Our first stop on the National Trust visiting holiday was Montacute House, we had wanted to visit this property last year but it was being used for filming Wolf Hall.
I love the old books in historic house libraries, the covers are so beautifully decorated.
There was not a large amount of embroidery on display but this crewelwork bedspread was one of the lovely things in the house.
Not only is the property gorgeous in mellow stone, set in a quintessentially English village of the same stone, (decorated with bunting for their upcoming Summer Festival), but also they have lots of portraits on loan from the National Portrait Gallery of Tudor and Stuart costume.
Some of the pictures didn’t have labels to say who they were but others were of suitable fame including Katherine Parr, the last wife of Henry the 8th.The detail of the fabric and embroidery is wonderful, especially the collar fabric.
There was also a portrait of a woman wearing a similar jacket to the Layton jacket that I love, apologies for fuzzy photos as it was a bit dark. I have found a Layton jacket Pinterest board of these jackets and other Elizabethan embroidery, some in a museum near here that I am intending to visit over the summer.
Am off out for a walk in a bit with Ted, my friend’s dog. It is a beautiful day here and all the rhododendrons are in bloom so we will have a lovely time, well I will, don’t think that Ted is that bothered about the beautiful flowers but there will be plenty to sniff at!
Then it is back to sewing, I have finished one pair of braies, (men’s undergarments), and have a shirt to cut out and sew this afternoon.
Hope that you are having a lovely weekend whatever you are doing and thanks for visiting.
There was a fabulous exhibition of Tudor and Stuart portraiture at the Queen’s Gallery a couple of years ago, and I’m quite certain that a skilled lacemaker could reconstruct some of the laces I saw there. Honestly, the patience and skill of some of those painters is just breathtaking – as your pictures also demonstrate.