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The One-Eyed Fairies

Chapter 2: FOREWORD
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About This Book

A collection of illustrated sewing-lesson stories frames practical needlework instruction as visits from tiny one-eyed fairies who live in a child's work-basket. Through playful episodes a young girl calls on the fairies and is guided through measuring, basting, running, hemming, blanket-stitch, darning, back-stitch, eyelets, cross-stitch, buttonholes, tucks, ruffles, patches, decorative stitches and simple finishing techniques. Each chapter pairs a short narrative or rhyme with step-by-step directions, diagrams, and project examples—doll clothes, marble bags, aprons, and holiday gifts—so readers can learn stitches and mending along with making small, practical hand-sewn items.

FOREWORD

This book has been written to tell little girls how much fun it is to learn to sew and make pretty things for their dolls, themselves, and other people. Of course, as Sir Bodkin says, “We can’t have gains without pains,” but it is much pleasanter to learn in play how to do things the right way. This makes it easier for us when we are grown up, because we have the knowledge “at our finger-tips.”

I hope that mothers, teachers, and those interested in girls will find this book helpful, as my experience has been that children eagerly grasp and absorb facts presented in story and rhyme.

A number of these sewing-lesson stories have appeared in the Modern Priscilla Magazine. Acknowledgment is here gratefully made for permission to use them.

Georgia Eldredge Hanley.