Your Machine s Decorative Stitches

Your Machine s Decorative Stitches
Author: Karen Linduska
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2011
Genre: Crafts & Hobbies
ISBN: 1574326457

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Learn to use all of the stitches that come with your sewing machine. Go past straight stitches and zigzags, and pump your quilts with surface design excitement. Appealing not only to the beginning quilter, this book will remind every quilter of all the choices available at her/his fingertips. Written for any brand of machine, Karen shows you how to use and manipulate those stitches to maximize surface embellishment. Practice on 12 small projects, then combine decorative stitch techniques to make two larger wallhangings.

Creative Uses for Decorative Stitches

Creative Uses for Decorative Stitches
Author: Karen Linduska
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2012
Genre: Embroidery, Machine
ISBN: 1604600276

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"Take your quilts to the next level of creativity by using the decorative stitches built into your sewing machine. Karen shows how to find multiple uses for a single stitch, how to combine stitches, and how to best use threads and stabilizers. Eleven projects serve as practice for getting to know your machine"--Provided by publisher.

Machine Magic

Machine Magic
Author: Deborah Louie
Publsiher: C&T Publishing Inc
Total Pages: 149
Release: 2022-02-25
Genre: Crafts & Hobbies
ISBN: 9781644030769

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Blossom into a decorative quilt artist Take advantage of everything your sewing machine has to offer! Decorative quilt artist Deborah Louie teaches how to use the stitch options on your machine and incorporate them into gorgeous appliqué pieces. Follow her step-by-step process of building and adding decorative stitches to individual flowers, then applying them to the background with free-motion decorative stitching. Also, learn how to combine stitches and adjust stitch widths and lengths to create your unique stitch garden. Gain confidence in using your machine while also creating bright and bold floral creations! Make the most of your sewing machine and learn to use decorative stitching Step-by-step instructions for building and applying decorative stitches to individual flowers, leaves, and clamshells Includes 4 projects and patterns for 22 flowers plus leaves and clamshells that can be combined for an endless variety of artwork in bloom

Decorative Machine Stitching

Decorative Machine Stitching
Author: Cy DeCosse Incorporated
Publsiher: Creative Publishing International
Total Pages: 128
Release: 1990
Genre: Crafts & Hobbies
ISBN: 0865732566

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Provides ideas for decorative stitching along with step-by-step instructions.

Stupendous Stitching

Stupendous Stitching
Author: Carol Ann Waugh
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2012
Genre: Art quilts
ISBN: 097289263X

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My Custom Stitch

My Custom Stitch
Author: Barbara Skimin
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 110
Release: 1999
Genre: Sewing
ISBN: 0972086609

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A comprehensive guide to creating unique stitches on Brother Pacesetter sewing machines that posess this function. All features are fully explained with tutorials for each machine model, 64 stitches ready to be programmed into the sewing machine, and four projects.

The Complete Machine Embroidery Manual

The Complete Machine Embroidery Manual
Author: Elizabeth Keegan
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2014
Genre: Embroidery, Machine
ISBN: 1782210997

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This title provides everything sewing machine users need to know, from the types and formats of embroidery design available, how to get them off the internet and into their machine, how to stabilise fabric, which threads and needles to use, and how to use these designs creatively for beautiful results.

Learning Decorative Stitches

Learning Decorative Stitches
Author: Dueep Jyot Singh,John Davidson
Publsiher: Mendon Cottage Books
Total Pages: 50
Release: 2016-03-23
Genre: Crafts & Hobbies
ISBN: 9781310951145

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able of Contents Learning Decorative Stitches – the Art of Shirring and Smocking Table of Contents Introduction Gathering Using Cords for Gathers Staying a Gathered Seam Getting Started with Smocking Traditional Diamond Stitch Different Types of Stitches Cable Stitch Honeycomb stitch and Surface Honeycomb Surface Honeycomb Outline back stitch Also Known As Stem Stitch Chevron Stitch Wave Stitch Trellis stitch Measuring for Smocking Helpful Tips Gauging Machine Smocking Also Known As Shirring Tips for Machine Shirring Couching Fagotting Finishing the Smocking Conclusion Author Bio Publisher Introduction I was just moving around the local fabric market, when I noticed that a number of garments were embroidered with really attractive smocking stitches at the front and the back, the neck, yokes, pockets, sleeves, the bodices, necklines, bodices, cuffs, and even waists of a supposedly plain design and turn them into a thing of beauty. Smocking is supposed to have originated in Europe somewhere in the medieval times, where buttons could not be afforded by the laborers to fasten the garment and fullness needed to be controlled. This was done with multiple rows of gathered fabric which was controlled over a wide area. Nowadays, it is restricted to just babies and children’s clothing primarily, even though you can use it on any garment which needs a bit of decorative embellishment. Later on, smocking became a purely decorative design intended as a status symbol – the word originates from a peasants’ shirt also known as a smock. This was used extensively in almost every garment made by hand for laborers as well as for popular ordinary wear in the eighteenth as well as the nineteenth century. Smocking at that time was done with crewel needles or embroidery needles with silken threads or cotton threads depending on the fabric. You will need about 3 times the initial width’s material because of major part of it is going to be gathered up into folds, and stitched together. If you can gather the material, you can smock it. Naturally, this was the best way in which clothes could be “gathered together” in the absence of elastic. The fabrics on which the stitches work best are lightweight and ones that can gather easily. These include gingham, muslin, crêpe de Chine, Cashmere, Swiss cotton, voile, Batiste, cottons, and handkerchief linens.