Kara Rasmanis is showing work as part of the 2011 BIFB “An alphabet of found and fallen” …..Kara showed at the Elephant patch in 2009 for the biennial.
Kara Rasmanis is showing work as part of the 2011 BIFB “An alphabet of found and fallen” …..Kara showed at the Elephant patch in 2009 for the biennial.
The Elephant Patch offers 2hr embroidery classes for visitors looking to create something special
Choose your favorite design and take a class to learn all you need to complete a project.
NEW designs will be offered regularly.
Classes held Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays. (Other days by appointment)
Elephant: 7cm design on silk, with separate ear and saddle. Using 3 different threads to stitch this fabulous creation.
Pumpkin pin cushion: 3 mediums are used to make this charming pumpkin pin cushion
Strawberry scissors keeper: Silk scissors fob, shaped like a strawberry. 3 Mediums are used to make this fantastic piece.

Posted in classes
December 17, 2008
JO HAS found her creative thread in Creswick, writes GENEVIEVE BARLOW
Dressmaker Jo Maxwell was looking for a change when she opened a shop in the town of Creswick in south central Victoria and set about filling it with designs she created and produced herself.
Six months on and her outfits – ranging from floaty capes to angled skirts and fitted trousers for the 40-plus woman, to embroidered little girls’ dresses – are walking out the door.
They’re grabbing the attention of passers-by who are drawn by the enigmatic sign featuring her trademark embroidered elephant, dress and chair outside her shop, The Elephant Patch.
Housed in a converted supermarket, the shop also stocks charming old “stuff’ like leather cases, old cotton reels and the odd antique.
“I’ve always collected antiques. My husband used to call it junk,” says the groovily coiffed 50-something Jo.
Twelve months ago, she closed her by-appointment-only wedding dressmaking business, but re-emerged, determined to get on and make something of her talent.
A dressmaker all her adult life, she trained in the craft as a school leaver, worked in a factory and started her own dressmaking business in Gisborne.
She’s also a talented embroiderer and teaches at an embroidery school in Melbourne.
So, as well as housing her dress designs, The Elephant Patch is set up to host embroidery classes.
At its heart is a table big enough to seat 10 students.
Here Jo’s been teaching embroidery to groups of women who team up for a two-hour workshop “to create something special”.
The idea has taken off.
“I get women whose husbands come to the forest resort just out of town to play golf.
“The men play golf. The women come here and do embroidery.”
They’re also keen buyers of her limited-edition garments.
“I buy 10 metres of material at a time and make whatever I can from that.
“Once that’s done I move on to something else, so you won’t find the same outfit anywhere else.”
A devotee of natural fibres, Jo says she’d rather be crunchy in linens and cottons than sweating in polyester.
She sticks with silk, wool and cotton. “I can’t stand synthetics,” she says.
She’s pleased with her progress and her designs.
“All my life, this is what I’ve envisaged doing.”
Posted in Article