This curtain Insider
information contains many coded messages that together form a narrative
about the domestic environment. The words ‘Help me’ are stitched in human hair
on to the curtain, which also includes an embroidered QR code. The code can be
read to reveal the words ‘Escape while you can’ while the human hair contains
the DNA of the seamstress. Combined with the veil of the curtain they seem a
cry for help and a warning to others. Both types of embroidery reference Victorian
domestic needlework, such as samplers and mourning brooches, and hint at a
gothic tale of confinement and control.
Friday, 2 January 2026
Stitched QR codes and what they can reveal
This embroidered
QR code links through to my website when you read it with a smartphone. However
I first became interested in using QR codes as a way of hiding information in plain
sight in a decorative way. The idea being that the message could easily be overlooked
in the same way as domestic textiles and their makers often are. I sometimes
hide text within lace patterns but QR codes can contain much more information
in a smaller space. QR codes do have to be quite exact though for the camera on
a smart phone to recognise them. My first attempts were made in black bobbin
lace but they were not reliable enough to work every time. I tried working the
codes at an angle so the squares were cloth stitch diamonds and alternatively with
the squares as tallies, but neither worked very well. I also experimented with
crochet squares but they became too large for the backgrounds I wanted. I then
tried cross stitch embroidery straight onto my background net but that wasn’t
reliable either. Eventually I found that cross stitch embroidery on counted
thread fabric was the most effective way of producing the QR codes.
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