- The NSW
Embroiderers Guild have an open
competition every other year to
celebrate Margaret Oppen. In the 1960s an
offshoot of the
Embroiderers'
Guild was...
- Burke's
Peerage & Gentry, for
Battle of
Prestonpans (1745)
Heritage Trust.
Embroiderers'
Guild Practical Study Group (1984).
Needlework School. QED Publishers...
- An
embroidered patch, also
known as a
cloth badge, is a
piece of
embroidery which is
created by
using a
fabric backing and thread. The art of
making embroidered...
- the
American Branch,
Embroiderers'
Guild of London. The
Guild was
created in 1958, in New York City, as a
branch of
Embroiderers'
Guild of London. In...
-
Embroidered lace is
embroidered on a base
using a needle. The base
varies according to the type. Many
techniques use a net,
either woven or knotted. The...
- text was sewn by prisoners.
Members of the
Embroiderers'
Guild stitched the images, with at
least one
embroiderer selected from each
region of the UK. Many...
- over the surface, and
after the
shawl is completed, the
rafugar (expert
embroiderer)
works the
outlines of the
motifs in
darker shades to
bring into relief...
- The
Embroidered Uniform Guard (traditional Chinese: 錦衣衞;
simplified Chinese: 锦衣卫; pinyin: Jǐnyīwèi; lit. 'brocade-clothing guard') was the
imperial secret...
- 44–44
Levey and King 1993, p. 12
Embroiderers'
Guild 1984, p. 81
Fitwzwilliam and Hand 1912, "Introduction"
Embroiderers'
Guild 1984, p. 54 Coatsworth,...
-
Gertrude Courtenay,
Marchioness of Exeter). All wore
gowns of
white satin embroidered with gold thread. She
quickly established herself as one of the most...