HIDCOTE REVISITED: NEW EXHIBITION

Invited to exhibit my embroideries at Hidcote Manor, a National Trust Garden, in April 2025, I immediately thought of my first visit in the 1970’s; I had just started to embroider, and the effect that it has had on my stitched work ever since. Above is a small selection of my first-ever embroideries that were inspired by my delight and fascination with gardens and flowers.

I stared with basic canvas work and enjoyed the restrictions imposed by the strict stitching and its filling-in-until-you-finish discipline. I was designing pictures in order to learn to embroider my ideas.

It was after visiting Hidcote that I started to draw gardens, mostly details of planting and of course, topiary. I took photographs and scribbled down notes to remember colour planting and topiary shapes to develop into embroideries. Now I realise that this was the time when I found my own way of stitching by using blended colours and really just stitching my drawings. I always scribbled drawings, took too many photographs and made notes ready to be tranformed into working drawings, and this is how start my work now, almost 50 years later.

Above a rather creased poster from my first one person show at Francis Kyle Gallery in 1979, showing my small scale canvas embroideries. My early fascination with topiary is evident.

Oddly I do not actually like the idea of strictly clipped hedges, specially when trimmed into animal and bird shapes, but this feeling completely disappears when I actually see it for real. I find this ambivalence really useful and for me it provokes new ideas; why bother to make anything that holds no meaning, mystery or is simply a puzzle for you to try to solve? But mostly I am delighted by the sheer absurdity of it. Why do we tether bird-shaped hedges to heavy domes of yew – to stop them flying off?

And I have continued to embroider the topiary figures that are often seen in grand gardens. Above is ‘Great Dixter’ a small silk embroidery circa 1980, that was very inspirational in making new pieces for this exhibition. Right is ‘Lytes Carey’, another National Trust garden, this is made mainly with simple large running stitches in woollen yarns onto a wool ground for a big woollen panel, in 2001. I always enjoy seeing the dense green walls of hedges surrounding an abundance of flowers, as seen below on my several visits to Hidcote in 2024.


Insired to make new works for the exhibition, back in the studio I combined different drawings, prints and photograps of several aspects of the garden’s abundance and used some old stencils and wonky photocopies that had been over-printed with my embroidered flower images. From this I developed a collage from shoji paper and stitched silk. Then found an old photograph of the birds as I can remember them with their crowns as peacocks.

The abundance of planting in the garden beds reminded me of Gustav Klimt’s flowery lanscapes, I began to imagine the plants at Hidcote developed into a wall of flowers. I had bought a packet of paper napkins patterned with a Klimt garden for presents to friends, from a museum in Vienna, but had kept them myself. I took one and pinned it to my studio wall, with the other half formed ideas.

Stages in the inspiration: designing, drawing, dyeing and stitching my homage to Gustav Klimt. I stitched a bird in twisted silk thread on a fine silk ground, then painted dye onto another silk ground adding many of the flowers and leaves, found in my photographs, to make the flower wall. Eventually I stitched the finished bird into postion.

The finished ‘Vintage Topiary Bird’ has become the front cover of the picture book/catalogue that I have produced specially for this exhibition. It has just been delivered to the publishers in time to be printed and for sale at the start of the exhibition Inspired to Stitch: Hidcote Revisited.


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9 thoughts on “HIDCOTE REVISITED: NEW EXHIBITION

    1. Hi Maris, so good to hear from you again and actually for me to get back to posting I have/am having an amazing season of exhibitions, classes and press for the last 12 month – 2 major for me- exhibitions and all the work planning, organising and producing what goes with it and as it is so much easier on Instagram had stopped blogging but now I am back on track – on orders of the publicity departments of the various venues – how times have changed!

      But this is really resume of my work with new stuff as well and it points ot the way I will develop it so thanks for looking in on me again

      yours Janet

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    1. Thanks Lyn, well the place to show process is on a blog so there is more to come, once a tutor always a tutor, and really I want to show people what goes into making any personal work, from the heart and with the hands. Janet

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      1. Janet, I commissioned you years ago to make a piece for my husband’s 60th (picnic, 2 daughters and a Morris Minor!) – it was the most magnificent work. And now to have this exhibition link sent by a friend. What a joy. So lovely to see how your work has evolved. Carry on …

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      2. wow I remember this so clearly – you lived near a canal? but it was such an amusing embroidery to do – so fresh with the packets of favourite foods. Thank you so much for this message, especially today as I am struggling to develop a new website – that apparently I need to enable me to ‘carry on’!

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      3. Oh poor you. Find a young person to help you with that website. They find all that stuff easy. Good luck. Do add me to your mailing list … charlogood@gmail.com. And I hope our paths may cross soon … Best to you from Hobart, will be in Aus for another 6 weeks. How blessed I am x

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