Small, quirky houses is a theme I love to return to. They make great repeating patterns, while differing slightly in shape, colour and design, and have the added fun of wondering who might live inside them. A little village of autumn houses has been hanging on my kitchen wall for a couple of years, sewn in appliqued felt onto a bit of abandoned patchwork, with buttons and beads to make the gardens. If you look closely enough, there are some tiny cat buttons frisking among the flowers.
| The autumn patchwork with added cats. |
Part of the appeal of houses is that they are such simple shapes to cut out, - just rectangles and triangles which are easy to vary in size. I used cotton in pale blues and greys so they would stand out against the dark blue patchwork and sewed them on with running stitch close to the edge. A very fine embroidery needle prevented too much fraying.
| Basic houses, ready to sew. |
The fun part is customising all the houses. I raided my box of fancy scraps - lace, ribbon, net, velvet, satin, sparkles and silk- and lovingly cut out tiny doors, windows and trimmings for the roof. Once again, the invisible thread earned its keep to hold them all in place. I couched silver thread around some of the doorways to add a bit of definition, and sewed bead knockers onto the doors.
| Adding trimmings to the houses |
It was at this point that I wished I had put a snowy landscape behind the houses. Undoing all the sewing to add one in didn't seem like any fun at all, so I painstakingly sewed bits of sheer fabric between each house, trimming to fit as I went. After that, I added the triangle trees, which were made from felt or fleece. I embroidered the plain white felt with tree-ish patterns before cutting out the triangles, which made it much easier to embroider right up to the edge. To finish off, I couched on strands of loosely-spun white wool for the snowy ground, and sprinkled on iridescent snowflakes. The outer squares of the patchwork were turned over to make a border.
So autumn has passed and winter now reigns on the kitchen wall. I was pleased with the mixture of different textures and patterns, and sticking strictly to the blue and white colour scheme has given a good wintry effect. Sadly, I didn't have any white cat buttons to play in the snow. I imagine they are inside their houses, curled up in front of the fire.
| The finished winter picture |
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