What's New in Needlepoint: Bracelets

Have you been keeping up with the reports out of New York and London's Fashion Week runway shows? The motifs, colors, styles and trends seen there will trickle their way through the retail landscape like a branching river, making their way to low, medium and high end stores. As it has for hundreds of years, embroidery is still trendy for embellishments. While many of us can't afford Alexander McQueen couture, we can add spots of stitching to our outfits and be right on trend.


Start with these new needlepoint bracelets from Cheryl Schaeffer and Annie Lee Designs. While needlepointed jewelry cuffs aren't new, Cheryl and Annie's designs and silver bangle style are refreshing. We spotted these at the TNNA tradeshow in January, and knew they'd be a hit: quick to stitch, easy finishing, and you get the bangle when you buy the painted canvas. Just add threads—with a spice or two of Kreinik metallics, of course. The designs would make great gifts for yourself or a friend.

Take a look at the photos here to see a few of the design options. Ask your favorite needlepoint store to order them for you from Cheryl Schaeffer and Annie Lee Designs, http://www.cherylschaeffer.com/.






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This kind of needle-work is a cinch

When an email comes in asking for Bent Weaver's Needles for making horse saddle cinch makers, you can't help but do a double-take. We get a lot of needlework enquiries, but not often from the horse industry. Then you find out the business owner in interested in Kreinik threads for making dressings for horse riders, and you definitely want to know more. We interviewed business owner, Charlotte Sharkey, and she shared some fabulous photos. Settle in; it's an extensive chat, but pretty interesting. The lesson here: no matter what you make with needle and thread, it can be creative, useful and beautiful.

Q: How did you get started in the horse business (making mohair, cinches, belts, etc)?

A: I guess first we’d have to go back to how I got started with fiber. I designed and taught jewelry techniques for 20 years as a hobby, including making glass beads over a torch—that’s where I experimented with color, which has served me well.  About 13 years ago I moved from San Francisco to a 13-acre farm in the New York area known as the Finger Lakes. I’m only 10 miles from Cornell University, but 4.5 hours away from NYC. My new home  is where the ice cream sundae was invented, and the Moog Synthesizer. We even have a farm raising buffalo.  It’s a pretty grass roots community.

Since I moved to a farm I figured it should BE a farm. Didn’t want to raise meat, didn’t want to milk every day, so I turned to fiber. I started with Angora rabbits, joined the local hand-spinners guild and learned all about fiber from shearing to cleaning to spinning. Then dyeing, felting, weaving, crochet…it all followed. As did the alpaca boys and the Shetland sheep. And the ducks & chickens.

Then I got my horse, Sweetie. Being a “maker,” I wanted control over creating some her tack. Somehow, while I was doing my research online I discovered a site that was all about weaving horse tack with mohair. Now, mohair is one of my favorite fibers. It’s considered the “diamond of fibers.”   So I ordered a loom and a lot of mohair cinch cord. This is a special yarn made specifically for horse tack. Very difficult to acquire here in the U.S.. Nearly all mohair is milled in South Africa, the world’s largest producer of mohair. The color range I was able to get was interesting, but limited. The next thing I knew I was importing the mohair cord myself…and buying dyes, and pot to dye in, and all the other things ones needs.

Q: How do you use Bent Weaver's Needles?

A: The instructional video I learned how to weave the cinches from illustrated how to weave in the mohair ends—using forceps! I still cannot understand why.  I already had some Bent-tip Weaver needles carried by Kreinik and instantly knew this was a MUCH better method. Why is this type of needle preferred to a straight needle? Because the cinches are woven very tightly. You want to know exactly where your needle is and where it’s going to come out. The Bent tip allows this. Plus, the fact that it’s stainless steel means you can actually grab it with a pair of needle-nose pliers & pull it through without the pliers nicking the needle shaft, causing rough spots, as would happen with an aluminum bent-tip needle. This is critical in order to smoothly weave in the mohair ends. Not to mention that I’ve had an aluminum needle head break while trying to pull it through with pliers—something the stainless steel needles won’t ever do.


Q: What role does color play in making dressing for horses, riders, etc?

