What I find amazing, is that she doesn't quite get how to anchor her
thread, or how to thread more than one strand of floss into the
needle, but she can see the placement of the pattern onto the material
so easily, something I have trouble with. I can see many companionable
days of stitching ahead...
I, too, am teaching my daughter who is 7. She is picking up on it very
quickly. I start her off in the right place and she takes it from there. I
love not having to watch as she makes each stitch, so I work next to her on my
own.
Greta
>I, too, am teaching my daughter who is 7. She is picking up on it very
>quickly. I start her off in the right place and she takes it from there. I
>love not having to watch as she makes each stitch, so I work next to her on
>my
>own.
What patterns are you using? My DD is interested, but she just hasn't gotten
the hang of it - and I think I need a simpler pattern. She is six. She can't
seem to make consistant x's, though. She starts out with an x, but gradually
she is doing straight lines.
Kim
Fabrics2U - Buy 10 patterns and get one free!
<http://members.aol.com/fabrics2u/index.html>
I wonder whether she would find it easier to stay on the diagonal using
plastic canvas? The grid pattern is much more obvious than on cloth.
Emily M.
>I wonder whether she would find it easier to stay on the diagonal using
>plastic canvas? The grid pattern is much more obvious than on cloth.
>
>
We have tried that and it does help... She still ends up going straight across
after about 10 stitches though.... She's left handed - wonder if that has
anything to do with it?
Probably. Have you tried starting her from the opposite corner and
having her work "backwards"?
My second son was ambidextrous as a preschooler. If he picked up the
pencil with his left hand, he did perfect mirror writing. In first
grade, he somehow got started using his right hand for writing --
probably by watching what the other kids did, since no one ever tried to
get him to change over.
Emily M.
It was also fun to wear it as part of my costume in the off-Broadway
show I did back in '95.
What a nice gift to give your daughter... my mom thought any kind of
stitching, needlework, etc. was a waste of time and money. It's
good that I learned differently! <gg>
Gentle stitching as you go,
Marny
Joi Ramey wrote in message
<3672c8a0....@news.cha.bellsouth.net>...
>My daughter, who is ten now, is letting me teach her how to
>cross-stitch. This is so touching, because I was ten or eleven when
I
>first began to learn needlework ...
>
>In article <19981207081422...@ng58.aol.com>, gspri...@aol.com
>(Gspring142) writes:
>
>>I, too, am teaching my daughter who is 7. She is picking up on it very
>>quickly. I start her off in the right place and she takes it from there. I
>>love not having to watch as she makes each stitch, so I work next to her on
>>my
>>own.
>
>What patterns are you using? My DD is interested, but she just hasn't gotten
>the hang of it - and I think I need a simpler pattern. She is six. She can't
>seem to make consistant x's, though. She starts out with an x, but gradually
>she is doing straight lines.
>Kim
We're using a Celtic knotwork pattern, which is very simple. I also
enlarged it by copying it on a piece of graph paper, so she could keep
track of what she's doing using a highlighter.
Six is a little young. My daughter has been 'practicing' since she was
about six or seven, but lacked the fine motor skills and coordination
to produce consistent cross stitches until just recently. At six, we
worked on backstitches and outlining. She became very good at that,
could even produce simple designs from her imagination. You might work
on something that requires less small muscle control until she's a
little older.
> At six, we
>worked on backstitches and outlining. She became very good at that,
>could even produce simple designs from her imagination. You might work
>on something that requires less small muscle control until she's a
>little older.
Thanks - we'll give that a try.
Joi Ramey wrote:
> On 07 Dec 1998 13:55:20 GMT, fabr...@aol.com (Fabrics2U) wrote:
>
> >
> >In article <19981207081422...@ng58.aol.com>, gspri...@aol.com
> >(Gspring142) writes:
> >
> >>I, too, am teaching my daughter who is 7. She is picking up on it very
> >>quickly. I start her off in the right place and she takes it from there. I
> >>love not having to watch as she makes each stitch, so I work next to her on
> >>my
> >>own.
> >
> >What patterns are you using? My DD is interested, but she just hasn't gotten
> >the hang of it - and I think I need a simpler pattern. She is six. She can't
> >seem to make consistant x's, though. She starts out with an x, but gradually
> >she is doing straight lines.
