Saturday, 14 November 2020

stitching cuneiform

Seems to lend itself to fly stitch. I find myself wanting to make the stitching as decorative as possible, along with representing the cuneiform; enjoying the patterns made by the cuneiform shapes. I allow myself to turn my fabric through 90 degrees, as the scribes might have turned their tablets, pressing stylus into clay.


I wonder about those Babylonian ladies, stitching mottos into their loved ones' garments: spells of protection, charms to ward off evil. Is this the stitch they might have used?

And because Rachel enjoyed my seaside, yesterday's walk gave me this



6 comments:

  1. Wow! Your seaside pictures are stunning! I love all things handstitched. Your work speaks ancient words.

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    1. Hi Mary, thank you for kind words, I just point the camera and nature does the rest. And yes, very ancient words, the white text is from an inscription about Sennacherib, so the 700's BCE

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  2. I'm really very taken with your stitched cuneiform - it fits beautifully! And thank you for the seaside pictures - I can feel myself breathing more easily!

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    1. Hi Rachel, I'm glad both the cuneiform and the seaside have met with your approval :-) The fly stitch does seem to work doesn't it?

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  3. stitching the cuneiform looks wonderful, Kat !
    (aren't you intrigued what it all says ??)
    Oh my, love the sun over the sea ! (going under I presume ...)

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    1. thank you Els, yes, always intrigued by what these cuneiform texts say (some of them are very banal - "fifty pots of honey to the temple stores" type stuff). This one is a royal inscription, Sennacherib, king of the four corners of the earth watching the booty poured out before him (and prisoners being executed!!!).
      Yes, a sunset over Beachy Head on the wonderful south coast of Sussex.

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