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         Rug Hooking:     more books (100)
  1. Marketing To Sell Rug HookingPatterns Online by Jassen Bowman and James Orr, 2007
  2. Sales Models For Your Rug Hooking Kits Online Business by Jassen Bowman and James Orr, 2007

141. Rag Rugs: Anchored Loop Rugs, American Locker Hooking Rugs
Anchored loop rag rugs, made with a rug hook and lacing needle or a locker hook.
http://www.netw.com/~rafter4/anchor.htm
Home Site Map Articles
(history, advice, free directions)
... "Connections"
Rugmaker's Homestead Rag Rugs Tour
#11: Anchored Loop Rugs
(American "Locker Hooking")
You may have heard of the Australian "Locker Hooking", a technique for making rugs on burlap or canvas with yarns and roving. What you probably didn't know was that this same method was done in America with strips of fabric ('rags'), and as with so many types of traditional rugs, it was called by a different name: the "Anchored Loop". Anchored Loop rugs were made with a combination of two tools, a traditional rug hook to pull though a loop of fabric strip, and a lacing needle or bodkin to lace the anchoring strip through the loop. These rugs were preferred over regular hooked rugs, since when completed the loops of fabric could not be pulled out. In the United Kingdom, a combined tool is used. It looks like a heavy steel crochet hook at one end with a large 'eye' at the other, so that the loops can be pulled up and anchored with a single tool. These 'locker hooks' work equally well with rag strip. Modern Anchored Loop rugs are most often made using a rug canvas base, rather than burlap, since it is much easier to achieve regular stitching, and the rugs are easier to handle during construction. Anchored loop rugs can also be combined with Tambour braids, as in the rug shown here. The border is of a simple tambour braid, while the center of the rug is the anchored loop. The photo gives a good idea of how the two different textures can complement each othereven when the stitching is done with the identical fabric strip.

142. HOME PAGE
Offers supplies for hooking rugs in wool fabrics with burlap or linen backings. Features patterns, rug kits, products, courses, exhibitions and contact information.
http://www.hookarug.com/
HIGHLAND HEART HOOKERY Home Page Enter Patterns Products ...
Enter
NEWS FLASH !!!
MARJORIE JUDSON TEACHING IN HALIFAX THIS FALL!! SEE INSTRUCTIONS PAGE.
Welcome to Highland Heart Hookery
CLICK HERE FOR NEW ADDITIONS
RUG HOOKING SUPPLIES
Give a Gift Certificate for Any Occasion! ighland Heart Hookery is a home based business, offering a wide variety of supplies for rug hooking in the traditional manner of wool fabrics in a variety of backings. We are a quality retail rug hooking business located in Atlantic Canada. Our products and services are featured on this web site. Whether you visit us on the Web or in our store, please feel free to browse. Let us know if you require assistance or have any questions. ur emphasis is on new, pure wools. Our beautiful, hand-dyed wools are sought after, around the world, by those who want to hook beautiful rugs. They are available to you through our mail order business, as are our lines of Folk Art patterns, based upon the paintings of Maud Lewis and Joe Norris. ighland Heart Hookery enjoys the contacts and communications made possible by memberships in the Rug Hooking Guild of Nova Scotia, ATHA

143. Ballyhoo! Rug Hooking Design Home Page
Offers original folk art designs for hooking. Features designs intended for hooking with wide cut wool strips.
http://www.ballyhoorugs.com

Welcome to Ballyhoo! Rug Design,
home of hand-drawn patterns on monk's cloth
by rug hooking artist, Jennifer Wells.
Contact Information
Telephone Address
3636 Redondo Drive
Lafayette, IN 47905 E-mail
jen@ballyhoorugs.com
[ Home ] About Me Patterns Shipping/Payment Contact Me ... Coupon! Send mail to jen@ballyhoorugs.com with questions or comments about this web site.
Last modified: 09/30/02

144. Deanne Fitzpatrick Rug Hooker
Deanne learned to hook rugs because she wanted rugs for an old farmhouse where she had As soon as Deanne started hooking rugs she knew it was for her.
http://www.dailywriting.net/FitzpatrickWeb.htm
when this photo was taken Deanne planned to be a singer Deanne Fitzpatrick grew up on a hill overlooking the water, and watching it was her pastime. "That is a natural part of life by the water," she explains. "You watch it and plan your day by the rhythms of the tides. The omnipotence of the water is clear and understood by coastal people. It is said that you should never take the water for granted because it can only be counted on to change." Deanne's rug 'The Lookout' captures the essence of what she saw. Wanting What I Have I am so small
on seven acres
beneath a starry sky
rich blues lit up by fireflies
in knee high grass surprising me with their light. My pick up sits in the front drive
beyond a grey shingled barn
housing mounds of colour
and freezing out the moths The pitch of my roof is perfect,
the green clapboard washed out
and smoke rising

