Spoolies Plastic Canvas Needlepoint Quilt Ornament – Free Pattern

Plastic Canvas Needlepoint Spool Quilt Ornament, designed by needlepoint expert Janet M. Perry

Scrap Threads and Plastic Canvas make this quilt ornament fun to stitch.

Are you looking for a way to make ornaments that look sophisticated, use your stash threads but that can be finished quickly? Look no further than 14-count plastic canvas and the wealth of quilt designs. This Spoolies Plastic Canvas Needlepoint Quilt Ornament is a perfect introduction to this much-overlooked material and to the wealth of great quilt designs. It’s part of the Plastic Canvas Blog Hop.

Find great projects on this virtual tour!

Find great projects on this virtual tour!

My grandmother was a seamstress and I remember loving all the wooden spools of brightly colored thread at her home. This quilt reminds me of her. It’s based on a free quilt pattern from Humble Bee Buzzings. I lightened both the spool ends and the background.

14-count plastic canvas is easily found at most craft shops. It comes in 8.5 x 11 inch sheets usually in white and clear. Either can be used although clear works slightly better for the front and white for the back of the ornament.

Any thread you use on 14-mesh canvas or that gives good or heavy coverage on 18-mesh canvas will work on this count of plastic canvas

For this design you will need:

  • embroidery floss in:
    • 5 sewing “thread” colors, I used red, yellow, green, blue, and violet
    • color of spool ends
  • background thread in white, ecru, or cream I used Vineyard Merino)
  • dark thread for inner and outside borders
  • light thread (could use background thread) for middle border
  • flat construction accent thread for “binding,” hanger and finishing

Following the chart below, stitch the ornament. Click on the chart to see the full-size diagram.

spoolie quilt block plastic canvas needlepoint  quilt ornament, designed by needlepoin exoert Janet M. Perry

Click on picture for full-size chart

The design is stitched in Mosaic, Reverse Mosaic, Diagonal Gobelin, Tent, Scotch, Reverse Scotch, and Half Scotch. Note that two corners of the middle border have broken lines.

Finishing

Once your ornament is stitched cut it out along the first line of open holes outside the stitched area. Trim this edge so it is smooth (as few bumps as possible). Using this as a template, cut out a second piece of plastic canvas the same size.

In eack corner cut off just a tiny bit so the corner is just a bit rounded. This prevents sharp corners that poke out.

Make a 3″ long loop of your hanger thread. Put the blank canvas behind the stitched canvas and sandwich the hanger between them.

Using your accent thread and beginning near one corner, sew the two pieces together with overcasting. This stitch is made like Tent Stitch (short diagonal stitches) but you go out the outside row of holes, over the edge and into the next hole. Instead of the two motions you make when doing needlepoint, you’re making one motion, like sewing.

At the corners you made need to make extra stitches for good coverage.

When you get back to the staring point, run your thread under some of the binding to finish it off.

P.S. If you are looking for May’s Learn-a-titch Owl, find it here.

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Spoolies Plastic Canvas Needlepoint Quilt Ornament – Free Pattern

May Learn-a-Stitch Needlepoint Owl

learn-a-stitch (las) nedlepoint owl, designed by needlepoint expert Janet M.Perry

This month’s Learn-A-Stitch Owl features stitches from the book Stitch Ins & Outs for the body. Although the stitches are designed for buildings, as you can see you can use them for so much more. Tomorrow find my Plastic Canvas Blog Hop project.

In this post I used:

  • Pebbly Perle
  • Baroque Silk
  • The Thread Gatherer Silken Perle
  • Belle Soie
  • Lorikeet
  • Watercolours

Trace the outline of the owl onto your canvas. Remember that the owls and the tip of the top triangle are represented by dots and transfer them as well. From the middle dot, draw two diagonal lines to make the top triangle.

Head

Stitch the triangle in the top center of the head in Encroached Gobelin below. This stitch is columns of Continental with open canvas between them.

encr gobelin 2-1

Add the eyes using brads. Mine were bought at Michael’s awhile ago. These are about 3/4″ in diameter and came in a package with several metallic colorsdiameter and round.

Stitch the head in Zig-zag Stitch, below. I make this stitch using Backstitch, one row at a time, this leaves the holes open and is more lacy. You can also make it in two passes of Pattern Darning, going over two under two. Make one pass of horizontal stitches, skipping every other row of holes. Then fill in using the same pattern to make the vertical stitches, completing the stitch. This will fill the holes, creating a more solid look.

zigzag

Left Side

Stitch the left side of the owl in Ridged Chimney Stitch, below. Make all the Mosaic stripes first, then fill in with the Reverse Tent Stripes.

ridged-chimney-stitch

Right Side

Stitch the right side of the owl in Pretty Patio, below. This stitch is confusing when seen in a block. It’s easiest to stitch one rectangular unit at a time in horizontal rows. The diagram reflects this. The first diagram is the first part of a rectangle. The second diagram completes the rectangle. The third diagram shows a second row so you can see how to place them. I just adored this stitch once figured out how to do it.

pretty-patio

Follow the entire series on-line:

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May Learn-a-Stitch Needlepoint Owl

Create Your Own Stitch Guide Class Open

needlepoint mary engelbreit ornament stitched with sublime floss by needlepoint expert janet m. perry

With this class you can easily create your own stitch guide.

