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Temari Techniques: A Visual Guide to Making Japanese Embroidered Thread Balls by Barbara B. Suess (24-Aug-2012) Paperback

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Bringing a time-honored art form into the modern needle-working world, this visually rich how-to guide reveals the techniques of Japanese temari balls. Anyone with an interest in fabric arts, particularly Japanese arts and design, can master stitching techniques and layer threads to create pattern, color, and texture. There are more than 40 easy-to-follow patterns to help fine-tune this skill set that will appeal to not only temari enthusiasts, but to quilters and embroiderers as well. Step-by-step directions and detailed drawings explain each technique, while mini patterns aid in practicing the new skills and help to lay the groundwork for individual and unique designs. This volume is great for beginners and for those stitchers looking for new challenges and intermediate temari designs. The book is more than a collection of once the basic techniques have been mastered, instruction is provided on how to combine patterns on the same ball to create a unique temari. A guide for left-handed stitchers is also provided.

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First published September 1, 2012

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Kelly (Maybedog).
3,480 reviews240 followers
May 31, 2022
3.5 stars

Temari is yet another craft in the craze of appropriated Japanese arts and crafts that has taken America by storm. It's not the most useful technique as it's very specific and is really just something to look pretty. But that has it's usefulness, too, and is no worse than the plethora of food and everyday object items made from felt that are apparently so popular they have their own books. (See my review for Big Little Felt Universe: Sew It, Stuff It, Squeeze It, Fun!.) The book says the roots of Temari were from the latter half of the first millennium C.E. from a men's kickball game and another game where women rolled balls between each other. (Oooo exciting! Well that era wasn't particularly pro-women's sports. I mean, how do you kick a ball when your feet have been bound so you can't walk?*)

I like this book in that it shows a traditional way of making these balls unlike another book I read that had the base being a Styrofoam ball. The instructions are quite good and make the art actually seem achievable despite the complex and perfect look of the samples. I don't think mine would be as perfectly round, though, without using a pre-molded ball, but that would come with it's own host of problems as it's a lot harder to embroider something solid.

There's a wide variety of designs and patterns although there is insufficient information to make the projects, in my opinion. In the back is a section on design and display as well as some motifs to get you started.

*My family has a sick sense of humor. My feet are tiny, disproportionate to my height even though I am short, and my parents and relatives joked on multiple occasions that my feet were so small they wouldn't even have had to bind them if I lived in ancient China. Had to?
128 reviews1 follower
February 19, 2014
This book presents good guidelines for creating Temari. There are lots of ideas that build on one another. Well done.
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews

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