Tutorial - Raised needlelace strawberry (stumpwork)

Would you like to stitch a lovely raised strawberry on one of your pieces?  Perhaps to decorate a section of crazy quilt?  Or as a special motif in a sampler?  Today's tutorial will guide you through the process step by step.

There are several ways of producing a stumpwork strawberry.  This needlelace version was the one I learned via a Royal School of Needlework kit a few years ago and is one of the simplest.  You probably already have all the things you need in stock.

These are the materials you need to hand: Your fabric mounted in your choice of work frame, (here, a 5" hoop), some red felt, red and green embroidery threads, some red sewing cotton, some gold or yellow contrast thread for the seeds, a crewel embroidery needle, a tapestry needle and a couple of pins.  You'll also need a little bit of paper or tracing paper.


Stage one is to draw out the shape of the strawberry on some tracing paper or, if you prefer, some bondable paper.  Here you can see two of different sizes so that the shape is raised up gradually.  The inclusion of my index finger gives a clue as to scale, but you can use whatever size you need for your piece.  Generally speaking, the larger the finished berry is to be be, the more layers of padding you'll need in order to get a good raised shape.


After you've cut out your strawberry shapes from the paper, just pin them onto the red felt and cut around them.  Stumpwork isn't a very exact science, so you won't need to be too precise, but if you prefer to be, then by all means use bondable paper and cut around the shape that way (in the Jane Nicholas style).


This tutorial concentrates mainly on the larger size of strawberry, so there will be two layers.  Using the crewel embroidery needle (I used a no. 7) stab stitch the felt shape into place using red sewing thread.  If at all possible, find a close match to your chosen thread as some tiny specks may otherwise show through and spoil the effect (unless that's the effect you want).


One layer in place (above).


Here (above) you can see both layers stitched into place - the larger covering the smaller, giving a nice, raised bump.  Below is the view from the back of the work.


Now that the padding is securely in place, it's time to think about which needlelace stitch is best to use.  My choice for this berry would be corded single brussels stitch, also known as corded detached buttonhole stitch.  The corded version produces a denser effect than the non-corded one that I've used in things like wired insect wings and so gives better coverage.  This is especially important if you weren't able to find a matching colour of padding.


This picture is from Kay Dennis' 'Beginners Guide to Stumpwork' published by Search Press.


In order to make needlelace, you first need to work a row of backstitch all the way around the outside of your berry shape in your choice of red thread.  In this example, I'm using Anchor #8 pearl cotton in colour 47, a slightly dark red. You could also use stranded cotton in plain or variegated shades, but I prefer pearl cotton for needlelace as there is only one strand to work with and that reduces risk of getting the needle caught in more than one strand.  #12 pearl cotton is another possibility.


When that is complete, bring the needle through at the top left and then change to the tapestry needle which is less likely to catch in the felt or stab your finger!  Begin to work a buttonhole/blanket stitch taking the needle through the top back stitch but NOT through the fabric.  Needlelace is all worked on the surface.  This part can be a little tricky as you will need to make double sure not to catch your needle in the felt and, as you are working slightly uphill, that can be quite hard.


When the first row is complete, pass the needle under the back stitch at the side of the berry.  (I apologise for the poor quality of this photo!)


This is the 'corded' part: Take a line straight back to the left hand side, again passing the needle under the stitch at the side.


Begin now to work your second row of buttonhole stitches taking the needle under both the stitch in the previous row and the cord.  Over the next couple of rows you will probably need to increase the number of stitches in each row in order to get good coverage.  Simply work more than one into a few of the stitches on the previous row, spacing the double stitches out nicely.  To reduce, just do the opposite - miss out a few stitches and just work, say, 5 stitches into 6 or 7 on the previous row.


Each time you take a new trip across the berry, you'll need to make sure that you have enough thread to complete the row.  However, you're almost certainly going to run out at some point.  just pass the needle through to the back of the work and fasten off.  Bring up a new thread in the same place and carry on as before.


Fill up the whole berry with needlelace and, when it's finished, just take the needle to the back again (you may well want to swap back to your crewel needle as it's sharper) and fasten off.


Here, I threaded my crewel needle with some of the Kreinik cord 104C and made some French knots on the surface of the berry to look like the seeds.  You can also use small straight stitches or any other technique that you think will produce the effect you want.


Moving on to the small leaves (sepals??) at the top of the berry and I'm going to create those using open based woven picots.  For this you need one of your pins again.  Insert it into the fabric above the berry and bring it out again as near to the berry as you can.  This is quite fiddly as, again, you're having to work uphill and you don't want the pin pulling at and spoiling your needlelace.


Fasten on your green thread at the back.  Again, I've used Anchor #8 pearl cotton, this time in shade 266.  Bring it out to the right of the pin as near to the berry as you can.  Pass the thread around the top of the pin, then take it back through the fabric to the left of the pin as near as possible to the berry.  This is the final size and approximate shape of your sepal.


