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Critiques

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Signalé
CathyLockhart | 2 autres critiques | Sep 30, 2022 |
This book is a detailed view of a 14th c. manuscript with embroidered binding, from several standpoints. Separate chapters discuss the provenance, the text, the binding, the embroidery, the stitches, the separate embroidered areas of the binding, and the making of a reconstruction of the binding. There are extensive footnotes, bibliography, and an index.

There is a wealth of closeup, detailed color photographs of the item, The stitches are diagrammed with probable ways they were created. In many cases, one cannot be certain without taking it apart, so these are educated analyses, not necesarrily rock-solid facts. The author is clear about what can be observed and what can be inferred.

This manuscript was written in Latin in England ca. 1380, by John Somer, a Franciscan friar. About 40 copies of his Kalendarium survive to the present day, so part of the discussion of provenance is narrowing down when this copy was made. I will let you read the text of this MS.8932 book if you wish to understand when this particular copy was created, bound, and decorated.

The text of Carey's book is readable and detailed; I found it fascinating and informative. I recommend this book for all people seeking to understand or reproduce this unique artifact, medieval almanacs, or are interested in embroidery of 14th c. England.

The book is available only on The Carey Company's website. The cost is reasonable (£25) but shipping to America is over half again as much in addition to that. It was worth it to me.
1 voter
Signalé
EowynA | Aug 27, 2019 |
The art of kumihimo. Previously published as: beginner's guide to braiding.
1 voter
Signalé
jhawn | 4 autres critiques | Jul 31, 2017 |
Interesting, particularly for a beginner like myself. I know only one pattern for braiding, that uses 16 strands to make a spiral round braid. The book presents a lot more shapes for braids, but uses only 8 strands for most of them, which feels skimpy to me - but I suspect I can expand them later on. The diagrams are excellent, both the layout for the beginning and the sequence diagrams that show the movements. I dislike most of the example braids - the author really loves working thick-and-thin, making part of the pattern through having fine threads against much thicker ones, and I think that's ugly and not useful. But they're only examples - and they do display well how the same pattern can produce very different-looking braids with minor changes. The book begins, of course, with equipment and materials, describing the braid-holder (marudai), the bobbins, and the weight and counter-weights; she shows everything from the traditional equipment to how to create equivalents from stuff lying around the house (cardboard, film canisters, pennies...). There's no mention of the foam disk that most Americans start with, though. She does assume you'll be using multiple threads, in ropes of many strands, and most of the example braids are made of silk or a silk substitute called biron, which are sold in such ropes. One thing that's not clearly shown, after the first braid at least, is just how thick the braids are - it's hard to tell, when all the examples are shown against a plain background (the first braid is shown across a hand, and it can be seen that it's about a little finger thick). It's an excellent, useful book.
 
Signalé
jjmcgaffey | 4 autres critiques | Sep 24, 2013 |
My review is rather lengthy. Please see my blog at http://kimikosews.livejournal.com/51358.html for the full review.
 
Signalé
KimikoS | 2 autres critiques | Feb 6, 2011 |
An excellent beginners guide to Japanese braiding. It includes examples of the various levels of equipment (from "Pride In My Authenticity" to "Kit-bashed out of common household goods"). The layout and format are excellent. I skimmed through it once on the ride back home from the bookstore, and when I sat down to actually read it, there was no new information for me to absorb -- I had learned everything but the numbers and specific patterns from the skimming.
 
Signalé
mastersonso | 4 autres critiques | Feb 4, 2011 |
Ms. Carey has looked at the bags, read the sources, and come to essentially the same conclusions that I did over the last 10 years, while I wrote my book on Sweet Bags. Hers reached publication first. What's not to like? She includes some sweet bags that are not shown in every other book. There are some very large, very close up pictures of bags, so that one can see the structures she talks about. We have different names for some of the stitches and structures. We reached the same conclusions on many aspects. We generally asked the same questions, and we got the same answers. It's a good book. *sigh*
 
Signalé
EowynA | 2 autres critiques | Jul 11, 2010 |
If you're tired of making round braids on the foam kumihimo disk but can't figure out how to do anything more complicated, this is a good beginning guide to using the marudai for slightly more complex tasks. It also includes how to do the round braid on the marudai.
1 voter
Signalé
aulsmith | 4 autres critiques | Apr 22, 2010 |
This book is just what I was looking for. I just took up brading and wanted some basic 'patterns'.
 
Signalé
karen430 | Jun 10, 2008 |
Maybe I'm dense, but this was the first book where the instructions for making cords made sense. Everything you need to know and what to do about various problems is explained. There are also beautiful inspiring pictures of cords made with different kinds of elements. Highly recommended.
 
Signalé
aulsmith | Mar 23, 2008 |
 
Signalé
PTArts | 4 autres critiques | Oct 6, 2021 |
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