My sister taught me how to do blanket stitch and a couple of other basic
stitches back in October last year. Try as I might, I never mastered the
blanket stitch - uneven, upsidedown and back to front, looked messy on the
project so I gave up.
Then my daughter asked me for a quilt with the symbols from a pack of cards
on it, i.e. clubs, spade, diamond and heart. I had to do it right.
Perfectly cut out the symbols, tacked the wadding to them, then tacked the
pieces to the material and started the blanket stitch. Sister was visiting
(hadn't seen her since before Christmas) so I decided to try again and do
some work to impress her. Well I did it all right, but instead of the
'straight' bit on the edge of the material, I had the 'teeth' (for the want
of a better word) on the edge and of course it did not stop material from
fraying and didn't look very neat at all.
Janet took one look and said, your stitches are very even BUT you have it
upside down.
I have now completed all four pieces and I am so pleased and happy to say
that two of them have been done correctly and look wonderfully neat, no
fraying edges and the other two will be my 'deliberate mistake' to add
character to the quilt when it is finally finished.
I have been practicing all afternoon and I am very pleased with my efforts
so far.
Sorry about boasting but this really is an achievement for me as Janet does
embroidery, cross-stitch, appliqué, patchwork, makes teddy bears, dolls and
wall-hangings and quilts. I am a learner and had never attempted quilting
before April last year.
Di Maloney
Mornington Peninsula
Victoria Australia
--
Best Regards
pat on the hill
--
Di Maloney
Mornington Peninsula
Victoria Australia
"Patti" <Pa...@quik.clara.co.uk> wrote in message
news:h6R4shCP...@quik.clara.co.uk...
And you are not the only one to do that with blanket stitch.
One of the sewers here bought a book to learn basic
embroidery stitches, and she did her first blanket stitch
that way too. The book showed how to do the stitch, but
never explained how to set it on the fabric edge.
Now - how about a few French Knots or some Feather Stitch?
--
Cheryl & the Cats in OZ
o o o o o o
( > Y < ) ( > Y < ) ( > Y < )
Enness Boofhead Donut
http://community.webshots.com/user/witchofthewest
catsatararatATyahooDOTcomDOTau
"Di Maloney" <sas...@alphalink.com.au> wrote in message
news:45bc42f4$1...@news.chariot.net.au...
: Hi all you very clever quilters who can appliqué.
:
:
--
Boca Jan
Florida - Land of the Hurricanes
http://pg.photos.yahoo.com/ph/poo_de_doo/myphotos
"Di Maloney" <sas...@alphalink.com.au> wrote in message
news:45bc42f4$1...@news.chariot.net.au...
NAH -- those are too easy as a "scary" challenge for a beginner
(she says, tongue heavily in cheek :-) ). If we really want to scare
her, Di should try a Queen Stitch or maybe a Bullion Rose! And congrats
to Di for mastering something new, good work!!! CiaoMeow >^;;^<
I used to do a lot of embroidery on DD clothing, for some reason she
doesn't want it done anymore (she is 17 tomorrow maybe that is why
LOL)
I have a number of my maternal grandmothers embroideries to complete
one has a stitch called 'thousand flower' unfortunately I haven't been
able to find out what it is.
I still have one of my first doileys and the front is okay but the
back is really bad......
Dee in Oz
Cats, I have been shown how to do the French Knots - still practising but
getting there.
Feather stitch will have to wait for time being :>)
Tia, your suggestion "try Queen Stitch or maybe a Bullion Rose" - I asked my
sister to show me what one looks like and I nearly fainted - you never know
tho, I just might get there yet. LOL
--
Di Maloney
Mornington Peninsula
Victoria Australia
"Di Maloney" <sas...@alphalink.com.au> wrote in message
news:45bc42f4$1...@news.chariot.net.au...
Patti in Seattle
"Dee in Oz" wrote...
i used to do a lot of hand embroidery way back when i was on the road
travelling thru europe with my backpack. i'd spend an evening in the hostel
repairing my clothes rather than buy new ones. i used scraps of fabric i
found here and there and some that was given to me. i also had beads. i
wonder if any of the stuff i did for others and gave away is still floating
around the world somewhere. :)
i found these sites with pix of how to do lots and lots of stitches.
tho 'a very few different stitches' used in various combos and sometimes
mixing short and long stitches and a bead here or there can make even more
neat looking embroidery.
the bottom of this page has some of those combos shown.
http://www.prettyimpressivestuff.com/stitches/
heres some other links with lots of stitch pix to look at.
http://inaminuteago.com/stitchindex.html
http://webstitch.designwest.com/needle_stitch.html
http://www.saigan.com/kidscorner/artcraft/emb.htm
http://www.needlenthread.com/2006/06/basic-embroidery-stitches.html
this site has videos of some basic stitches, i use dialup so i didnt look at
them.
if i find any others with good pix or info will post them.
hth,
jeanne
--
Vote B'fly for President '08
san-fran at ihug dot co dot nz
nzlstar on yahoo msg'r
nzlstar on webshots
"Di Maloney" wrote...