A: The Western horse riding crowd in our U.S. Western states do more than just ride their horses for pleasure. They also compete in all types of events, many we’re familiar with through rodeos. And if you’re familiar with the sport of English Dressage, you can add Western Dressage to your vocabulary. It is a new and growing sport and there is a national organization supporting and teaching these methods of horsemanship. And then there are hard-core endurance events. In all of these sports standing out with unique colorful western tack on your horse is one way to catch the judge’s eye. My best customer and friend, Shonna Shore, has opened a FaceBook page: Concho River Mohair Cinch Company. Her designs are phenomenal and she makes the best use of my array of colors. (See photos of some of Shona's cinches).

I now have over 60 colors for the 2-ply cinch yarns. This is the yarn that is used to weave the design. I also create custom colors in the 8-ply cinch yarn—4 times the thickness of the 2-ply, this is the yarn that is the “warp” and runs from buckle-to-buckle. And I’m creating tie-dyed 8-ply and 2-ply in two, three or even four color combinations. The picture of the Turquoise & Black horse breast collar depicts one of my tie-dyed pieces. Also woven by Shonna.

Q: Do you make any other items?

A: I’ve woven a bunch of belts, which are lingering in my new Etsy shop all alone. You’re more successful in selling when you have a variey and abundance of products in your shop. I’ve also made “mini cinch” keyrings with my 2ply scraps. And I’ve passed this “recipe” for making them onto the cinch makers to make as giveaways, gifts or to sell. I currently have a large weaving in progress combining the mohair with sari silk yarn & sari fabric yarn, this I plan on making into messenger bag flaps, bound with soft leather.

Q: Do you sell at shows, galleries or online?

A:  currently sell only through my Etsy shop; Caravan Fiber.  I am working on a 2nd Etsy shop—Caravan Emporium. I’ll be carrying something completely different in this shop—vintage accessory items for the boudoir such as 1920-1930 vanity lamps from Germany, which I am refurbishing, rewiring and making hand-sewn shades. Also vintage porcelain Little Lady powder boxes and trinket boxes, and luxe pillowcases of crepe-backed satin, hand-trimmed with lingerie laces—all very fem, very luxe.

As you can tell—I’m always busy and always coming up with new ideas—so many it’s hard at times to keep up with all of my lines as well as maintain my farm and the animals every day. But somehow it all gets done. It’s a really good life. And I feel it’s also pretty well-rounded in creativity, helping my fellow artists, enjoying the outdoors and communing with animals.

Do I miss city life? Yes, yes I do. And I’ll get back to visiting cities to enjoy the hustle, the inspiration that the diversity of the people and products offered, the restaurants and museums…the SHOPPING! I actually can’t wait until my animals don’t need me around so much. Until then, I’ve plenty to keep me busy.

For more information on Charlotte Sharkey of Caravan Fiber (and soon Caravan Emporium), visit her Facebook page, https://www.facebook.com/Caravan-Fiber-104905256418/?fref=ts or her Etsy shop https://www.etsy.com/shop/CaravanFiber


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New Japan Thread colors

Introducing five new colors in Kreinik Japan #5, a smooth gimp you couch on fabric or canvas to resemble real metal embroidery. Japan threads are non-tarninshing options to more expensive real metal threads, and look elegant when used in surface design, needlepoint, even crochet. 

The new colors are:
  • 131J Cojo Salmon
  • 132J Larkspur
  • 133J Sunny
  • 134J Glacier
  • 135J Aurora
If using in needlepoint or surface embroidery and you want the Japan thread to be the main focus, couch with a clear monofilament thread, or a coordinating color of Kreinik Cord or Blending Filament. Japan color 134J Glacier, for instance, pairs with Kreinik Cord 032C. Japan color 133J Sunny matches Blending Filament color 091. If you want your couching stitches to be decorative, adding a layer of visual interest, you can couch the new Japan colors with any color of thin thread such as Kreinik Silk Bella, Silk Couching Thread, Cord, Japan #1 or Very Fine #4 Braid. 

