Be sure to check this one out it is a lovely!
http://www.beadinpath.com/beads.html
"EVERY CHILD IS AN ARTIST. THE PROBLEM IS HOW TO REMAIN AN ARTIST ONCE HE GROWS UP." ~ PABLO PICASSO
I was granted permission by the board of the Falmouth Historical Society to reproduce this early American sampler from 'Cape Cod' Massachusetts which I found in their archives. I learned of and was intrigued by it's provenance, which told a fascinating tale of young Joanna's life on Cape Cod. I adored it's simplicity. Yet in the sampler's simplicity it reveals many clues about the young girl who wroughtthis needlework and it provided a link to another family member's sampler located in nearby Sandwich. Someone called the process of reproducing a sampler tedious but I beg to differ because that would imply that it was long, time consuming, repetitive, and boring. Boring it wasn't! I was so excited to be allowed permission by the board to reproduce it I'd be waiting for the girls to unlock the door early Monday morning.The process of reproducing this was simple, really. Take one large magnifying glass, graph paper, a pencil, ruler, and patience. Count the stitches mark them on the graph paper one by one. Correctly match the floss colors to the aged and faded original floss as well as the linen on which it was stitched.This sampler took approx. one year from start to finish.The following summer I was invited to give a lecture as well as conduct a children's workshop on the story of Early Samplers and their makers.
It will always be near and dear to my heart!