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Beginner's Guide to Goldwork Embroidery: Essential Stitches and Techniques for Goldwork
Beginner's Guide to Goldwork Embroidery: Essential Stitches and Techniques for Goldwork
Beginner's Guide to Goldwork Embroidery: Essential Stitches and Techniques for Goldwork
Ebook119 pages38 minutes

Beginner's Guide to Goldwork Embroidery: Essential Stitches and Techniques for Goldwork

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The expert crafter shares the basic stitches and essential techniques to create beautiful goldwork embroidery in this comprehensive, illustrated guide. 

Goldwork embroidery uses metal threads to create regal and luxurious designs. In this beginner’s guide, Kate Haxell gives readers everything they need to get started working in this beautiful, shimmering style. Every stitch has clear step-by-step instructions and is accompanied by colored diagrams, making it easy to create these impressive embroidered designs. This short book also includes instructions for two projects by professional embroiderer Becky Hogg—a sweet silver brooch and an elegant acorn hanging picture.


 
LanguageEnglish
Release dateApr 1, 2018
ISBN9781446377451
Beginner's Guide to Goldwork Embroidery: Essential Stitches and Techniques for Goldwork

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    Beginner's Guide to Goldwork Embroidery - Kate Haxell

    GETTING STARTED

    Very little is required for your first adventures in embroidery; some fabric, threads, a needle, a simple frame, scissors and a fabric marker will see you through a few projects. However, there are other items that will become essential if you want to do more – and better – embroidery, and some items that are useful, but not vital. The following pages illustrate equipment and explain the techniques needed to make the most of it. You will also find the most basic embroidery stitches.

    Equipment

    Basic embroidery equipment is inexpensive and widely available, so you’ll have no problems finding what you need. It is worth buying good-quality needles and thread, and the best embroidery scissors you can afford.

    FABRICS

    Different styles of embroidery require different fabrics, but added to that there is personal taste and any practical considerations.

    Plain-weave fabric in linen or cotton is the classic embroiderer’s fabric and an excellent choice for beginners to freestyle embroidery. These fabrics handle well and have a smooth, tightly woven finish that is easy to work with. If the finished item is likely to be laundered then wash the fabric before you begin stitching to pre-shrink it.

    Evenweave fabric has the same number of warp and weft strands to the inch and is designed for counted thread work, such as cross stitch, Hardanger, blackwork, pulled thread, and drawn thread. You can buy evenweave in 100 per cent linen and cotton, and in some synthetic and natural fibre mixes. Evenweave fabric is graded by the number of strands to the inch (also called ‘threads per inch’), that is, the number of warp or weft strands of fabric in a measured inch. This ranges between 12 and 32, with 32 being the finest. A fabric with 24 or 26 strands per inch is suitable for a beginner to try most counted thread techniques.

    Aida is a type of evenweave fabric made from 100 per cent cotton and is woven in clearly defined blocks to make stitching very easy. The sizes of these blocks determine the size of the stitches. Aida is generally available in counts of 7, 10, 11, 12, 14, 16, 18 and 22 blocks per inch. You will usually be working each stitch over one block, so if you use 11-count Aida you will fit 11 stitches on one inch of the fabric. If you are a counted thread embroidery novice, Aida is great for your first few projects.

    Hardanger is a specialist evenweave fabric for stitching the embroidery style of the same name. It usually has 22 strands to the inch and is woven with pairs of strands separated with distinct holes for the stitches, making it very easy to count the strands. Hardanger fabric is also stiffer than many other evenweave fabrics so that it can support the stitching effectively.

    Crewel linen twill is a medium-weight twill made specifically for hand embroidery; it’s sometimes called ‘Jacobean twill’. It is a very finely, tightly woven fabric and the weave does not split or loosen as you pierce the fabric with the needle. Do not use an upholstery twill as a substitute because it will not be tightly woven enough. As the name suggests, crewel twill is the best fabric for crewelwork embroidery, and you can also work freestyle embroidery on it. A good-quality herringbone weave fabric or a plain weave can be used instead of twill.

    Silk can give embroidery a lavish, elegant look. You can work on fine silks, but for most purposes a firm silk – such as washed silk, thick habutai, dupion, raw silk or taffeta – is best. Silk is often used for goldwork, but can be used for freestyle embroidery as well. Silk fabric should usually be stabilised onto calico before being

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