145. Finding Aid - Helen Martin King Materials - Lyon College
Today rugs hooked by Helen Martin King are both rare and prized. Brochure “Hooked rug Patterns hooking Helps” by Mrs. Harry King
http://www.lyon.edu/webdata/groups/library/rcol/king.htm
Helen Martin King Materials
Lyon College Special Collections
Regional Studies Center
Mabee-Simpson Library
Lyon College
P.O. Box 2317
Batesville, AR 72503-2317
Telephone: 870-698-4330
Introduction Title: Helen Martin King Materials Accession number: 92-003-AC Collection size: 0.5 linear ft. (1 box) Donor: William Jackson Butt II Repository: Lyon College Special Collections, Regional Studies Center Information About Helen Martin King and the Collection Helen Martin King (1895-1988) was a longtime Batesville Arkansas, resident who gained notoriety in the mid-20 th century as both a skillful hooked rug maker and a designer of hooked rug patterns. King was a native of Powhatan Arkansas Lawrence County ) whose father’s business interests brought the family to Batesville during Helen’s childhood. She attended the Arkansas College preparatory school before marrying a neighbor, Fitzhugh Hail, in 1913. However, when her husband’s unexpected death ended her brief marriage tragically the following year, Helen embarked on an educational odyssey that would take her to the Cincinnati Conservatory of Music, the Ohio Mechanical Institute, the Cincinnati Art Museum , and Sophie Newcomb College in New Orleans Louisiana While studying at the latter college, she met and married Harry King, a young Methodist minister from

146. Rag Rugs: Hooked, Poked, Prodded, Bodkin And Shuttle Rugs
Traditional Hooked rugs and related methods. Traditional hooked rugs are made with a rug hook which looks like a small crochet hook attached to a wooden
http://www.netw.com/~rafter4/hooked.htm
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Rugmaker's Homestead Rag Rugs Tour
#12 Hooked, Punched, Poked, Prodded, Bodkin
All six of these rug types are fairly closely related. They are all traditionally made with narrow strips of wool worked through a burlap, monkscloth or linen base, or rug canvas. All of the rugs work on the same principle. When wool strips are put through a loosely woven fabric, the strands in the weave tighten to hold the wool in place. The exception is the bodkin rug which is additionally secured by the way the strips are cut.
Hooked rugs were often combined with unrelated techniques to achieve particular effects or as a border for the hooking. Some of these methods included braided borders, tambour and the anchored loop. RUGS WORKED FROM THE FRONT SIDE: HOOKED RUGS Traditional hooked rugs are made with a rug hook which looks like a small crochet hook attached to a wooden handle. They are worked on the front side of the rug and made by pulling up loops of wool through the burlap or fabric base. Hooked rugs were often made following patterns printed on old burlap feed sacks, like the piggy, here. The older style of hooked rugs is called "primitive" hooking and is done with wider strips of wool (3/16" to 1/4" or larger). "Fine" hooking is done with very narrow strips of wool, and the designs include elaborate shadings to represent details of flowers or scenery.

147. Decorating : Other : Hooked Rug Pillow : Home & Garden Television
Contemporary pattern to try with this oldfashioned craft.
http://www.hgtv.com/hgtv/dc_fabrics_other/article/0,1793,HGTV_3390_1376360,00.ht
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Hooked Rug Pillow
Carol Duvall Show : Episode CDS-812