> >Kim
>
> We're using a Celtic knotwork pattern, which is very simple. I also
> enlarged it by copying it on a piece of graph paper, so she could keep
> track of what she's doing using a highlighter.
> snip
When my "not quite 7" year old nephew was here in March, I had him do (for
example) 10 slanty lines across, and then 10 more slanty lines back, to make the
Xs. After while, he had a pretty good grasp on what he was supposed to be
doing. That might be easier than trying to do the entire X at one time. The
number of slanty lines across & back gave me time to help the other two, or to
get in a few stitches of my own.
Liz from Humbug
I feel that children need to take their own pace at learning
to stitch. My dd is 4 <turns 5 in a month> and she is
content to "stitch" on scrap fabric and with spare floss.
She does basic lines. I don't stress her learning a cross
stitch until she can read a pattern.
I do enjoy stitching with my kids.
jb
whose daughter loving askes: "Momma, can I crotch-stitch
with you now? I do a pretty job, see????"
Joi Ramey wrote:
>
> My daughter, who is ten now, is letting me teach her how to
> cross-stitch. This is so touching, because I was ten or eleven when I
Have you thought about one of the "quickpoint" canvases that some needlepoint
shops carry? The only problem may be that when my daughters discovered
needlepoint on painted canvases they lost interest in charted cross stitch.
It's really expensive to get the three of us in the shops together these days!
One of the highlights was when my local shop staff talked to my older daughter
about changing to basketweave to help eliminate distortion in her canvases and
she picked it up after a five minute mini lesson. Sandy looked at me and said
"You know we have women who come in here and can't do this after a three
session class." I have trouble imagining having that much difficulty learning
it, but that's the way I am with knitting, so to each their own. Meanwhile, I
was very proud of my daughter!
We also deal with the fact that I am very left handed and they are both right
handed so it gets interesting sometimes!
Casey
In article <19981225003422...@ng-cc1.aol.com>,
-----------== Posted via Deja News, The Discussion Network ==----------
http://www.dejanews.com/ Search, Read, Discuss, or Start Your Own
I just took a class in how to paint your own needlepoint canvases, and
I'm really looking forward to doing LOTS of this. I unknowingly chose a
rather challenging design for my first try, because I chose a large
Easter egg kind of thing (it was taken from a Pysansky design, which is
a Ukrainian form of egg decoration that is simply gorgeous).
I'd love to hear from those of you who paint your own canvases to get
some ideas. Here's one: over Christmas, I traced around the hands of
my family members, and will combine these "hands" into a design. It's
ultimately going to be a gift for my newly adopted (from Ukraine) little
niece. Her hands are really little :-)
We used acrylic paint on mono canvas in the class.
Diane
--
Author of The Home-Alone Dog: How to have a happy
dog when you're hardly ever home
(An book-on-tape for busy dog owners)
http://home.earthlink.net/~homealonedog
victoria
On Mon, 28 Dec 1998 01:39:44 -0600, Diane Bassett
<homeal...@earthlink.net> wrote:
~Dear stitching friends,
~
~I just took a class in how to paint your own needlepoint canvases,
and
~I'm really looking forward to doing LOTS of this. I unknowingly
chose a
~rather challenging design for my first try, because I chose a large
~Easter egg kind of thing (it was taken from a Pysansky design, which
is
~a Ukrainian form of egg decoration that is simply gorgeous).
~
~I'd love to hear from those of you who paint your own canvases to get
~some ideas. Here's one: over Christmas, I traced around the hands
of
~my family members, and will combine these "hands" into a design.
It's
~ultimately going to be a gift for my newly adopted (from Ukraine)
little
~niece. Her hands are really little :-)
~
~We used acrylic paint on mono canvas in the class.
~
~Diane
A couple of years ago, I started embroidery. In my city, I could only
find TWO patterns (I wanted to do pictures, not designs on the end of
napkins). So, after learning how to thread a needle, I started creating
my own pictures. So far, I have been keeping things simple - lifelike
birds and cartoon characters(the cartoons aren't lifelike, of course,
but they certainly resemble the real cartoons). The satisfaction I feel
from sdeeing these totally original creations come to life in thread is
almost beyond words. Now I hear that others are doing similar things
... it's almost like I found a long-lost relative. GO FOR IT!
Steve Reid
nbp...@nbnet.nb.ca