Let me tell you a secret. I simply love needlepoint. It takes all my will power not to buy every canvas I see even though I can’t finish what’s already in my stash.

The reason is simple, I can’t help but start to plan a canvas whenever I see one, writing stitch guides in my mind.

I’m lucky because I write stitch guides but for too many of use stitchers we’re tied to guides that are either expensive, inadequate, or not to our tastes. You probably think the alternative is to commission a stitch guide, possibly with a cost running into hundreds of dollars. And if you already own the canvas and maybe even the threads even your options for this are limited.

You could summon your bravery and plunge into creating your own guide. But there doesn’t seem to be anywhere to find out how the professionals do it, so you end up frustrated or find yourself putting that canvas back into your stash.

I want to change that by giving you the tools to create your own stitch guides.

Once a year I offer this special class that will show you what others don’t, namely what you need to know to create your own stitch guide. With the techniques you’ll learn in this class, picking the right stitches and threads for your canvases won’t be magic anymore. You’ll know how to do it yourself.

The 2013 Create your own Stitch Guide cyberclass is now open. While each person stitches a canvas differently, there are guidelines, techniques, and tips that will help anyone, at any stitching level, create a lovely finished canvas.

I’ve worked and thought and stitched over decades and developed principles that I want to share with you in this cyberclass.

Participants in the class will not only get the five-lesson cyberclass but a selected group of people will get to have a canvas they submit analyzed for stitch guide possibilities. Another group of students will be able to have one stitched or partially stitched “failure” analyzed for how it could be improved.

There will be plenty of interaction with on-line discussions, weekly chat rooms, surveys, and more. New this year will be a section on stitch guides for the smaller canvas, including some delightful canvases stitched by friends.

In the cyberclass I’ll show you, with stitched and unstitched examples, the things no one tells you about. You’ll learn:

  • the different ways designs get on canvas and what they mean for stitching
  • how to pick threads for different areas for realism, fun stitching, and special effects
  • the different types of stitches and how to pick them so they fit on canvas
  • why every canvas needs to have some Tent Stitch on it
  • how to create a balanced canvas

Not only will you learn the things you’ve always wanted to know but that no one would tell you, but you’ll see the guidelines in action, with my successful canvases, my failures, and even my unstitched canvases. As a bonus you’ll see how, with one canvas, my initial plan got changed as I translated it to stitching.

Needlepoint is so wonderful and creative but for too long have people treated the creation of a stitch guide as a secret.

It’s not, you can learn to do it yourself, and I want to teach you how.

Become part of this exciting cyberclass, beginning June 15, 2013 and continuing for five weeks. There will also be a private Yahoo group created as part of the class where we can continue the discussion and share our problems and results.

The cost for the class is only $35, significantly less than your average stitch guide. You can sign up today using the PayPal button below.

Class lessons will be sent via email and discussion and bonus material will be in a private Yahoo group. If you would like to take the class but would prefer to pay by check, please contact me.

This class is only held once a year, and will not be repeated until 2014. The value of this class is enormous to stitchers at every level. With it you will be able to tackle hand-painted canvases with ease and without buying pricey stitch guides.

You can enroll today by clicking on the button above.

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Moms & Stitching

My Mom, Petey, playing in the snow shortly after her marriage.

My Mom, Petey, playing in the snow shortly after her marriage.

Although my Grandmother taught me the basic needlepoint stitch, I owe my passion for needlepoint to my Mom (pictured here).

My mom’s an artist, and she will try just about anything. When I was really little she designed and painted a fire truck for my brother’s bedroom. I remember her doing mixed media collage at one point in the 60′s I think. An oil of lovely apples hung in our living room.

When I was in Junior High she took up portraiture for awhile with me, in all my teenage anger, as the subject. Let’s just say that faces weren’t her strong suit.

Growing up we’d do crafts, Thanks to her I tried paper mache, copper enameling, and a host of other things. She taught me from childhood to love, appreciate, and understand art. The one thing we didn’t do was needlework.

She couldn’t teach me successfully was to draw. I’m just plain bad at it. So bad that she secretly worried that I’d never find an outlet for my creativity.

Probably because of my grandmother who sewed, knitted, and crocheted I had from an early age a love of thread. From my mom I had a love of color. These things manifested themselves in odd ways: collecting every green in every brand of embroidery floss to do a grand all-green scene (never happened), trying a complex stitch to embroider a rainbow on my jeans in 1969.

But nothing ever stuck. Then in 1970 I saw a needlepoint kit in a magazine and convinced my parents to buy it for me. After learning the basic stitch I was off and running, needlepointing constantly.

Needlepoint has, since I wasn’t even 14, been my creative outlet. It speaks to my artistic and fiber heritage. It gives me a way to be very artistic without having to draw. It fuels my creativity and feeds my soul.

Once my mom confessed she had worried about me and art. She said that when she saw me do needlepoint, she said “Janet has found her art.”