Bring the thread back to the front of the work directly to the right of the pin and take it up around the head of the pin again, crossing over and going from left to right.  This is another good time to change to a tapestry needle.


Begin the needle weaving as shown, first going over the outer threads and under the central one.


From the other side, weave back the other way this time going under the outer threads and under the inner one.  Don't pull too tight or you'll lose the shape of your picot and it'll end up being over narrow.


Continue weaving and, every couple of rows, stop and push the rows towards the top of the pin so that you can fit as many rows as possible into the picot.


When the picot is finished, change back to the crewel needle and take the thread through to the back.


Bring the thread to the front again just where you want the picot to be anchored.  You may want to do as I did here and make it closer in to the berry so that the finished result will be slightly curved and give a more raised effect.


Repeat the picot twice.


Here's our finished berry!


This is a smaller version worked over just the smaller piece of felt padding and done with the Anchor #12 pearl cottons.  (NB I think Anchor no longer manufacture pearl cotton #12 in shade 47, although other darker reds seem available).  The seeds here were worked with small straight stitches in Kreinik cord, 102C.


Enjoyed this tute?  Why not nominate Sew in Love for a Craftsy 2103 Blogger Award in the embroidery - best tutorials category?  You can nominate as many blog as you like at this stage, including your own, but I'd be delighted it you were to include mine in amongst them.  Click on the graphic below to be taken to the nomination site.=)

Nominate me for Craftsy's blogger awards!

Text and images © Elizabeth Braun 2013

Work in Progress Wednesday - 9 Oct 2013


Sorry to disappoint anyone, but I haven't got very far on with the filling in of cutwork sections.  I've just managed to do the basic needle-weaving on the top section, which was quite tricky being so close to the edge of the frame.  I've decided to simplify this bit and not put in the picots or the buttonhole bands.  The simpler the better, I think, as there's a lot of detail already and, frankly, I can do without having to move so far out of my comfort zone on every filled section on this piece.  There'll be plenty that are outside it, but I want to keep them to a minimum, if I can.  I guess, at the end of the day, one could say that hardanger has more or less had its day with me.  I've done a lot over the past decade or so, but I doubt I'll do too much more now.

Anyway, I'm still hoping to get this piece finished in the next ten days or so and will be very glad to see the end of it.  It's dragging on now and I'm ready to change the subject stitch-wise!=)  I have so many lovely, new threads and so many ideas from books, magazines and much more, that there couldn't be enough hours in a 60-hour day to come close to touching them all.  Don't you often feel that way too?

Nominate me for Craftsy's blogger awards!

I've seen a couple of fellow bloggers mentioning the Craftsy 2013 Blogger Awards and, if you're interested in joining in the voting etc, I'd be honoured if you would nominate Sew in Love in the embroidery section.  Details can be found on the Craftsy site here, and are open until 14 October - next Monday.  Of course, please only put my blog forward if you honestly feel it's worth an award nomination and you can nominate as many as you like, so there's no need to pick just one from all your favourites - put them all forward! The relevant categories are 'best photography' and 'best tutorials'.  The top four in each category will be selected then, followed by a two week voting period and it looks like an interesting event, although there are, of course, some well-known sites that are almost certain to come out top.  I don't mind that, but it would be nice to take part and make a decent showing.=)  Part of me has a desire to have the most popular needlework blog in the UK.  Mary Corbet's Needle'n'Thread undoubtedly holds the world title, with Sharon B's Pintangle taking the the trophy for Australia and probably Kathy Andrews' The Unbroken Thread for mainland Europe (as if any of you need links for those!), but I could aim for the UK slot...=)

Text and images © Elizabeth Braun 2013

Must it *all* be fun?

I've been pressing on with my new cross stitch quite a lot this week whilst I haven't really felt up to tackling the filling in of the sampler hardanger elements.  I had a quick practice of woven picots and buttonhole bars and think I can pull those off all right, but haven't tried them on the real thing as yet.

When I posted that I was going to do this cross stitch last week and said that these designs could be a bit boring to stitch in parts, one reader asked why I was going to stitch it if it was going to be boring, after all, didn't I embroider for fun?  That set me thinking about how much of a project can be expected to be fun and is it realistic to expect the whole thing to be enjoyable from start to finish every time?  What would you say?

If I'm honest, I can't think of any task, project or occupation that's fun 100% of the time.  I remember last year a former colleague wrote, 'Work is generally good' and I knew he was talking about a job he'd really wanted to do and was enjoying on the whole.  However, there are certainly aspects that are a bit tedious or even a nuisance and I doubt there's any job that excludes any negative factors whatsoever.

