Stitch no 7 is called Gate Stitch and is one of the many Canvas Stitches I have found in Mary Thomas's Dictionary of Embroidery Stitches.
I have not found a Swedish name, in French it is called Point de Porte. (Thank you Mattia).
Actually it is not an entirely new stitch to me; I worked a few of these gates on my piece Pile 'em On, last year.
In spite of looking advanced it is an easy stitch made up of straight lines, and it does certainly look like a gate!
First make four vertical stitches, then a cross and finally a horisontal stitch. On the next 'gate', the horisontal stitch is one level lower. The gates can also be placed without a gap and you then have a good filling stitch. In Mary Thomas's book the stitches are also placed at different levels making a nice pattern.
Here they are in a row with gaps on Aida.
Homework:
Fill one of these boxes with Gate Stitches (no gaps and at different levels).
I like this stitch and will try it as soon as I can stitch again!
ReplyDeleteit is easy, quick and fun.
Deletelovely. seems like an easy stitch. This is the first time, I have seen or heard of this stitch.
ReplyDeleteChitra
It IS an easy stitch, and you will expand it in many ways, I am sure. I hope you have a chance to stitch in the cool evening park.
DeleteAnother one to remember.
ReplyDeleteJust think drawing with pencil and you will remember how to stitch it.
DeleteI will be interested to see what you do with it.
ReplyDeleteThe most obvious is of course to make a gate!
Deletethis is a great counted stitch
ReplyDeleteYes,s and it is pretty, too.
DeleteThanks for introducing me to this stitch. I already played with it on Aida and I'm planning to try it on my needlepoint sampler too.
ReplyDeleteGreat. Easy, isn't it?
DeleteGood choice, it turned out great.
ReplyDeleteAfter having finished my homework I now know how the stitch can look very different when used as a filling stitch.
Delete