>>8207110
Well, like I said, women were forced to do it back in the days. My grandmother told me stories of how the nuns would force her to learn how to make clothes, crochet, knit, etc. when she didn't like it that much. And guess what? As soon as she was out of the Church residential school, she dropped all that lightning fast, except knitting and embroider simple things like chair seats. When she got married, she wanted to make part of her trousseau linen, but after making one monogram, she gave up because it was too time consuming.
Plus there was the whole freeing of women, and the women who didn't like it do it didn't teach it to their daughters.
Women started to work to get financial freedom from their husbands too. Other distractions appeared, like TV, magazines, and women could go out. There wasn't really a reason left to embroider your things.
However, now that the internet allows sharing content and making it easily available, people who still know all those patterns and techniques should be interviewed and their knowledge should be written down to pass to the next generations.