What about hobbies, crafts and needlework?  I think it's true to say that we all have our favourite parts, parts that we don't mind and parts that we accept as part of a overall enjoyable process, but that we find dull in themselves.  For instance, many cross stitchers hate backstitch parts, knitters dislike sewing up garments and I find transferring patterns to be a bit of a pain to do.  Which parts of a needlework project do you find less than thrilling?

With these Lizzie*Kate designs, there are some large-ish areas of one colour that do get a bit dull to stitch.  With this one and the 'Spring' one I did 3½ years ago, it's the fence that drags on a bit.  With some other pictures, plain backgrounds can be a plain bore to work.  Generally speaking, I've found that working on them little and often, perhaps interspersed with more interesting parts or projects, helps to relieve the monotony and gets a necessary part of an otherwise fun project done.

Strangely enough, and this goes for many tasks and not just needlework, getting through the dull and trying parts and completing them gives one of the greatest senses of achievement!!

So, I think that with embroidery, as with everything, one takes the humdrum parts along with the more stimulating ones and accepts that it adds up to an overall strongly positive experience.

What are your thoughts on the subject?  Do you really find every part of a stitching task fun and enjoyable?  Are there some you'd gladly hand over to someone else to do?  (Sorry about the awful photos above, BTW, the lighting has been terrible this week and I can't seem to improve it on Photoshop...)

The Anchor number 12 pearl cottons I ordered the other day came through the next morning.  It was so much fun getting a parcel from SewandSo after all this time!

As you can see, I ordered 'landscape' colours, except for the light yellow, which is a favourite shade of mine and the Kreinik #1 Japan thread in 321J, which I treated myself to.  Actually, I was rather disappointed with it as it was supposed to be 'dark gold', but there's next to no difference between that and the regular gold shade 002J.  Well, at least I know now.=(

As my number twelve ball drawer was full before, I had to do some reorganisation in order to get these new colours in so, as you can see, I decided to devote the drawer itself to 'colours' and moved the browns and greys into the space vacated by the Pipers Silks now that they have their own box.

I'm not 10% happy with this arrangement as, frankly, this cantilever section looks messy and, fussy creature as I am, I wanted to have all the browns in one section and the greys in another, but numbers didn't work out.  Anyway, it's the best I can do for now.


This below is my Anchor #8 pearl cotton collection - solid colours.  I have a fair few of the Anchor multi-colour ones too, which I used to use a bit when I did a lot of hardanger cards a few years ago.  I really need to find more uses for these as, whilst it's great to have a nice collection, it's even better to have a use for them, but you can only do so many things at once and I'm vehemently opposed to having a large number of projects on the go at once.  I have two WIPs at the moment and one UFO and I want to clear the slate of at least two of those before starting in on new things.  If I can clear off the third too, (which is boring me!!!), oh, how happy will I be?!=)


In case anyone was wondering why I bought the landscape coloured #12 balls, it's because I'm interested in trying some of the Helen M Stevens' 'look through' style pictures where you have certain foreground elements and then shaded in sections are fields, waterways etc.  #12 pearl cotton is perfect when the rest of the piece is to be done in stranded cotton.  I think, if I'm to use the Pipers silks, the gauge might not be quite right, but then I could bring my Madeira silks, which seem slightly twisted and considerably less shiny than Pipers, into play.  What thread combinations do you think would work?  What would you use?

Text and images © Elizabeth Braun 2013

Work in Progress Wednesday - 2 Oct 2013


Hi!  It's Wednesday again and here's the update on the sampler work.  This first photo above is the completed garden section which will show through the cutwork to be done in the large square section you can see lower right in (almost) the full piece below.


In the shots above and below, you can also see that I've been getting well on with the cutting out.  I won't do any more thread snipping now until these sections are done and, having had a good look at the pattern etc, I don't think they will be much of a problem, as I'm quite used to hardanger sections.  I've never done buttonhole bars or picots before, so I want to practice those before putting them in the real thing though.


Next week I hope to be able to show these 12 sections filled and the long side bar sections cut - maybe the square section too.

Now that the surface work is finally complete bar a few beads in the bottom section, I thought it was high time to put away all the stranded cottons that had been used in this piece.  Most of them had been out in the kit bag for over three years, (yes, you read that correctly!  I had the piece kitted up for about 18 months before I started on it - I did it in August 2010 in Taiwan!), and it had been as long as that or longer since all my stranded cottons were neatly in their bags.  I don't need regular Anchor cottons for any of the three projects that are unfinished at the mo.  The L*K is using GAST - Gentle Art's Sampler Threads, the sampler now needs only pearl cotton #12 and a few stray strands of cotton left out for attaching the beads, and the old peacock feather uses three shades of Anchor Marlitt and some plastic/nylon sort of invisible thread, which is horrid stuff!!

