Booklet

Object name

Maker

Date made

Circa 2007

Place made

Description

Single sided panel with alphabets and numerals. Part of a 34-part embroidered alphabet made by Dr Isabel Elliott and completed in 2007.

Content description

Panel with embroidery on one side, featuring five alphabets and three sets of numerals 0-9 on a red linen ground. The alphabets, each of which is in a different font, are worked in silver cotton threads in cross stitches. The alphabet at the bottom is in cursive. The numerals are worked in green cotton threads also in cross stitches. The back of the panel is a green synthetic fabric made to resemble watered silk.

This panel is one of 34 parts of an embroidered alphabet made by Dr Isabel Elliott and completed in 2007. Elliott embroidered a large box which houses 32 four-sided booklets. Each booklet focuses one on letter of the alphabet and embroidery technique whose first letter matches that letter of the alphabet (A for appliqué, B for blackwork, etc.). Some letters have multiple booklets due to having multiple techniques. This large and impressive group of objects was made by Dr Isabel Margaret Elliott (1931-2016). She received her PhD from Cambridge in 1958 and became a paleobotanist at the Natural History Museum in London. It is clear that her love of science and the natural world influenced her embroidery. When she married her husband, Isabel was made to leave her job (as the Natural History Museum was then part of the civil service and married women were not allowed to be part of the civil service). She began to attend classes at the RSN after meeting a woman embroidering for a class run by that organisation. After the RSN she joined the Embroiderers' Guild. She became a Life Member of the Guild and gained her City & Guilds, which enabled her to teach. She was Mistress of Embroidery at Gloucester Cathedral and was a travelling tutor throughout the UK. Elliott produced an immense amount of embroidery, much of which is available to view at isabelelliottembroidery.com.

Dimensions

width: 30.5cm
height: 23cm

Materials

Stitches

Techniques

Credit line

Gift of Susan Perkes, 2019.

Catalogue number

RSN.2296.hh

Other numbers

RSN 2296

Web references

© Royal School of Needlework