I’m really excited about this! And I think many of you will be, too, especially if you’re a Linen-Lover!
I wanted to work up a nice little sample project to show off this new linen for you, but instead, I worked up a rustic little (read: pathetic and tiny) few stitches to help illustrate what I really like about this linen. I have a small project planned for this particular linen, and it will show up some time before Christmas.
In the meantime, without further ado, let’s move on to the introductions!
My friends, please meet Provincial, the new 20-count needlework linen in the Legacy Linen line from Access Commodities.
By 20-count linen, I mean that there are 20 threads per inch in this linen
When a linen is called a “something-count” linen, it’s assumed that it’s an even-weave linen, which can be used for counted needlework techniques like cross stitch, blackwork, Hardanger, and the like.
But there’s a lot more to this linen!
Provincial comes in six colors. The more neutral colors include (from left to right) Taffeta Cream, Buttermilk Biscuit, and Ivory Piano Key.
It’s really difficult to get the colors of the fabrics across online. The Buttermilk Biscuit is kind of a light golden color, like a wheat field ready for harvest, blowing in the wind. It’s a beautiful color! And perfect for antique reproduction samplers and the like.
The other three colors in the line up are, from left to right, Silver Pine Needle, which is a subtle grey-silver with just a hint of green to it; Crimson Crinoline, which is a deep, bright true red, not orangey at all, but a thoroughly noble red (very hard to find in good needlework linen!); and Sea Water Black, which is a kind of washed black, not perfectly pitch black, but kind of like a deep chalkboard black.
Now, to show you how this linen differs from most other linens on the market sold for needlework, here’s a close-up photo of it. The needle shown is a size 26 tapestry needle.
Notice the weave of the linen. Notice how the threads in the weave fill up the whole weave. They are nice and plump, and they don’t leave open areas in the weave, where skinny threads don’t quite fill things up.
In the photo above, I tried to give you a sense of the weight of the fabric, by cutting it and folding it back on itself a little bit. It is a heavy weight linen. It’s quite a bit thicker than other linens you might be used to, but it’s also that much sturdier!
The linen, straight out of the package when you buy it, has a nice “hand” (or surface feel) to it, and it is not very stiff. If you’re used to selecting linen or other needlework fabrics that are very stiff when you first purchase them, this is not that type of fabric.
It seems to me that, generally, the lower the quality of fabric, the greater amount of sizing is used on it before it’s bolted up and packaged for marketing. Higher quality fabrics don’t require a lot of sizing in them to keep them in shape before the consumer purchases them. So, when you are out and about, looking for needlework fabric, if you find fabric that’s super-stiff, that’s because it needs a lot of sizing to keep it presentable for the consumer.
This particular linen has body to it (as good linens do), but it isn’t stiffened up with a lot of sizing. I’m sure there’s some sizing in it, to make bolting easier, but there isn’t enough in it to make it super stiff.
You can do a lot with this linen – from dense surface stitching with heavier threads, to cross stitch, Hardanger, and even rustic drawn thread work. It’s a great linen for any folk-ish embroidery, but it’s suitable for regular weight stitching as well.
You could also make this linen up into items that will endure some wear and tear, like tote bags.
So, like I said, I wanted to get a little design worked up for you, to show you some stitching on this linen. I haven’t had a chance to do that yet.
But I spent a little time doodling about with the linen, just to see how it feels when stitching on it. I scribbled up some little elements on the red linen, using a white gel pen.
Then I took some regular whitework threads and worked stem stitch around the lines. For the fun of it, I filled half the heart with a checkered cross stitch pattern.
The moral of the story is this: the linen takes surface line stitches really well – you can achieve smooth curves without being constrained by the gridded effect of the weave. And it takes counted stitches well, too! So the two can be effectively combined on this linen, which opens up some interesting design possibilities!
When working satin stitch or long and short stitch with finer threads, it might help to back the linen with a cotton muslin, just to make sure there’s a good support structure to ensure smooth edges on the filled areas. With heavier threads, I don’t think it would be necessary, but I haven’t tried these two approaches yet. I will soon!
In fact, I can’t wait to work the little project that I have in mind for this fabric! It’s a little folky design, stitched in heavier threads, combining counted and surface embroidery. I’ve had the plan for the design for a while, but no idea what fabric to work it on. When I read about Provincial 20-count and saw the denseness of the weave, I new it would be a perfect match!
Where to Find 20-count Provincial Embroidery Linen
Here’s a list of needlework shops that I know either are already carrying Provincial or will be carrying it:
Hedgehog Handworks in Westchester, CA, and Nordic Needle in Fargo, ND, will both be carrying it. I’ve shopped extensively at both of these shops, so I’m familiar with them and can vouch for their good service.
Other locally owned needlework shops (maybe one of them is near you?) include the following:
Stitcher’s Corner in Wiscasset, ME
Stitching Post in Baltimore, MD
In Stitches, in Alexandria, VA
With Needle in Hand, in Boardman, OH
Stitching Bits & Bobs in Plainwell, MI
Stitches ‘n Things, in Fenton, MI
Stitchville USA in Minnentonka, MN
Welcome Stitchery, Inc in Crystal Lake, IL
Village Needlework in Marion, IA
3 Stitches in Spring, TX
Stitches from the Heart, in San Antonio, TX
Ewe Count in Cheyenne, WY
Attic Needlework in Mesa, AZ
Other shops that I know carry linens from Access Commodities (so they could special order this if you want it) include Needle in a Haystack in Alameda, CA and Threadneedle Street in Issaquah, WA.
In Canada, check with Traditional Stitches in Calgary, AB.
In Australia, All Threads Embroidery carries some Legacy Linen.