Materials: printed hooking pattern on fabric like burlap, linen or monk's cloth
wool (two graduated swatches with eight values of color, 6" x 36" spot dye, and 1/2 yard of background color)
medium rug hook from Harry M. Fraser Company
scissors or Bliss Model A cloth stripper from Harry M. Fraser Company 14" elevated rug hooking frame polyester fiberfill Steps:
  • Center the printed pattern on the canvas onto the hooking frame.
  • Cut the woven wool fabric into strips approximately 1/8" wide. Separate the strips by color.
  • Starting in the center of the pillow, hold the wool strips underneath the pattern. Working from the back of the canvas, pull one end of a wool strip through to the top side of the canvas, then pull the remaining length of the strip up through the canvas in loops to create the pile of the rug. Pull the end of the strip to the top side of the rug.
  • Continue to fill in the design pattern on the canvas with strips of wool as outlined in step 2. If desired, outline the design pattern first then filled in with loops.
  • 148. Hooked On Rugs!
    For a foot warming and perhaps even budget boosting craft try making your own rugs including hooking techniques and advice getting started beginning
    http://www.motherearthnews.com/library/1983_January_February/Hooked_on_Rugs_
    @import "/css/men.css";
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    Archive CD Organic Coffee Organic Tea ... Event Calendar Directories
    Carpenters' Directory Soil Testing Labs Hatcheries Directory Green Homes ... Print Issue #79 - January/February 1983 HOOKED ON RUGS!
    Borgne M. Keith On a frosty morning, when you start to swing your dreading-to-touch-the-cold-floor feet out of your snug bed, wouldn't it be nice to know there's a cuddly hooked rug waiting for them? That floor covering can warm you inside, too . . . if it's an "heirloom" that you made yourself! And you can create a cozy treat for your toes, because hooking requires neither special needle-working ability nor a big budget. If you've got a rug-sized scrap of burlap to use as backing, some odds and ends of old wool clothing to recycle, a dollar or two to spend on the one necessary tool, and a few stay-at-home hours to spare . . . you can soon be a homestead rug hooker. What's more, if you become really good at this craft, you can use it to turn a profit. There's quite a demand for fine handmade floor coverings, you see . . . and the price tags on quality hooked rugs can run from $100 to $1,000.

    149. VHS: Rug
    Vermont Union rug. Hooked by Helen Prouty Tracy, Barre. Begun in 1941 and finished in 1981. Wool on burlap. This rug is a variation on a design
    http://www.vermonthistory.org/precious/rug.htm
    "Vermont Union" Rug
    Hooked by Helen Prouty Tracy, Barre. Begun in 1941 and finished in 1981. Wool on burlap.
    This rug is a variation on a design representing Vermont's entry as the fourteenth state in the Union, an appropriate subject in 1941, when Vermont was celebrating the 150th anniversary of its statehood. Tracy translated an original late-nineteenth-century pattern by Edward Frost into a round design. She emphasized its Vermont theme by adding Camel's Hump and Mount Mansfield in the background and including some personal symbols from her own life in Vermont.
    Tracy began her studies with Charlotte Stratton of Montpelier, who became one of the premier teachers and revivalists of rug hooking in the United States after World War II. In her book Rug Hooking Made Easy, Stratton wrote that Tracy's rug was "probably the finest scenic rug ever hooked." When Stratton left Vermont in the late 1940s, Tracy set aside the project. In 1979 Tracy began to take classes with another well-known teacher, Anne Ashworth, and with her encouragement finished the rug in 1981.
    Exhibit Index Back to Previous Item Forward to Next Exhibit Item

    150. Arts Buzz
    Like many of the contemporary rug hookers, Polly Miller, Nantucket’s very own hooker , Dirt, mud, spills, and sunlight are enemies of your hooked rugs.
    http://www.yesterdaysisland.com/03_articles/crafts/first.html
    Other Articles Hooking on Nantucket by Robyn Smith Nantucket homes are filled with all sorts of wonderful handcrafted objects, some made by the owners, others purchased on the island in one of the many antique stores, art galleries or gift shops. Early American folk art, such as whirligigs, quilts, and hooked rugs are among the most coveted. Many of the earliest hooked rugs that survive today came from maritime settlements. The long, inactive periods at sea led to the invention of all sorts of crafts, such as scrimshaw, macrame and an early, primitive form of rug hooking in which sailors used bits of raveled burlap to create marine scenes on a rough linen background. Rug hooking has a history that spans a hundred and fifty years in this country. However, it was from the l850s until the l930s that this craft became somewhat of a craze among American housewives. The technique was carried on, perfected and flourished as a practical as well as recreational pastime. Families and friends often got together for "rug frolics", the equivalent of the quilting bee. Just as our early homemakers pieced together scraps of fabric from worn-out clothing to make patchwork quilts, strips of worn clothing were used to create hooked rugs. It is only more recently however, that we have come to appreciate the hooked rug as an important part of our American heritage. Perhaps, like quilts, when used strictly for utilitarian purposes we tended to take rugs for granted, never thinking to elevate them to the status of an art form. With our growing interest in American folk art, there comes an appreciation for their design, craftsmanship and historic value. Just as time adds significance to early quilts, so it is with the hooked rug.

