Stuff It - Then Stitch It
The Easter egg - which actually looked more like a football at first - is made out of some wool remnants I had lying around. I cut out four marquis-shaped sections, using two colors. Taking one of each color, I sewed them together, right sides facing, then I did the same with the remaining two colors, then placed the two sewn together pieces right sides facing, and sewed those together, leaving a little turning hole in the last seam. All this was done by hand - it would go a lot faster by machine and would look a heck of a lot better! Anyway, this was just an experiment.
Next time, by the way, I'll use six sections and hopefully the finished product won't remind me of a kid's stuffed football!

This is the egg, with a few layers of embroidery worked on it. Next time (next year?) I'll work a few more rows and do something more elaborate with the tips. The possibilities are really endless as far as the embroidery goes - you could get really elaborate with something like this! Beads, ribbon, a variety of stitches...

From top to bottom, I used fly stitch, double feather stitch, herringbone, daisy stitch and French knots, and buttonhole wheels.

Embroidering on a stuffed figure is pretty easy, actually. You begin with a knot in the end of your thread, take the needle in some distance away from where you intend to start...

...wiggle the needle around a bit in the filling, then pull the thread through, so that the knot catches inside the filling and secures the thread.

Work your stitches in a "sewing" method - that is, taking the needle in and out of the piece in one swoop - and then, when you get to the end of your stitching, anchor the end of the stitch as you normally would....

...bringing the needle either out in a seam, or out underneath a stitched area...

...and take a small securing backstitch, to anchor the thread. It's best if this can be done in a seam, where the backstitch can't be seen, or, again, inside some stitched area where it will be hidden.

Bring your needle out of the stuffed figure anywhere, and cut the thread close to the surface, pulling a bit on the thread so that, when it's cut, it is pulled into the inside of the stuffed thing.

See! It's gone. Wow. Those seams are really ugly. A sewing machine will eliminate that messy look, I think!

You can see here a view of the egg on a "corner." To ensure relatively straight paths along which to embroider, I first used regular white thread and basted a running stitch line around the egg. Once the line was embroidered, I cut the white thread and pulled it out. You could probably even use something like a fabric masking tape to mark the line and then baste, to get a really straight line.
I'm pretty sure I'll do this again, but next time, I'll make a pattern for a six-panel egg, and I'll use a machine to sew up the seams. I suppose any fabric would work - wool felt would probably work great!
Another option would be silks and brocades and fancy fabrics, for a dressier look. And, of course, you're not limited to egg-shapes. You could do spheres... think Christmas ornaments and so forth. I'm contemplating a similar project for my kids' embroidery classes this year.
So that was my stuffed egg adventure. I love the colors! But now that Easter is over, I think I'll move on to other needle 'n thread adventures!
Labels: embroidery tips and tricks, holiday stitching, needlework pictures, pictures, wool felt
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