This is the pile I put away this morning:


First I laid them all out according to colour number so that it was easier to get them into the right bag, but I thought they made an attractive display in themselves (even though the light was terrible first thing this morn!)  I can't think why black was there as I haven't used it in this piece.  Must have been hanging around from something else.


I had to re-lay out several of the bags, which were first done the best part of a decade ago, and it made me think that I need a more user-friendly storage solution for them than in grip-top bags in the centre of my main workbox.  Trouble is, I can't think of anything that would work!  I want to keep them in shade number order as it makes them easier to find when I'm working a design that just gives a list of numbers - and besides, I like it that way!  So, I don't want to start moving them into colour families and I don't have much more space or money to invest in anything fancy.  I also definitely don't want to be spending hours on end winding 450 or so skeins of thread onto floss bobbins, so that idea is out and wouldn't be space effective anyway.  If you can think of anything that will work within the parameters of what I already own, then please share...


My Lizzie*Kate cross stitch is coming along swimmingly and has been terrific to work on when the big sampler was out of the question at any given time.

I've also been spending some of the cash I made from my recent e-bay auctions on some more threads this morning.  I've ordered 17 more Pipers shades, which should fill in many of the gaps in my colour spectrum there and also some more Anchor Pearl #12 in landscape shades.  They should come within the next day or two and, if Susan from Pipers is as quick off the mark as she was with my last order, then I hope to see those threads here in about a week too.  I haven't put in an order from Sew-and-So since well before we went to Taiwan, summer 2009. I think I may have ordered some Caron Watercolors for a hardanger project I was doing at that time, but no collection building stuff, so it was really fun to do it this morning.=)

Oh, and talk about exasperating:  I had my Boot 'flu jab yesterday lunchtime and what should arrive in today's post but my latest lot of Boots Advantage Card offers with '250 points for buying your winter 'flu jab at Boots'!  Oh well!  I'll ask them if I can add it on retrospectively.  They'll almost certainly say 'no', but they won't have a chance to say 'yes' if I don't ask, will they?=)

Text and images © Elizabeth Braun 2013

New cross stitch projects coming up!


Yes, yes, I know I was going to do some small Helen M Stevens' designs, and I haven't forgotten them.  It's just that I, frankly, want to be able to sell on the above charts - esp as a lady in the south of England bought 'Winter' and 'Spring' from me last weekend - so I need to get them worked up.

I'm not very much into the Lizzie*Kate style of design, but more or less anything four seasons design-wise will get me, so I collected these.=)  I also rather liked the third one, 'Cherish All Living Things'.


Before we went to Taiwan just over four years ago, I sold off about two thirds of my over-dyed threads - GAST and WDW, but I kept back all the colours I needed for these projects and some others that I thought I would use in other types of embroidery.  So, thankfully, I had everything I needed to kit up these designs, except perhaps a piece of linen for the last one.  I haven't finally decided on that one as yet.


This is the floss toss for the first one, 'Summer', and I'm ready to get going on it.  I was going to wait until I'd got further on with the sampler, but, as I'm having some lung trouble which, oddly enough, restricts how I can move around and bend over a piece of work (cutting threads needs me in a certain position and I can't maintain it for long just now), I'm giving myself permish to make a start on this one!  As I remember from 'Winter' and 'Spring', they're a rather a bore to stitch in parts, but shouldn't be too bad.

The sampler is coming along well though.  I've finished the 'look through' section cross stitch etc and set that aside for later.  I've also re-positioned the main piece in the frame and cut out the top two motifs.  Sadly, my hardanger scissors declined to co-operate, so it seems we need to look at those again.  However, my goldwork pair have lovely fine points and, as they're specially toughened for cutting metal threads, won't go blunt very quickly.=)

Text and images © Elizabeth Braun 2013

Work in Progress Wednesday - on Thurs 26 Sept 2013!!


I haven't made huge strides this week and I was too busy yesterday to post an update, but here it is a little late (and still Wednesday somewhere just West of the International Date Line....).

I inserted the french knot lupins, which I can't say I enjoyed.  I don't mind french knots in small doses, but these were a bit of a bore to stitch, so I was glad to get the out of the way.


On these two shots, you can also see that I put in a few of the remaining beads, just leaving the section near the bottom scroll to do after the upper section has had the cutwork done.  Of course, you can't put beads under a snap frame bar, although ordinary stitches don't suffer by it too much.


I also discovered and inserted a few missing 'x's from near the beaded area and, as you can see below, made a start on the 'look through' piece that will be fixed behind the large square box when that's cut out and a few filling elements put in.


So, apart from those last beads, (about 15 mins work), the surface is now complete - HURRAH!

Time to get the trusty old petit point scissors into action.  I'm not nervous of cutting threads as a general rule, although I will feel a little more cautious than I normally do when doing the larger areas.

Text and images © Elizabeth Braun 2013