Hoopla contains thirty artist profiles / interviews, instructions for nearly thirty projects, embroidery basics, a brief history, and a few resources. Within these 400 pages, there is bound to be something for everyone.
The projects are quite unique. Personally, I found many of them odd and not to my liking — but taste is personal. Overall, I was glad that I discovered this hefty book in the public library, and had not purchased it.
Featured artists whose work I found most interesting include:
- Jenny Hart of Sublime Stitching
- Krista Muir, working with Shane Watt, on fictional map piece “Moderato"
- Ray Materson, who taught himself to stitch while incarcerated
- Sasha Webb, and her series of Goddess Women
- Kirsten Chursinoff, layered nature studies
- Aubrey Longley-Cook, animation of running dog, and series “Zombie Zoology”
- Cate Anevski, colorful faces, illustration work
- Laura Splan, doilies and lace-inspired stitching
- Penny Nickels, embroidery based in printmaking
I also appreciated this short list of films where embroidery has a cameo: La Bohéme (1926), The Heiress (1949), Les Brodeuses / Sequins / A Common Thread (2004), The Curse of the Golden Flower / Man cheng jin day huang jin jia (2006), and Bright Star (2009). A number of books, magazines, and blogs are also listed as resources.