Feature

●This item is a Counted Cross Stitch Pattern that you will use to sew and create a picture. It is NOT a finished product.
●Floss and Fabric are NOT included. This is NOT A KIT. This purchase is for a paper chart only. You must purchase Floss and Fabric separately.
●Charted for 14 count fabric. Finished size is 8 inches (112 stitches) by 18 inches (252 stitches).
●Chart uses up to 48 colors DMC Cotton Floss. Full stitches only. No half stitches and no backstitching necessary.
●We provide two charts both printed in black ink on bright white 11" by 17" paper. Chart #1 is a single page overview chart. Chart #2 is a 4 page enlarged chart to work from.


Description

This is a pattern that is used to sew and to create a needlepoint or cross stitch picture. This is NOT a completed product. It is NOT a kit, it contains no floss or fabric. This chart was inspired by a Medieval tapestry. Tapestries have been used since at least Hellenistic times. Samples of Greek tapestry have been found preserved in the desert of Tarim Bdating from the 3rd century BC. Tapestry reached a new stage in Europe in the early 14th century AD. The first wave of production occurred in Germany and Switzerland. Over time, the craft expanded to France and the Netherlands. In the 14th and 15th centuries, Arras, France was a thriving textile town. The industry specialized in fine wool tapestries which were sold to decorate palaces and castles all over Europe. Few of these tapestries survived the French Revolution as hundreds were burnt to recover the gold thread that was often woven into them. Arras is still used to refer to a rich tapestry no matter where it was woven. By the 16th century, Flanders, Brussels, and Enghien had become the centers of European tapestry production. In the 17th century, Flemish tapestries demonstrating intricate detail of pattern and color embodied in intricate compositions, often of monumental scale. In the 19th century, William Morris resurrected the art of tapestry-making in the medieval style at Merton Abbey. Morris & Co. made successful series of tapestries for home and ecclesiastical uses, with figures based on drawings by Edward Burne-Jones. Kilims and Navajo rugs are also types of tapestry work.