Cog Embroidery: The Skirt

Poor image of cog skirt

I apologise for the shoddy photograph, but it was all I had at the time. Anyway – you can see that I put the embroidered cogs (from my earlier pillowcase prototype) onto a skirt. This was my plan, and I’m glad it worked!

Just a couple of notes – the skirt is a linen/polyester blend, and as such stretched a little on the embroidery ring. In future I’ll look for pure linen or cotton to minimise this. I only did three little cogs, because the larger cog I did on my test took so long, and I was impatient. The final effect is a bit underwhelming, I fear, but there’s nothing to stop me from adding more cogs as and when the fancy takes me. Maybe I’ll have them tumbling down the skirt in a cascade!

I’ve recieved a couple of nice comments about the cogs – mostly from people surprised that I’d actually done them myself, and not bought the skirt like that. Which is a nice backhanded compliment. ;)

Possible future plans involve adding more cogs, and/or doing some abstract steam/smoke patterns on a white article of clothing (possibly that top). However, that’s not quite as defined in my head as the cogs were.

  • Hmmm, embroidered gentlemen's hankies ;-)

    L
  • Tinkergirl
    Thankyou very much for the compliments (but the photo really is sub standard - I know I could have done better with a bit more work) :)

    But I do thank you for your kind words. They are appreciated, and I am very pleased with my cog skirt.
  • Anonymous
    Firstly, the photo is not that bad (why are you so hard on yourself?!). Secondly, the cogs turned out beautifully -- even better than your practice run, which is why (of course) you did one.

    I really like the idea of "tumbling cogs", or even a bandeau around the skirt where the existing cogs are. A "Cog Cornucopia" might also work.

    Very nice work. You can wear it with pride.
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