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- Newsgroups: rec.crafts.textiles
- Path: sparky!uunet!super!jill
- From: jill@super.org (Amelia J. Scott-Piner)
- Subject: Re: Making an x-stitch pattern
- Message-ID: <1992Nov23.170023.19840@super.org>
- Sender: news@super.org (USENET News System)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: bart
- Organization: Supercomputing Research Center (Bowie, MD)
- Date: Mon, 23 Nov 1992 17:00:23 GMT
- Lines: 75
-
- >The biggest problem is the letters kind of slant
- to the right. When i was using regular 14 ct. cloth it was too far apart
- to get a nice crisp slant, so I switched to the 22 ct. and that's better.
- Except it's so hard to count. Does anyone have ideas for a simpler method?
-
- Thanks,
- Ann Bailey
- ab5y@virginia.edu
-
- Hi Ann!
- I'm not very good at drawing on the e-mail files, but I'll
- give it a try. It sounds like you are relying on whole X X X
- stitches to form your name. That way is going to look blocky
- and smooth flowing lines are going to be impossible. To get a
- nice slant on the lines, the best thing to do is to use a
- combination of half-stitches and backstitching.
- I'll try to show you an example
-
-
- /\/\/\/
- /\/\/\/
- /\/\/\/
- /\/\/\/ this uses half-stitches
-
- \/\/\/\/
- /\/\/\/\
- \/\/\/\/
- /\/\/\/\
- this one doesn't
-
- Outlining in backstitching also brings out a clean edge. I've found that
- even solid areas of black x-stitches need backstitching to keep them from
- looking like they have fuzzy edges. Letters can be done solely in a
- backstitch also. Do you know what I mean by backstitching? On most counts
- of cloth, two strands of floss are used to stitch the whole, 1/2, and 1/4
- stitches. Backstitch is used to outline a stitched area. It's done with
- less floss than the original stitched area, mostly, in this case 1 strand.
- It's also usually done in a darker color to emphasize the outline slightly.
-
- Boy, it's hard to explain this without demonstrating on a piece of stitchery.
- You can use backstitch to create letters and figures, or to add little
- flourishes onto a cross-stitched letter (Loops and curls, etc.).
-
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- | | | | | |/|\|/|\| | | |
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- | | | | | |\| | |/| | | |
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- | | | | | | |\|/| | | | | Can you see the backstitched heart in
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - this piece? Each square here is
- equivalent to a square on the cloth.
-
- Many graphs have rudimentary directions on the basic cross-stitch, half-stitches
- (some people call what I am calling a half-stitch a 3/4 stitch because it covers
- 3 out of 4 legs of the X.), and 1/4 stitches, as well as backstitching.
-
- / / / \ \ \
- /\/\/\ 1/2 stitches (3/4 stitches) /\ /\ /\
-
- \ \ \
- \ \ \ 1/4 stitches
-
- \/ \/ \/
- /\ /\ /\ full cross-stitch.
-
- Look at your graph paper and think of the squares on it as squares on the fabric.
- Each corner of the square is a point where the needle can enter the fabric. The
- trick is not to limit yourself to block designs based just on full x-stitches.
- Graph it out on the paper before grabbing your needle or marking on the fabric.
- From experience I can tell you that it's cheaper in the long run :). Hope this
- helps....
- jill@super.org
- Jill Scott-Piner
-
-
-