Recently, while I was researching queen-stitch motifs on early samplers, I was drawn to a lovely early-seventeenth-century English spot sampler that is housed in the Metropolitan Museum of Art. I have always been charmed by spot samplers, with their motley assortment of stitches, motifs, and techniques. The prevailing theory is that spot samplers, unlike schoolgirl or marking samplers, were created as an “aide-mémoire” or personal pattern record for their makers.
Geometric motifs were commonly worked in a diaper pattern (a regular repeat in all directions), and they were frequently arranged in repeating square, rectangular, or lozenge forms.
By its very nature, queen stitch may be arranged in a vertical, horizontal, or diagonal fashion, allowing one to vary its orientation to add subtle dimension to the stitching. I have combined several…
