There's an interesting article in the September/October 2004 Piecework magazine, on Embroidered Globes (Terrestrial and Celestial), something used in the 1800-1840-ish era to teach schoolgirls their geography and needlework all at the same time (and I though we had mastered multi-tasking!).
For any woman portraying a grown-up in the 60s, familiarity with these globes might be an interesting addition. There was one reference to the brothers of a family using the silk embroidered globe as a ball... as many were 4-6" across.
There's also a project given on-line:
And, a book listed in the bibliography that looks very interesting:
Girlhood Embroidery: American Samplers & Pictoral Needlework, 1650-1850
It's listed as out of print, but inter-library-loan might be a source.
For any woman portraying a grown-up in the 60s, familiarity with these globes might be an interesting addition. There was one reference to the brothers of a family using the silk embroidered globe as a ball... as many were 4-6" across.
There's also a project given on-line:
And, a book listed in the bibliography that looks very interesting:
Girlhood Embroidery: American Samplers & Pictoral Needlework, 1650-1850
It's listed as out of print, but inter-library-loan might be a source.
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