Friday 5 February 2016

Step-by-Step How To Keep The Back Of Your Stitching Neat


Don't underestimate the importance of keeping the back of your stitching neat and tidy. No knots. No long expanses of thread between stitches or colour changes. No mess!

I'm using my current stitching project to provide some tips and to demonstrate the technique.  



Tip 1 Loop Start - No Knots 
Here's how to start stitching without using a knot in four easy steps. 
(1) Take a length of silk and fold it in half. 
(2) Thread the two ends (not the looped end) through the eye of the needle. 
(3) Bring the needle up from the back of the fabric to the front. Make sure you leave the looped end at the back. 
(4) Take the needle down from the front of the fabric to the back and through the loop of silk. Pull tight.
Continue stitching normally.



Tip 2 Form Each Stitch Consistently 
Don't create each cross stitch individually. Stitch a row of half crosses in one direction and then complete the crosses by stitching in the other direction. Ensure all of the top stitching in your work is consistent and slants the same way. Be very careful if you are rotating the fabric in a frame. Take it from me - it is very easy to get it wrong and end up with an embroidery in two halves with each half slanting the opposite way. 


Tip 3 Thread Length 
Don't be tempted to leave the thread too long thinking it will save time. It will get twisted and knotted as you stitch. It is frustrating and annoying and it will slow you down. If you find your thread is getting twisted as you stitch let the needle hang down until it stops spinning. Now you can safely start stitching again. 

Tip 4 Check The Back Of Your Work Frequently
Check the back of your work regularly as you stitch to ensure that the thread has not become knotted or loose. If you spot a problem - go back and resolve it. It is horrible to have to unpick stitches but it is worth it in the end.

Tip 5 Ending - No Knots 
Take the needle from the front of the fabric to the back as usual and then take the needle through the backs of three stitches before neatly cutting off the end as close to the last stitch as you can. I've found three to be the magic number. It looks neat and it holds the thread in place securely. 



Practice on projects when the back of your stitching will not be seen. Practice until keeping your stitching neat becomes second nature. Practice until it comes naturally and you don't have to think about it. In this way you'll remove the stress from stitching projects where the back of your stitching will remain visible.