About

Mary Corbet

writer and founder

 

I learned to embroider when I was a kid, when everyone was really into cross stitch (remember the '80s?). Eventually, I migrated to surface embroidery, teaching myself with whatever I could get my hands on...read more

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Gingham Embroidery – Summery and Sweet!

 

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We’ve revisited gingham embroidery on Needle ‘n Thread several times over the years, but when summer comes, I always think it’s a subject worth drawing to your attention again.

It’s hard to believe that it’s been nearly ten years since I put together this index devoted to embroidery on gingham (also called “chicken scratch” here in the US). And some of the information and tutorials stretch all the way back the first years of the blog! That’s seventeen years! Crazy!

Gingham embroidery is one of those styles of needlework that evokes a certain nostalgia, I think. There’s something very homey about it. While it seems a bit old fashioned and relegated to a certain era, it isn’t, really. It’s so easy to update the look of gingham embroidery with modern color trends, bright and crisp fabrics, and different types of fibers.

This is a colorful and fun style of embroidery that’s accessible to anyone – from child to adult, from beginner to advanced stitcher.

Revisiting Gingham Embroidery on Needle 'n Thread
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Let’s Look at Lettering in Embroidery

 

There are so many stitches out there in the embroidery world! And there are so many opportunities to use them to write with embroidery!

Favorite sayings, personalization, motivational aspirations – or the comical reverse – can all be said with embroidery. Embroidered words, phrases, names, places, dates – these can all be added to larger projects like quilts, blankets, samplers, decorative towels, pillows and pillowcases, wall hangings, and more. There’s no end to what you can do with embroidery and words.

What stitches work best for embroidering words? Well, it really depends on several factors: the size of your project, the design layout, the words you want to emphasize, the use your project will be put to, or simply the look you like. You have to take into account many factors when you consider what stitches to use.

What’s the best way to know how to determine what stitches to use where? Trial and error, really. Practice over time, experience – these things will help to teach you what works, stitch-wise, in different scenarios.

One of the best ways to get in that kind of practice is simply to stitch. A lettering / text sampler can help, and that’s what I was doing when I put together these lessons for hand embroidered lettering and text some umpteen million years ago.

Hand Embroidered Lettering and Text Tutorials
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Revisiting Drawn Thread Embroidery!

 

Today, we’ll take a quick delve into the archives here on Needle ‘n Thread and touch on some embroidery techniques that I really, really love but that I haven’t had a lot of time to indulge in.

I’m remedying that with the next Stitch Snippet project that will launch in July (it’s called Sweet Marguerite – and it is little and sweet). In this project, we will work a decorative hemstitch edge on the piece, involving drawn thread embroidery.

Drawn thread techniques can seem daunting – after all, you’re removing threads from the ground fabric! – but it’s not. Not at all! And the results can be very satisfying.

Adding some simple drawn thread techniques to your embroidery repertoire is a great idea, because they work so well for finishing embroidered goods, especially household goods like tablecloths, cloth napkins, towels, table runners, placemats, and the like.

So let’s see what’s in the archives, shall we?

Revisiting Drawn Thread Embroidery
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Revisiting Stitch Fun!

 

Over the next couple weeks here on Needle ‘n Thread, we’re going to be revisiting some beloved embroidery topics, projects, and series. There are quite a few hidden gems here on the website that I want to highlight again, especially for those who are new to Needle ‘n Thread – or for those who have been around so long that, like me, you may have forgotten what’s even on the website!

You might think I’m kidding about that, but I’m not! I just came across a few articles on a topic that I’ll be writing about soon, and I had one of those forehead-slapping moments:

“I’ve already written about this???”

And a few minutes later, after perusing the articles: “Wow. I really did write about this already. How could I have forgotten?!”

It’s always good to take a fresh look at old topics. And to that end, we’re going to re-visit some older topics and projects here on the website that, despite their age and despite all the advances in online technology in the past 17 years, have not gone “out of style.” They still have valuable information in them that is worth tucking away in your needlework repertoire.

One of the my favorite series here on Needle ‘n Thread will kick off this Topic Rejuvenation. It’s the Stitch Fun! series. While the series stretches back deep into the history of Needle ‘n Thread, it is not defunct, nor is it anywhere finished or complete. It’s an ever-developing series. I’m sure I’ll be adding more to it in coming months and years.

But for those who haven’t seen it and don’t know what it is, or for those who have forgotten about it, here’s a little recap of the series.

Stitch Fun Embroidery Series
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Summer Production in the Studio

 

There are certain times of the year at Needle ‘n Thread when we tend to take a breather – a couple days around Thanksgiving, a few days around Christmas, a few days around Easter. The rest of the year, we pretty much work in a frenzy, except for summer. In the summer, we usually go into a calmer, looser mode of work, where we get in more time with planned stitching on upcoming projects and the like.

When you’re stitching, everything slows down. Everything becomes more relaxed. It’s quieter. Calmer. Perfect for summer.

So in the summer, we’ve always been a bit looser with the work schedule. We stitch a lot, yes. We do some production, yes. But it’s pretty looser and more flexible than the rest of the year. The kids pop in. We do impromptu activities with family. Things like that.

This is the time of year when I can usually take a scheduled vacation for a week while Anna covers for me. And visa-versa. (Technically, we can do that any time of the year, but summer always seems to be when it actually happens. The other times of the year are just too crowded.)

But this year has been different. It started off in a royal mess, with my house problem right as we were just settling into the new studio for work. And it never really improved – we’ve been chasing the proverbial tail all year long.

Although summer has finally come, there is definitely something different about it this year. Now, we are in full production mode on every single front. With an extra part-time set of hands, we’ve been working full days and then some, with little variation except for personal appointments and the Life Things that still pop up.

I’ll show you some of the things we’re working on so you can get a taste of Studio Life!

Kit Production
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Tips for Framing Embroidery

 

I’ve had a lot of questions lately about framing embroidery pieces.

Now that I have a studio space with a Big Wall, I’m more inclined to frame more of my sample pieces to hang as a kind of gallery on that wall. I wrote about the wall here, if you’d like to read about it and see how it has developed since we moved into this space last autumn. There’s still quite a ways to go on it! It’s just a matter of sorting stitched samples (I have about a gazillion) and finding the right frames for them.

I like framing embroidery! And I like doing it myself, because I’ve had too many problems when taking pieces to framers who don’t quite know how to handle needlework. This frame job was disaster, for example. Considering the cost of the job, in fact, it was a huge disaster.

And it was that disaster that convinced me once and for all that it’s just better to undertake framing on my own.

So, today, some quick framing tips for you, in a nutshell, with links that you can explore further if you’re interested in framing your own embroidery pieces.

Do it Yourself: Framing Embroidery
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