Tag: antique sampler

  • Antique samplers – verses

    Antique samplers – verses

    MADELENA Shop, Sell, Discover
    World’s largest online gallery of antique SAMPLERS
    The Sampler Guild (UK)

    Antique samplers – a selection of  interesting verse samplers

    Before we get started here’s a question.  May one overlook fading when evaluating antique samplers?

    If a sampler is appealing enough in other respects we think you may, but as always it is a matter for individual taste.

    1787 Antique sampler – Some men get riches…

    Here is an example of an antique sampler with a fairly early date, a great verse, a strong strawberry border and a circa 1860 Hogarth frame that makes it a darling despite the fading.

    By the hand of providence the heavy stitching or stronger color in the thread allows the verse to stand out. Take a look at the sampler to see what I mean: 1787 verse sampler

    Verses7faded

    “Some men get riches, yet are always poor, some get no riches yet have all things store.”

    “How very true” we murmur. A verse like this means something to everyone. The words will be as true two centuries from now as they were 228 years ago when the sampler was stitched by Mary Ann Shepherd.

    Biblical antique sampler – inscription from Proverbs

    Proverbs 1:8
    Proverbs 1:8

    “My son hear the instruction of thy Father, and forsake not the law of thy Mother”

    Quotations from the Book of Proverbs are as popular today as ever they were in the past. This pithy epithet is typical. While families remain the bedrock of society it will never lose it’s power.

    Antique samplers currently available for sale from Madelena with the word ‘Mother’ in the description

    Antique samplers currently available for sale from Madelena with the word ‘Father’ in the description

    The Drowning Fly –  a rare antique sampler verse

    Unusual 1820 verse sampler
    Unusual 1820 Drowning fly sampler. Detail.

    1820 Drowning Fly sampler is available for sale.

    An unusual verse immediately arouses curiosity:

    Where does the material come from?

    Might the governess of this seven year old girl have had the imagination to write something original? And if she did would such behaviour from an employee have been acceptable?

    Or would she ask her employer, the girl’s mother, to choose a text? Could it have come from the bible, a treatise, a play, a sermon, a magazine, a newspaper?

    I could not help but google a phrase trying to find the source. And here it is. Probably an ‘approved’ publication widely read by ladies of the day.

    sampler verse source ALL SOURCE

    My guess is that seven year old Ann was curious about insects, flies in particular. Mom chose this poem for her sampler in the hopes that it might hold her daughter’s interest long enough for her to absorb the subject matter of the verse.

    sampler verse source ALL

    It is fun trying to guess what was in the minds of families living generations ago. Isn’t this part of the attraction of antique samplers?

    They add color to our understanding of society in a particular era, which is in this example is late Georgian. In the US, while this sampler was being stitched during the year of 1820, James Monroe was elected president effectively unopposed.

    World’s lovliest verse sampler at the V & A

    Picture and caption from V & A website article on antique samplers
    Picture and caption from V & A website article on antique samplers

    The Victoria and Albert Museum in London has the finest antique sampler collection on the planet. The samplers are to die for. No article on verse samplers can fail to mention the world’s foremost (in our opinion). The verse begins

    “As I cannot write I put this down simply and freely as I might speak to a person to whose intimacy and tenderness I can fully entrust myself and who I know will bear with all my weaknesses.”

    If you are not able visit the museum in person click here to visit the V & A website to read more about this unique antique sampler.

    MADELENA Shop, Sell, Discover
    World’s largest online gallery of antique SAMPLERS
    The Sampler Guild (UK)

  • Antique Samplers, Houses and Churches

    Antique Samplers, Houses and Churches

    Madelena Shop, Sell, Discover
    World’s largest online gallery of antique SAMPLERS
    The Sampler Guild (UK)

    Some of us are fascinated by those English needlework samplers that depict buildings, so much so that some collections consist of nothing else.

    One collection known to us consists only of Solomon’s Temple samplers.
    Solomon’s Temple was a teacher’s favourite as it would likely have been used as a focal point around which a variety of religious topics could be taught. While the veracity of the depictions would not have been questioned by mere children the importance of the original site on Temple Mount (Mount Zion) in Jerusalem is undisputed. File:Vistaescorial.JPG Vista de El Escorial desde el Monte Abantos, twenty miles northwest of Madrid

    Extensive research by numerous historians has resulted in varied reconstructions of the temple design in later centuries. That of the Spanish Vista de El Escorial, was possibly the most magnificent and definitely used as the pattern used in some of the sampler designs including the Solomon’s Temple sampler on the Madelena website at time of this post (click the link to see what we mean):

