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SUSAN
SINGLETON |
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Designed after a mid-eighteenth century New Hampshire sampler, this piece
is delightfully naive with its oversized animals, insects, and birds. Around
1760, the New-Hampshire Gazette began publishing advertisements for girls'
schools, placed by female instructresses, emphasizing a curriculum of
practical as well as decorative needlework. While this sampler is atypical
of most of the recognizable schools of New Hampshire (i.e. the bird and
basket designs of Canterbury, the dark green linsey-woolsey grounds on
samplers of Dover, and the house and barn samplers of Portsmouth), it is
significantly stylized to suggest that it was taught by a particular
teacher, who could have been advertising for more pupils at that time.
Stitches used in the sampler are cross, back, and satin. Stitched on 35
count linen, it will measure approximately 15" x 22-1/4", and is recommended
for intermediate level needleworkers. |

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Date: 1760
Rated: Intermediate
Linen count and finished size: 35 count, 15" x 22-1/4"
Stitches: Cross, satin, back
Kit with cotton floss: $63.00
Kit with silk floss: $142.00
Graph only: $18.00
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