Atomic Ranch Fabric - Antique White is white with a hint of aged gray. Remember country picked fences. "Things get better with age." Create an instant heirloom with your favorite pattern.
Colors may also look different depending on your computer monitor or phone screen. Feel free to reach out to us if you're unsure about the exact color of a fabric!
Atomic Ranch Fabric - Antique White is white with a hint of aged gray. Remember country picked fences. "Things get better with age." Create an instant heirloom with your favorite pattern.
Colors may also look different depending on your computer monitor or phone screen. Feel free to reach out to us if you're unsure about the exact color of a fabric!
Atomic Ranch Fabric - Antique White is white with a hint of aged gray. Remember country picked fences. "Things get better with age." Create an instant heirloom with your favorite pattern.
Different depending on your computer monitor or phone screen. Feel free to reach out to us if you're unsure about the exact color of a fabric!
This pattern from By The Bay Needleart is the third in a new series called "Words of Wisdom". This design features the word "Faithful" with a sweet house.
The model was stitched on 28 ct Water Lily linen with DMC floss. The stitch count is 42 x 70 and the finished size is approx. 3" x 5".
Atomic Ranch Fabric - Antique White is white with a hint of aged gray. Remember country picked fences. "Things get better with age." Create an instant heirloom with your favorite pattern.
Colors may also look different depending on your computer monitor or phone screen. Feel free to reach out to us if you're unsure about the exact color of a fabric!
Atomic Ranch Fabric - Antique White is white with a hint of aged gray. Remember country picked fences. "Things get better with age." Create an instant heirloom with your favorite pattern.
Colors may also look different depending on your computer monitor or phone screen. Feel free to reach out to us if you're unsure about the exact color of a fabric!
Atomic Ranch Fabric - Antique White is white with a hint of aged gray. Remember country picked fences. "Things get better with age." Create an instant heirloom with your favorite pattern.
Colors may also look different depending on your computer monitor or phone screen. Feel free to reach out to us if you're unsure about the exact color of a fabric!
Atomic Ranch Fabric - Antique White is white with a hint of aged gray. Remember country picked fences. "Things get better with age." Create an instant heirloom with your favorite pattern.
Colors may also look different depending on your computer monitor or phone screen. Feel free to reach out to us if you're unsure about the exact color of a fabric!
Atomic Ranch Fabric - Antique White is white with a hint of aged gray. Remember country picked fences. "Things get better with age." Create an instant heirloom with your favorite pattern.
Colors may also look different depending on your computer monitor or phone screen. Feel free to reach out to us if you're unsure about the exact color of a fabric!
Atomic Ranch Fabric - Antique White is white with a hint of aged gray. Remember country picked fences. "Things get better with age." Create an instant heirloom with your favorite pattern.
Colors may also look different depending on your computer monitor or phone screen. Feel free to reach out to us if you're unsure about the exact color of a fabric!
Atomic Ranch Fabric - Antique White is white with a hint of aged gray. Remember country picked fences. "Things get better with age." Create an instant heirloom with your favorite pattern.
Colors may also look different depending on your computer monitor or phone screen. Feel free to reach out to us if you're unsure about the exact color of a fabric!
This is a very fine example of an early northern Dutch sampler called a letterndoek, or alphabet sampler. The illuminated letters are typical of northern Holland needleworks. Symbolic spot motifs include dogs, a stag, trees of life, and paired birds.
The Queen of the May is a tradition that celebrates beauty, renewal, and honour. Each year, we select a sampler that embodies these qualities - a design that rises above the rest, chosen not only for its visual appeal, but for its enduring presence.
Stitched in 1826 by a boy of just nine years of age, this eye-catching sampler challenges expectation. It speaks not only of skill, but of discipline, patience, and quiet determination. William worked with precision and care, producing a piece that stands confidently alongside, and in many cases... Read more about William Curtis 1826 - Cross Stitch Pattern
Collected from German, Italian, Scottish, Dutch, English, and American samplers, this book of alphabets takes off from where the previous edition, Alphabets from Early Samplers, ends. The alphabets have been fastidiously reproduced from samplers dating from 1530, to 1868. Over 80 alphabets are charted, as well as two complete alphabet samplers, one of them dating from 1725.
The first book of its kind to be published, this collection of over one hundred charted reproductions of buildings from samplers and needlework of the seventeenth through the mid-nineteenth centuries fills a huge void in the body of sampler publications. It includes many photos of the finished... Read more about Architecture From Early Samplers - Cross Stitch Book
Characteristically ornate illuminated alphabets are featured on this classic Scottish sampler. Other stylistic elements indicating its origin include the peacock with seven tail feathers and three rows of initials of the maker's family. The illuminated alphabets on this particular sampler are... Read more about Margret Lawrance 1823 Scottish Sampler - Cross Stitch
This little sampler was inspired by a 220 year old large sampler in our collection that was stitched by Mercy Stainton and is filled with garden motifs-trees, flowers, birds, beehives, and animals of all kinds. Mercy used a variety of stitches in her sampler and we have tried to sprinkle... Read more about Mercy's Garden - Cross Stitch Pattern
Marie Duclos was thirteen years old when the spring of 1895 gently settled over her village. The hedges, still shy, were dotted with buds, and the first scents of flowers drifted through the window of the room where she sat each afternoon, her embroidery hoop resting on her knees.