as I did when I first began my Petit Point journey back in December of 2017. My very first Petit point project was a 1/12th scale rug that I designed myself, using some elements I found on the Web and some that I made up myself. I completed stitching it in February of 2018. I named the rug Butterfly Rug (very original name, lol) and have posted the pattern for free in our Free Patterns section. The pattern is free since I used some elements that were "Free for Personal use" in the design and therefore, should not sell the pattern.
It is hard to imagine that I have been doing this for just over 6 years! Who could have imagined that I would love it so much that I would go on to design so many fun rugs to stitch! I have thoroughly enjoyed my journey and look forward to many more years of designing and stitching.
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helping to make the symbols look more like the originals. This is by no means the only way to stitch this pattern. It is the way I have chosen to stitch it. There is noting wrong with keeping all of your stitches slanting in the same direction all of the time. (In fact, most people would tell you that you can't change the direction of your stitches - I choose to ignore that because I like the way this looks)
Most likely, this border will take me a while to finish, but you will see it sooner as I have been trying to catch up on my blog posts since being away, and a new post will be showing up once a week until I am caught up. For example, this post comes one week after the last one, but in reality it took me almost a month to get this far after the photo in the last post.
This would leave the opposite side of each motif empty. When I got all the way around, I did the same thing around the rug, stitching the other side of each motif and the unfinished single stitches. You can see some of the empty sections remaining on the bottom left side of the photo. As you can see, the empty sections are alternating down the side. This way of filling in these motifs has two advantages - 1) it uses less thread and 2) it doesn't make the rug thicker by carrying thread across the motif.
When I showed this photo on the online stitching group I belong to ([email protected]), someone asked me a very good question: Do you actually count the hundreds of stitches for the border? Not at all. That would be way too difficult. I usually place a few stitches in the corner of the outermost border, then count inwards diagonally from the corner to the first section that has a pattern. In this case it was 6 rows in from the outermost row. I then work the patterned section around the rug, using the pattern to count my way around and make sure there are the correct number of elements on each side before I get to a corner. I complete the patterned section so that I know everything is correct and then I stitch the outer, boring rows to get some of the boring parts out of the way before I start on another patterned section. The great thing about this approach is that I know every row I do from now on is smaller than the last, lol. The small patterned section on this rug is hard to see in the photo but shows up very well in real life. Do you sometimes get bored with sections of a rug when you are stitching? I know I do. I often find the plain rows on the outermost border and the background of a rug to be the most boring part. I decided long ago to try not to have a lot of that to do at the end of stitching one of my rugs because I would find it so difficult to finish. I would be thinking all the while of the new rug I want to start and would most likely put the current one aside so I could start a new one. In the beginning of stitching a rug, I am still excited about stitching it, so I try and complete some of the boring stitching right away. I still have a few rows of the dark blue to complete before I start the more interesting, inner border, but I am determined to be disciplined and do this before I start the next section!
in from the corner.
My first stitches were about 1/2" (1.25 cm) worth of stitches horizontally from the corner. (Bottom row in the picture). Then I return to the corner and finish one stitch before the end of the row. Then I stitched a stitch one stitch in from that and one row up to continue the diagonal I am forming. The outermost border is made up of 4 rows, so I stitched one more diagonal and continued the innermost row of that border across the canvas until I got within 1" (2.5 cm) from the right corner. I did not count, only measured with my measuring tape. I did not end the thread because I will be using it later to continue the stitching at that side of the rug. My next color brought me closer to the border I wanted to use to lay out my rug perimeter. As you can see, each row began 1 stitch up and over from the last row, to create a diagonal. I did not need to, but decided at this point to stitch across the rug again until I reached a similar point my last row did. You will see one blank row in the photo. This is to be dark blue, but I didn't want to start another thread, so I left it blank. Continuing on the diagonal, I finally reached the row where my pattern could begin. This row was very easy in that I stitched 4 stitches, left 4 blank and repeated across the row. At this point, I began counting the number of elements I had across the bottom row. In this case I had the corner element, 27 elements across the bottom, then another corner element. I find that I can easily count blank spaces (where the element will go) since I am not trying to count holes across the whole width of the rug. When I had the correct number of spaces, I stitched the corner element edges and continued vertically to reach the spot you see in the first photo before I ended my stitching for that day. I will continue in this fashion until my border has all four sides in place. |
AuthorMy name is Yvette, and I will be writing this blog to tell you about the creative process that has gone into the creation of my Petitpoint patterns along with showing the stitching I have done of some of the rugs. Archives
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