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Articles

“Regular Progressive Work Occupies My Mind Best”: Needlework as a Source of Entertainment, Consolation and Reflection

Pages 176-187 | Published online: 28 Jun 2016
 

Abstract

This article examines the experiences of sociable and solitary needlewomen in the long eighteenth century to reveal some of the emotional benefits derived from the act of sewing. Following Rosenwein’s theory of “emotional communities,” this article considers how needlework was centered in a number of emotional groups sited within the domestic sphere. The article will argue that the home was the place for “emotional sewing” and that both sociable and solitary sewing provided sources of emotional support. It considers evidence from eighteenth-century women’s diaries and reminiscences, including those written by Sarah Hurst, Anna Larpent, Catherine Hutton, and Gertrude Savile, which provides a rare opportunity to consider feelings about a skill traditionally passed from mother to daughter and frequently practiced in social groups. Despite the feeling that needlework symbolized the restricted role of eighteenth-century women, who were confined to their domestic environment while constrained by male expectations, the article suggests that the subversive side of sewing should not be ignored. Well-practiced in all needlework skills, some women may have had a different view of needlework using the hours spent sewing to focus on other concerns and negotiate time for their social, emotional, and intellectual well-being. It examines the likely difference between female and mixed groups when good cheer and merriment may have been as important as intellectual discussion and emphasizes that solitary sewing allowed time for reflection and consolation.

Notes

1. The diaries of Anna Margaretta Larpent 1790–1830 are held in the Huntington Library, California, USA, Ref. HM 31201; Microfilm of the journals can be seen at the British Library M1016/1–7. In this article, the latter reference number will be used; Beale Citation1891; Saville Citation1997; Djabri Citation2003.

2. http://www.ctacostume.org.uk/uploaded_files/2012%20Miscellany%20standard%20size.pdf ; Patchwork bed hangings andbed cover, Collection of NorwichCastle Museum, Norfolk Museumsand Archaeology Service, NCM

1929.116.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Bridget Long

Bridget Long is a Visiting Research Fellow in History at the University of Hertfordshire. A past President of The Quilters’ Guild of the British Isles, she is an advisor to the Quilt Museum and Gallery at York and an Associate Fellow of the International Quilt Study Center and Museum, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, USA. Her particular interests are domestic needlework, particularly patchwork and learning to sew in the long eighteenth century.

[email protected]

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