--
Sharon from Melbourne Australia (Queen of Down Under)
http://www.geocities.com/shazrules/craft.html (takes awhile to load)
http://pg.photos.yahoo.com/ph/shazrules/my_photos (same as website but
quicker)
"Patti" <Pa...@quik.clara.co.uk> wrote in message
news:h6R4shCP...@quik.clara.co.uk...
--
Sharon from Melbourne Australia (Queen of Down Under)
http://www.geocities.com/shazrules/craft.html (takes awhile to load)
http://pg.photos.yahoo.com/ph/shazrules/my_photos (same as website but
quicker)
"Polly Esther" <miste...@mindspring.com> wrote in message
news:12rp90r...@corp.supernews.com...
I have done a seach some time ago and never knew that Millefiore meant
a thousand flowers.
Dee in Oz
> > Victoria Australia- Hide quoted text -- Show quoted text -
I have visited each of them - they were very interesting although I could
not access the first one. Just a blank page. I have bookmarked them for
future use.
Thankyou also for any future ones you come up with.
--
Di Maloney
Please remove 1 from email address to reply direct.
"nzlstar*" <fancyf...@unpickit.com> wrote in message
news:epjvq7$5fu$2...@lust.ihug.co.nz...
Have a look here for what may be your thousand flowers.
It could be Brazilian embroidery you are referring to.????????
--
Di Maloney
Please remove 1 from email address to reply direct.
"Dee in Oz" <davem...@dodo.com.au> wrote in message
news:1170056230.5...@v45g2000cwv.googlegroups.com...
the beads are made from long 'canes' of glass, fused to one another in a
design that when cross cut into single beads look like flowers.
iirc, they were first made in Italy. there is another name for them but
darned if i can recall what it is....oh wait, let me check google again.
grrrrrrr, cant work out the spelling, will find it tomorrow if i get lucky,
lol.
i've seen similar made with polyclay too.
i could see them made with thread too tho.
how does the pattern read?
if its not how i envisage what i'm talking about i'll beatle off back to my
cave.
we used to get xmas candy like this when i was a kid. i loved them, wish i
could find them now. must do more checking around next xmas, lol.
off to bed now, having an early night to see if i can get some more sleep at
night rather than being awake half the night then falling asleep all day
long, argh.
jeanne
<i did come across a renaissance bead show in Tucson this week tho, fwiw>
Millefiori meaning "thousand flowers" (mille-fleur in French) is the
technique you describe. The glass bead that is covered with flowers by
"painting" them on with molten glass is called fiorato "flowered". Is that
the name you were trying to think of?
Val
"Val" wrote...
>
> "nzlstar*" wrote...
Dee in Oz
> Dee,
> I am glad you have that information.
> I have some of my Mum's and MILs unfinished embroidery projects and when I
> think I am proficient enough, I am going to have a go at finishing them -
> under supervision of course by my sister.
I must have missed the beginning of this thread -- sorry. I do a
lot of needlework, and I DO mean a lot. And by needlework, I mean
needlepoint, cross stitch (both counted and stamped), surface
embroidery, silk ribbon embroidery, etc. I have never heard oaf the
Thousand Flower Stitch so I will have to check some of my needlework
books. Is this something that is called for in one of the unfinished
embroidery projects you have? Please let me know, OK, and I will ask
over at RCTN if anyone knows what this stitch is :-).
As for proficiency -- it's no different than quilting or anything
else, the more you do the better you get. You can always practice the
required stitches on a piece of scrap fabric or even along the edges of
the needlework itself, assuming it's not a piece that has an already
finished edge :-). CiaoMeow >^;;^<
PAX, Tia Mary >^;;^< (RCTQ Queen of Kitties)
Angels can't show their wings on earth but nothing was ever said about
their whiskers!
Visit my Photo albums at http://community.webshots.com/user/tiamary
Cappy
Thanks for your post. It's not me that needed the information it was Dee,
the poster above me but I am sure if you come up with a answer, she would be
very pleased.
I am practising my stitches, and I am glad to say they have improved so
much.
Cheers,
Di
--
Di Maloney
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"Tia Mary" <CatWo...@aol.com> wrote in message
news:52905bF...@mid.individual.net...
I found the threads my Mum had for her embroidery - I had stored them away
after Mum passed on thinking I would never used them - now all I have to do
is pick the easiest one first.
Will post a pic of what I try to do.
Regards,
Di
--
Di Maloney
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"Di Maloney" <sas...@alphalink.com.au> wrote in message
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