Cut Out + Keep

How To Cross-Stitch

Step by step instructions on how-to cross stitch

https://www.cutoutandkeep.net/projects/how-to-cross-stitch-3 • Posted by Cat Morley

Cross-stitching is really easy to learn and super addictive when you get the hang of it.

You will need

Project Budget
Almost Nothing

Time

0 h 30

Difficulty

Nice & Simple
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Description

Cross-stitching is really easy to learn and super addictive when you get the hang of it.

Instructions

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    All you'll need to cross-stitch is an embroidery needle, some embroidery floss, scissors and a piece of aida cloth. Cut a length of floss long enough to reach from your extended hand to your shoulder. You can change the thickness of your stitches, by subtracting threads from your floss. I like to pull my thread apart in half and stitch with three threads.

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    Bring the needle and thread through the back of your cloth to the front, leaving a tail of a few inches at the back of the cloth.

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    Take the needle back down through the cloth, a hole to the right and a hole above the one you came through on, creating a sloping stitch going up to the right.

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    Bring the needle back through to the front, this time in the hole one below the one you went to the back on.

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    Repeat this process to continue your stitches. When you're working from a chart, or creating a design. Stitch one line at a time, going from left to right for the desired number of stitches.

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    Turn the cloth over to reveal neat vertical stitches at the back. Instead of knotting off your loose tail, slip it through a number of these stitches. This will keep your finished piece flat and neater than knotting.

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    Once you've got the hang of making a basic stitch, you can try making your stitches in just one step by bringing the thread through to the front at the bottom left, then placing the needle through the top right hole and then slipping it through the bottom right hole, before pulling the thread through in one stitch. The keeps your stitching at the front and makes the process a lot faster.

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    If you need to leave a blank space, or change colour for a stitch on your current line, skip as many holes as you need, bringing the thread back through to the front further along the line where that colour continues.

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    Keep stitching until you reach the end of the line.

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    Bring the thread back through to the front through the bottom right hole.

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    Now, take the thread back down through the top left hole, creating your first x stitch.

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    Continue this process for each stitch you created, working your way back along the line.

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    When you reach the start of your line again, bring your thread through the top left hole to the back of your work.

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    Bring the thread back to the front two holes below to start the second row.

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    Continue stitching your design following your chart.

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    When you've finished all of your stitches, take the thread through to the back, stitch it through the back of a number of the vertical stitches and cut.