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As a club member you’ve already received our great Easter Fun Pattern. For 20% off you can add 2 more fun Pysanki patterns:
1. The Pysanki Easter Egg roll includes 3 fun borders to finish off a special quilt; 12 Easter Eggs in a continuous border, Pysanki Chicks and Star Ponies. In fact the Star Ponies can be used any time of year. The Eggs themselves can be enlarged for blocks too.
2. Versatile Pysanki Flower is a time-saving, year round pattern that will let you quickly cover ground in a most charming way.
Remember besides the Club Special of the month you get 10% off any other patterns.
Let me tell you about Pysanki.
These uniquely decorated eggs are traditionally made at Easter time in the Ukraine region. The designs are filled with meaning and the good luck they are purported to bring is legendary.
If you’re not familiar with the term, Pysanki, let’s think of it in terms a quilter would recognize. They are “Batik Eggs.”
Now that only makes sense if you know how Batik is made. It’s done with a wax resist. Melted wax is used to “write” on the egg (or fabric in the case of Batik). After the first designs are drawn on the egg, the wax is allowed to harden and the egg is dipped in a light color dye – possibly yellow. Then more detail is added to the design, the wax hardened and the egg dipped in the next color of dye – maybe orange. The process is repeated with increasingly darker colors – purple, brown, black – until an intricate layer of design is built up. Then the wax is removed and what remains is a beautifully decorated egg. It’s an Easter Egg that’s truly a keepsake. (Not that it can be kept forever, because they are traditionally raw eggs.) Through the centuries they have been given as special gifts. The designs were illustrative of hoped for blessings.
In drawing the patterns of MeadowLyon’s “Pysanki Series,” I’ve chosen the motifs I thought most charming. Although geometric designs are, by far, most popular in real Pysanki, I find them more difficult to draw and to stitch in “continuous-line” without a lot of risky backtracking. I hope you’ll enjoy the images that I’ve created in leaning a bit more towards what we, in the U.S., think of as Easter designs. Some of them are a bit intricate because I wanted to achieved the flavor of the little wax dots and embellishments in the design. If you desire, in many cases you can by-pass the stripes and loops leaving a simpler outline of each animal or motif. Also, I don’t mind if you want to enlarge the “Eggs” in the Easter Egg Border. They would be lovely in quilt blocks.
I hope you’ll have as much enjoyment from them as I have.
Happy Easter, Judy Lyon
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