    151. Textiles : Hooked Rugs :
    1930s COTTAGE Folk Art Hooked rug Backing Pattern UNUSED Use this for making hooked rugs with rug yarn, knitting worsted or rags. Buy!! Enjoy!
    http://www.rubylane.com/collectibles/,id=78.6.html
    @import "http://pics.rubylane.com/0/rl.css"; Help ? My Account Shopping Bag Sign In ... Textiles Hooked Rugs Page: Items 1 - 14 of 14 Textiles Hooked Rugs Bedspreads Clothing, Accessories ... Tapestry in other lanes Antiques Artisans All Lanes Search Tools Show Pics Only
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    Collectibles: Textiles: Rugs
    AMERICAN FOLK ART CIRCA 1933! NEVER USED! This is a burlap printed backing for a hooked rug. It is circa 1933 as it has "NRA MEMBER" printed on one edge. The condition is near mint the possibilities are ENDLESS! You could expand or reduce this ...
    TOINETTE'S Vintage Clothing Jew ~ Exclusively on Ruby Lane
    Hooked Rug with Mill Race Scene
    Collectibles: Textiles: Rugs
    This charming, scenic hooked rug pictures a red mill by a rushing stream with a water wheel. It is yarn-hooked on a coarse, white cotton ground. The yarn seems to be a wool-cotton blend. The fringe, made of brown cotton, dates from the 1940's or 1950 ...
    Turtle Creek Antiques Inc. ~ Exclusively on Ruby Lane
    Dritz Self-Threading Automatic Rug Hook 1946 Collectibles: Textiles: Dritz Rug Hook Presenting........this Dritz Automatic Rug Hook in the original box ( box is a bit beat up) and the original instructions and in fine working order. Use this for making hooked rugs with rug yarn, knitting worsted or rags. Buy!! Enjoy!! Mailing info: ...

    152. CM Magazine: Acadian Cultures Series.
    French Acadian names crop up throughout the story of how hooked rugs became a Unfortunately a rift developed for a time amongst the rug hookers when
    http://www.umanitoba.ca/cm/vol7/no13/cheticamp.html
    CM . . . . Volume VII Number 13 . . . . March 2, 2001 Acadian Cultures Series. Grades 6 and up / Ages 11 and up. Review by Joan Payzant.
    Cheticamp: The Hooked Rug Capital of the World. Louisdale, NS: Colouring the Road Video Productions (P.O. Box 326, Louisdale, NS, B0E 1V0), 1998. 10 min., VHS, $29.95.
    Cheticamp: Gateway to the Cabot Trail. Louisdale, NS: Colouring the Road Video Productions, 1999. 25 min., VHS, $29.95.
    Cheticamp: The Hooked Rug Capital of the World.
    This is a great video although it is a little disappointing because it is so short. The opening scenes introduce Cheticamp, a beautiful French Acadian village in Cape Breton, Nova Scotia, with scenes of a rowboat in a peaceful anchorage, the imposing church, heart of the village, its harbour with fishing boats at their moorings, and a group of people on horseback riding on a long sandy beach. French Acadian names crop up throughout the story of how hooked rugs became a major industry in the village populated by Deveaus, Chiassons, Boudreau's, Doucets, Poiriers, and Muises. Through their cooperation and artistry, the unique handwork of this enterprising village is now known in the Vatican, Buckingham Palace and the White House. Like many early settlers, Cheticamp women hooked rag rugs out of old clothing cut into narrow strips. Gradually came the transition to wool which they dyed themselves. Alexander Graham Bell's summer home, Beinnn Breagh, at Baddeck was not too far from Cheticamp. Mrs. Bell and her daughter, Mrs. Fairchild, became interested in the Cheticamp rugs and often took their visitors to see them. One of these friends, Miss Lillian Burke of New York, made suggestions to the rug hookers to improve the quality of their work, saying that finer wool in pastel shades would add to the beauty of the rugs. She bought many of the rugs cheaply and sold them in New York at high prices. Unfair as this was, she is credited with starting the big industry which Cheticamp rugs have now become.

    153. Claire Murray | Hand Hooked Rugs, Home Accessories And Women's Clothing.
    Claire Murray s online store features her entire line of hand hooked wool rugs, women s apparel, home accessories, kitchen and bath accessories,
    http://www.clairemurray.com/tips.asp
    @import url(/css/formating.css); Browse Catalog search/catalog quick shop: Home Gift Registry Request a Catalog Store Locations ... Rug Hooking Tips Traditional Rug Hooking Rug hooking is an American craft that began in the 1600's and has been
    passed down from generation to generation. Our 100% wool is the finest
    available and is carefully dyed to assure that your rug will last for many generations.
    I think you will find rug hooking to be easy to learn as well as very rewarding.
    It is important that you read this information and your rug
    hooking instructions before starting your project.
    I know you will be delighted with your Claire Murray hooked rug kit.
    Because rug hooking is a leisurely craft and not an exact art such as
    needlepoint or counted cross stitch, it allows much more room for
    personal expression. I encourage all of our hookers to relax and