If you've never tried couching, it's time to learn this versatile stitch. It enables you to use any fiber on any fabric or canvas because the fiber doesn't have to fit through any holes. Simply lay it on the top of your design, and tack down in side-to-side or decorative stitches. Plunge the ends to the back of your fabric/canvas and secure on the back with tacking stitches or running them beneath other stitches.

Ask your favorite needlework store for the new Japan thread colors, or visit http://www.kreinik.com/shops/Japan-Thread-5-5m-spools.html for more information.

LEARN MORE:
For more information on Japan threads, visit http://kreinikthread.blogspot.com/2013/01/kreinik-q-japan-threads.html


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Two Colorful New Shoelaces

Perky up these winter days with Cupid's Kiss Shoelaces, a cheerful red/pink blend made from Kreinik threads. Robin's Egg Blue Shoelaces will get you marching into spring with their baby blue shades. Both are new colors in the C.A.K.S. line of shoelaces created by Kreinik.



C.A.K.S. Laces honor Charles Austin Kreinik who took his own life at age 28. In the end, Charles was affected by physical pain, alcoholism and depression, but in brighter days he was a gifted person of quirky humor and generous spirit. You could even spot that in his clothes: he loved wearing unique, patterned socks and bowties.

Suicide dimmed that light. However, Charles’ parents, Doug and Myla Kreinik, want others to keep theirs shining brightly.  One small way to do that is through these fun shoelaces, made from Kreinik threads in West Virginia.

Wear these colorful laces to brighten your corner of the world and show your sparkling personality. A portion of the proceeds  from C.A.K.S. Laces will benefit a fund designated for suicide prevention, addiction counseling, and grief support programs.

So lace up your shoes, put one foot in front of the other, and keep on going—or dancing! Your purchase helps others, supports grieving families, and makes the world a little brighter.

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New Kreinik Metallic Thread Colors

Fresh and cheerful, versatile and useful: the Spring 2016 Kreinik metallic thread color additions are here! Available now in Tapestry #12 Braid size (coming soon in other sizes), meet 5801 Cool Cucumber, 5802 Leap Frog, 5803 Seaside, 5804 Calypso, and 5800 Golden Blackberry. In a metallic finish—whether in home decor, clothing, jewelry, or stitchery—you either want classic and elegant, or bright and fun. The new colors cover all of these.


So how do we go about choosing new thread colors? We listen to designer and stitcher requests, plus examine the line from time to time to see what's missing. In this case, when we reorganized the Kreinik Metallic Color Card in shading order—all the greens together, all the silver shades side by side to better help you select threads for your projects)—we noticed a need for other shades. The two new green colors, for instance, work nicely into the chartreuse families. Use 5801 Cool Cucumber and 5802 Leap Frog for many designs; shades of lime are now standard for tropical, spring, floral, Halloween, and Christmas themes just to name a few.

We are always asked for shades of orange, so the new 5804 Calypso was created to offer a shade less metallic than 027 Orange but still rich in color. The gold-orange variegation in the Braid gives you a little depth and light play in the color, adding a pretty glimmer of shimmer. When it debuted at the TNNA needlework trade show this month, designers were already planning on using it in autumn and Halloween themes. 

The new color 5800 Golden Blackberry also joins our relatively new line of gold color blends. This one features a black-blue-purple-berry. The result is as royal as you can imagine, rich and classy while almost fairy tale in appearance at the same time. We think it also makes a gorgeous night sky color too. Don't you love a thread color that works in so many designs?
One of the main reasons to use a metallic thread in a needlework pattern is to replicate the metallic nature of a real-life object. Water, for example, is naturally shimmery. When you see water, snow, dew, rain etc stitched in a matte cotton or wool thread, your eye knows something is missing. Water motifs just need to be metallic, so for your stitching awesomeness, we proudly present 5803 Seaside, a blue/green/pearl mix. It has a fairy-tale quality as well, so look for places to use it in all kinds of designs.

Enrich your stitchery and perk up your projects with these gorgeous new shades. Ask or visit your favorite needlework resource for the new Kreinik, available now in Tapestry #12 Braid:

5800 Golden Blackberry
5801 Cool Cucumber
5802 Leap Frog
5803 Seaside
5804 Calypso

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Happy New Re Year

That's no typo in our headline…it is the Year of the Re, as in re-imagine, re-ignite, re-fresh, re-group, re-invent. January is always a good time to reorganize and rededicate yourself to what matters to you. Whether that means learning new needlework techniques, finishing projects, organizing your stash, teaching youngsters, or personal goals like getting fit or stopping smoking, every day gives you a chance to improve something, start anew, and be thankful. 