    1802 Solomon’s Temple sampler by Jane Batty

    House samplers depicted the homes of the girls under instruction and are hugely popular with collectors. These were their own homes, fields, sheep, dogs and so on. The connection with the past is palpable. We maintain a collection of great examples to purchase online. At the time of this post we have the following house samplers available for sale in our online store:

    1821 House Sampler by Mary Hassack

    1839 House Sampler by Ann Norgrove

    1840 House Sampler by Mary Eldridge

    Churches are of particular interest because they are most likely to be still standing. Most of the country mansions similar to those depicted in the house samplers listed above were demolished after 1945 due partly to the introduction of heavy taxation on inherited property (‘death duties’) and partly to the demise of primogeniture (the right of the firstborn child to inherit the family estate) in a world upside down following the great war to end all wars. The online Madelena store has two great examples still available at the time this blog is published:

    1842 ‘Saint Marks Church, Witton’ Sampler by Alice Walsh

    1822 Halstead Essex Church Sampler

    Both churches still stand.

    Saint Marks Church formerly in the parish of Witton, stitched in 1842 by Alice Walsh aged 10
    Saint Marks Church formerly in the parish of Witton, stitched in 1842 by Alice Walsh aged 10

     

    On the left is an image of Witton Church in its former glory as depicted in this wonderful sampler.

    A great little snippet from this wonderful sampler is this tiny stitching error. See how ten years old Alice has stitched ‘Thou God seets me’? I am pretty sure she intended ‘Thou God seeth me’. What do you think? Maybe she misheard her governess or misread her writing…

    Inscription detail from the Saint Mark's Church sampler
    Inscription detail from the Saint Mark’s Church sampler

    I feel a connection with this darling girl of so many generations past. I feel her grandmother’s delight as she willingly overlooks the mistake.

    St Mark's Church, Blackburn
    St Mark’s Church, Blackburn, photographed 2014

    Present day pictures show this Church of England original much added to and frankly now become a  much less attractive shape.

    Alice stitched her sampler four years after the church was consecrated in 1838.

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    Saint Mark's Church, 2014
    Saint Mark’s Church, photographed 2014

    The south transept was added in 1870, the north transept and vestry between 1881 and 1887.

    Various restoration work was done at the same time.

    The original structure was designed to seat a congregation of over 700 souls.

    Antique needlework samplers were made by children and every one of them unique. How wonderful is that?

    To see in reality an actual building depicted in a sampler by a child elicits a powerful sense of connection between past and present, reminding us of all those changes that have taken place in the material world since our girl skipped to church glowing with youth: life expectancy has doubled; photography, electricity, bicycle, motor car and air travel have all been invented; women’s roles and rights in society have been transformed; and lately the information revolution and a digital age has dawned making it now possible to share with everyone the magic of discovery. Halstead Essex Church sampler 1822

    • 1822, Halstead, Essex, England, Church Sampler (detail)

    Nearly two hundred years ago, Mrs Pask ran the local school in the country town of Halstead, in the county of Suffolk, close to Dedham Vale an area known as ‘Constable country’ after the renowned but financially unsuccessful landscape artist John Constable who lived there and wrote to a friend in 1821 “I should paint my own places best.”

    A year later… one can sense the excitement on that warm summer day… Mrs Pask gathers her pupils together to announce that the school will today be visiting the local church, and the older girls will be sketching its outline to make patterns for samplers they will be stitching to show their parents what wonderful progress they are making with their needlework and education. Many months later a sampler is proudly completed, dated 1822 and inscribed ‘This sampler was worked at Mrs Pask’s School, Halsted, Essex’. The name of the stitcher is unfortunately indistinct.

    1822 Halstead Essex Church Sampler

    Now to a photograph of the very same church taken eighty years later from a different angle, but allowing for children’s inaccuracies undoubtedly the same building.Halstead Essex Holy Trinity Church 1903, Holy Trinity Church, Halstead, Essex, England.

    And here it is again today, exactly one hundred and eleven years later.

    06CaptureHolyTrinityHalstead

    Does it not make you tingle all over to know that one may even today enter this church, tread the flagstones trod by those girls and perhaps seek out the pew wherein our young stitcher might have pondered the meaning of salvation between pre-teen distractions. We can even pore over the indistinct lettering of lichen encrusted headstones in the churchyard outside, hoping to find the last resting place of Mrs Pask and wondering if her pupil, our stitcher, is herself somewhere buried here.

    Madelena Shop, Sell, Discover
    World’s largest online gallery of needlework SAMPLERS
    The Sampler Guild (UK)