I am lagging behind! Here, finally, are the last three TAST stitches.
Herringbone Square #53, Laced Herringbone Square #54 and Buttonholed Herringbone #55
The most difficult part with the Buttonholed Herringbone was to keep the thread free from twists. If there is too much of a twist on the thread the garland is not hanging neatly but curls in an unruly way. You can see that in the light green section of the upper row of Buttonholed Herringbone stitches.
There are two ways in which you can avoid this:
- Let the thread dangle (with the needle as a weight) from time to time and untwist itself.
- Learn to roll the needle between the thumb and index finger while stitching. For S-twisted thread like the perle I have used, roll the needle clockwise.
22 comments:
more good examples of the tast stitches Queenie and don`t worry about lagging behind, you are ahead of me. E great tip about the thread twisting, I know the one about dangling the thread but have not tried twisting the thread, will remember and try it.
This is a very lovely sampler! It is good to read that others have the same problems stitching the garland. Thank you for the link to Mary Corbert.
Really enjoyed all your stitches will you be doing more?
lovely stitching never heard of s and z threads will check that out, thank you.
I wonder if putting the needle at the other end of the thread would help matters. It certainly helps when quilting.
Yes, I think the thread will twist less if you thread the needle with the end that comes off the skein or reel.
Most (cotton embroidery) treads have an S-twist.
Yes, TAST goes on, forever, I hope. Sharon has a lot of stitches to teach us!
No, Claudia. This is a very SIMPLE sampler!
I love the garland look, and if you check out what Chitra (http://jizee6687.wordpress.com/2013/03/02/tast-2013-7-55-buttonholed-herringbone-3/) has done with the stitch you'll get a lot of inspiration.
It does need a lot of control to avoid the curls, though.
Your sample is very lovely and thaank you for the tips.
I am looking forward to your work, once you have finished.
We all stitch in different ways and I found out that I often 'play' with the needle and rolled it between min fingers, restlessness?, and then saw that the twist got worse or better. Now it is easy to feel how much I need to roll the needle.
Guess I should have read your tips before stitching my buttonholed herringbone, but thanks for the tips and links.
That is a lovely sampler.
I didn't have any trouble with the buttonholed herringbone but then my thread had a low twist. I had unravelled a thread and I must have done away with the twist. Also the distance between each loop was only .5cm which didn't give it time to get out of line. It was rather similar to the Beaded Hedego
Edge Stitch but I think I like it better.
I guess that the longer the Herringbone stitch is and the more Buttonhole stitches you can add to the bar, the more the thread will twist. The loop on the Hedebo stitch is made differently and I always forget so have to check it out before I start. The Buttonhole loop is very straight forward and I like them both.
Not at all!
Thank you. I hope the tip was useful.
Such nice samples! I'm also behind on TAST and blog reading. But I had a nice creative day. I'm glad I'm not the only one with the twisting problem. I always dangle my thread, because somehow I keep forgetting which way to twist back!
Yes, Chitra offers a lot of inspiration. But the garland in your last row is perfectly stitched.I think success also depends on how many buttonhole stitches you make. I keep on struggling :-)
I used to dangle my threads, too. Then I started rolling the needle 'automatically'. When I am going the wrong way, the thread will 'tell' me.
How true! Tension and how tightly we pack the buttonhole stitches can make the garland look wobbly.
Oh Wow! I just did some embroidery on a quilt I made and I hadn't embroidered for years! Yours is just stunning. Beautiful work. xCathy
I've not seen this sample of stitches before. They are fantastic.
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