I’ve been stitching various experimental pieces recently and enjoying different ways of working. I’d seen someone on Instagram who had been embroidering fantasy aerial landscapes and I really liked the idea so I printed out a satellite image of part of a walk I enjoy along the River Ancholme between the villages of South Ferriby and Horkstow and decided I’d stitch the section from Horkstow Bridge along the lane to the road.
I drew it free hand onto some calico and then started to fill in the fields with satin stitch and the hedgerows in french knots. I used a slightly slubby silk on the longer field and an odd almost cord-like thread on the smaller one.

I then moved onto stranded silk which gave smoother looking fields. I like the contrast of the slightly textured silk but not so sure about the corded thread…

I also realised that I needed to vary the shades of green in the hedgerows and copses.

The lane from the bridge to the road was added in split stitch. Really not liking the corded thread at all now, but as the French knot hedgerows went right through the edges of the stitches I wasn’t going to be able to easily undo it at this point, so I’m living with it!

Lastly I added the River Ancholme and the drain that runs parallel with it in split stitch. Horkstow Bridge, which is a very early Victorian suspension bridge, is two French knots and a couple of satin stitches (bottom left corner) and I included part of the fields across the river. Off the hoop the tension isn’t great, but it was a lot of fun to do.

Back in 2010 I stitched a piece for our Embroiderers’ Guild Summer Challenge, for which we were given some blue thread, aida and the prompt ‘Blue Pot’. My response was to create some cross stitched ‘shards’ of Victorian blue and white china lying in the ‘soil’

I don’t have it any more because it’s on the cover of the 2010 scrapbook but I do miss it.

So I decided to stitch a mini version featuring the most iconic part of the willow pattern design – the birds.

Once I’d stitched it, I laced it over a couple of pieces of pelmet vilene for rigidity and started to couch various fancy threads around it for the soil.

I also added some patches of split stitch to vary the textures as I’d done with cross stitch on the original.

I wouldn’t normally stitch the same idea twice, but it’s good to have my own miniature version.
I like your blog and your stitching and sharing, thank you.
Thank you so much. I’m glad you enjoy it.
I agree, once is usually enough – but there are exceptions to every rule!
I do see what you mean about the corded thread, but I think that once the whole piece was completed, it settles rather better as part of the whole. Another reminder of something I’m hanging onto for my current (unfortunately secret) project, so thank you very much!
I think you’re right. It was certainly less jarring as the landscape progressed. It’s always a learning curve!
I can see the shard as a brooch. I’ve did some landscape pieces machined but they’re about 12inches square. I bet yours is tiny! 😄
Of course – it’s about 2 and a half inches by 4 inches! I’d not thought of that about the shard, but you’re right – it would work really well.
The landscape looks great. That’s a bit of path I keep meaning to walk, you couldn’t get through years ago, when I last tried. The pottery shard looks so different to the previous piece, love the background, too.
It’s a very good path along the Ancholme to Horkstow bridge now and the lane to the road is pretty good. Nice and flat before we trek up the ridge!
Done parts of the other end. Planning on riding my bike down there.