    154. Claire Murray | Hand Hooked Rugs, Home Accessories And Women's Clothing.
    Claire Murray s online store features her entire line of hand hooked wool rugs, women s apparel, home accessories, kitchen and bath accessories,
    http://www.clairemurray.com/description.asp
    @import url(/css/formating.css); Browse Catalog search/catalog quick shop: Home Gift Registry Request a Catalog Store Locations ... Rug Hooking Tips Claire Murray's website features more than her beautiful hand hooked 100% wool rugs ! The Claire Murray website also features home accessories like dishes woven throws bedding , even apparel
    Claire Murray's home line begins with her beautiful hand-hooked 100% wool rug designs . Motifs include botanicals botanical fruit wildflowers gardens ... Tropical themes with colorful fish even Nemo can be found here , wildlife rugs featuring bears raccoons and bunnies, as well as nautical themes with sailboats clipper ships , starfish and beaches. Even children's rugs with teddy bears fairies and nursery rhyme characters , including Noah's Ark . Claire Murray's ever-popular hand hooked rug designs have been translated to a complete line of decorative items for the home, washable bath mats, flannel sheets duvets and shams, even quilts.
    On the website you may Search by Rug Size or find a Rug Underlay
    Claire Murray offers special sales on rugs, home décor and apparel that change almost every week!

    155. St. Petersburg Times Online: News Of Citrus County
    After its initial appearance in the US Colonies, hooked rugs reemerged as a fine WHAT Hooked rugs exhibit, Craft as Art Seeing with an Artistic Eye
    http://www.sptimes.com/2005/07/15/Citrus/Hooked_on_fine_rugs.shtml
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    Hooked on fine rugs
    The Webber Center Gallery in Ocala has an eye-catching assortment of hand-crafted beauties. Catch them before they're gone.
    By JORGE SANCHEZ, Times Staff Writer Published July 15, 2005 As many area artists continue to test the boundary between fine crafts and art, displays of fine crafts, such as wall hangings and glassworks, are beginning to fill the exhibit walls of local art galleries. Last month, the Citrus County Art League gallery in Citrus Hills debuted its fine crafters group with a members' exhibit. The show was well attended and featured beadwork, pottery and wall hangings. This month, the Webber Center Gallery at Central Florida Community College in Ocala is showing off an eye-catching assortment of another fine craft: hooked rugs. These feature the works of nine members of the Ocala Rug Hooking Guild.

    156. Hooked Rugs And Designs Complete Kits, Patterns And Books - Early American Desig
    National WOOL FELT Yardage, Woolen Felt, Indygo Junction Pattern Books, Hallowing Harvest, Making Spirits Bright, C. PendletonColonial Crafts offers secure
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    157. Shelburne Museum These United States 50 Statehood Rugs By Molly
    She began making hooked rugs age 14 and graduated from the Rhode Island School of Rugs are hooked by looping cloth in different colors through a woven
    http://www.shelburnemuseum.org/whats_on/new_exhibits_detail.php?id=3

    158. Happy Hunting - Hooked Rugs
    This area has long been famous for hooked rugs, so this was a good Hooked rugs were first introduced into America along the eastern seaboard,
    http://www.thegavel.net/Julyhap.html
    Happy Hunting - Hooked Rugs
    by Cheryl York-Cail
    It's that time of year again - vacation time - so once again I'm doing my story from the coast of Maine. This area has long been famous for hooked rugs, so this was a good opportunity to explore some of the nearby shops, and see what's available. Hooked rugs were first introduced into America along the eastern seaboard, and the Canadian Maritimes. The art of hooking was popular with sailors and European settlers. Rug hooking has a long history with its roots lost in antiquity. No one seems to know just where this technique of rug making first evolved. Various experts and historians have attributed this art's origins to many different places such as China, 3rd to 7th century Egypt, or Scandinavia. Some historians think that hooking has its origins in prehistoric times. Hooking has been long associated with seafaring countries. The earliest American hooked rugs probably dated from the 18th century, but the rare survivor from this period are usually only to be found in museums. The first rugs were made from rags, and bits of leftover fabric. One of the earliest uses for these rugs was as bed rugs; they were also used on tabletops and other furniture, eventually on bare cold floors. During the early 19th century, rug hooking became more common, and by the middle of that century rug hooking was popular. Hooking was very popular in New England, and the Canadian Maritime during the 1800's.

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