Here at Kreinik, our 2016 Quest is to journey with shops, designers, publications, makers, and stitchers to rejuvenate a love of color, texture and dimension in everything. We want to help you embellish the world, brighten your corner of it, share the love of all things creative, and have fun. We are thankful for you, our friends and customers, and can't wait to make life better for you in any way that we can.

Where do we begin? With three things:

1. A new Kreinik Metallic Color Card
Colors in the Kreinik metallic thread line aren't static; they move with the flow of trends, moods, and seasons. Since colors have been added, discontinued, dye lots changed, we created an updated Kreinik Metallic Color Card, available now through your favorite needlework store or www.kreinik.com. This tool (which contains actual thread swatches) will keep you organized and make it easier to pick colors for your next project. Plus, if you're reading a chart and don't recognize a number, the color card will show you the color.


2. New thread colors
Ok, we can't reveal too much about these fun new shades available in your favorite Kreinik Braids, because they are debuting at the TNNA trade show this week in California (businesses: come to the Kreinik booth! Visit www.tnna.org for show details). Trade show attendees get to see them first. We'll post pictures after the show on our Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest, and Flickr pages. You're going to love the cheerful colors that fill in some shading areas and can be used in many design themes.


3. Designer shoelaces for a cause
It may seem strange that Kreinik is coming out with a line of shoelaces, but they are simply a creative, colorful use of your favorite fibers—devoted to a worthwhile cause. The Kreinik family lost their son Charles to suicide last year. These C.A.K.S. shoelaces honor Charles and others in similar situations. A portion of the proceeds go toward suicide prevention, addiction counseling and grief support programs. They are fun, colorful, and cheerful, designed for every day wear or sports/cheerleading groups. Available in two lengths, with metal tips, the first color group glows in the dark. A special custom-lace program has been developed for groups to do fundraising with the laces. Contact us at info@kreinik.com for details.

Let's make 2016 a fabulous, fun year. Re-fresh, re-ignite, re-invent, and re-create everything that is good, colorful and creative to brighten lives everywhere.

For more information:
1. COLOR CARD: https://www.kreinik.com/shops/Kreinik-Metallic-Thread-Color-Card.html
2. THREAD COLORS: stay tuned!
3. SHOELACES: http://www.kreinik.com/shops/CAKS/

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New: Designer Shoelaces For A Cause

Shoelaces? Yes! Made from the quality, colorful Kreinik threads you use for stitching. This project of love comes from the Kreinik family, made to honor their son Charles who passed away in 2015. Charles loved colorful shoelaces, and this line was created so people of all ages could step out in fun, brighten their corner of the world, and donate to worthy causes.
C.A.K.S. Laces honor Charles Austin Kreinik who took his own life at age 28. In the end, Charles was affected by physical pain, alcoholism and depression, but in brighter days he was a gifted person of quirky humor and generous spirit. You could even spot that in his clothes: he loved wearing unique, patterned socks and bow ties.

Suicide dimmed that light. However, Charles’ parents, Doug and Myla Kreinik, want others to keep theirs shining brightly.  One small way to do that is through these fun shoelaces, made from Kreinik threads in West Virginia.

Wear these colorful laces to bring cheerful color to the day and show your sparkling personality. A portion of the proceeds  from C.A.K.S. Laces will benefit a fund designated for suicide prevention, addiction counseling, and grief support programs

So lace up your shoes, put one foot in front of the other, and keep on going—or dancing! Your purchase helps others, supports grieving families, and makes the world a little brighter. These cool laces are made with Kreinik glow-in-the-dark fibers and look awesome under a blacklight.

Click here to purchase.


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News direct from thread maker Kreinik Mfg. Co., Inc., located in Parkersburg, West Virginia. Visit our factory outlet store when you are in the area; call for hours 1-800-537-2166.

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