That’s the best compliment she ever gave me (and she isn’t shy about praise).

Happy Mother’s Day!

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Moms & Stitching

Needlepoint and Fatigue

Originally posted 2006-10-22 07:34:55. Republished by Blog Post Promoter

Have you ever had the feeling while you were stitching that this is too tiring to be fun?
That was just happening to me, and I wanted to share with you some questions to ask and some solutions for the question of needlepoint and fatigue.

Is the light good? For many people, especially as we get older, light is a big issue. No matter whether you stitch in natural light, under a stitching lamp, or just with the lights in your home, be sure there is enough. Dim light could be making your stitching less fun.

Is there not enough contrast between your clothing and the canvas? Sometimes this can make it impossible to stitch (try using black canvas when wearing black clothes! Get what my friend Michelle calls a “lap dog” – a piece of white (or black) canvas you put in your lap to enhance contrast. If you want even more light, there are now lamps which sit in your lap and shine up through the canvas.

Is your needle the right size? Having a needle which is either too large (my problem this morning) or too small can make it harder to stitch. If you are finding yourself stitching more slowly, or fighting the thread, try changing the needle size.

Are the holes in the canvas too small? Use some kind of magnification (glasses or a lens). For another solution, switch to larger mesh sizes.

Are you stitching in the car? Is it uncomfortable? This happened to me yesterday. Check the amount of glare. On days with lots of glare, you might need to wear sunglasses while you stitch, or just not stitch and enjoy the ride.

Is the frame too heavy? There are two solutions to this. One is to switch to mini stretcher bars which are thinner and lighter than regular bars. The other is to allow a strand to support the weight for you.

Are your feet restless or tired? Get a footstool or use a recliner and put your feet up. My favorite footstool is a foldable one from K’s Creations.

Finally, if you suffer from some kinds of chronic problems (MS and fibromyalgia in my case) sometimes you are just too tired or uncoordinated to stitch. I know this is happening when my hands get achy and I can’t get my needle into the hole. If this happens to me, I try to rest a bit and see if that helps. If that doesn’t do the trick, I stop stitching and do other things. Some of the ones I’ve been doing lately include finding stretcher bars for new projects, pulling threads, and pasting things into my idea notebook. Other times, I look at needlepoint books for ideas.

Fatique doesn’t have to mean an end to needlework (even if it’s an end just for the morning)

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Inspire your Needlepoint with this Art Generating Tool

Create designs like this easily

Create designs like this easily

In the interests of helping you waste time and inspiring your needlepoint (though not directly) I bring you Silk. It’s an interactive art generator that has easy to use tolls that let you create wonderful designs that seem to be made of billowy silk or colored smoke.

Click on the link and the design screen shows up, a blank black canvas. Put your mouse somewhere and start to move it. A symmetrical design will appear.

On the left are options and controls. The dot in the line on the upper left is the controls button. With it you can pick colors. To do a color blend drag one color onto another, then you can start drawing with the blend.

Below that is a slider that allows you to create symmetry with different numbers of points. When you select these the points appear as dark gray dots.

You can save your images as well.

This is such a cool tool.

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Plastic Canvas Blog Hop – Lots of Free Projects

Find great projects on this virtual tour!

Find great projects on this virtual tour!

You’ll have to wait until May 15 to see my project, but in the meantime take a look at these wonder plastic canvas projects provide by a number of different designers.

THe idea was developed and coordinated by my friend Diane of CraftPod. She’s long been a fan of using plastic canvas in ways that are beyond the usual design. I’ve featured many of them on this blog (click on the category plastic canvas under techniques to find them.

You can visit her blog post to get the complete list of designers, days when the projects go up, and links to the blogs.

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Plastic Canvas Blog Hop – Lots of Free Projects

Quotable Quotes in Needlepoint

noel-letter-chart

Samplers and quotes are a continual attraction to stitchers of all kinds. From magnets which declare whether the dishes are “clean” or “dirty” to elegantly bordered and framed sayings, the combination of words and stitches allows almost anyone to become a designer.

Today I will discuss choosing an appropriate quote, picking a style of alphabet, spacing and choice of a border. With these tools, you can make your own quotable quotes in needlepoint.

Choosing a Quote

When doing a quote in needlework, you need to be aware of the space each letter will take up and the effect this will have on the size of the finished piece.

Ideally a quote for needlepoint should be short. Quotes for cross stitch can be longer because you can use Backstitched letters to put more letters on each line. The quote should also be something which breaks into more or less even lines. For example “Kiss the Cook” is great as either a one-line or a three-line quote, but is not good as a two-line quote.

Alphabets

Once you have chosen the quote the next challenge is choosing your alphabet. A finished quote can use letters from one or more graphed alphabets. A number of these alphabets available on the Web can on my alphabet charts Pinterest board or in the list of Free Alphabets on All about Needlepoint. Some possible combinations are:

  • all capital letters
  • upper and lower case
  • fancy or larger capital letters

Since the design for your quote comes almost entirely from the shape and style of the letters these considerations are very important. You can test an alphabet/text combination by using similar font on your Word Processor and trying the phrase out.

There are many books available, both for needlepoint or for other kinds of counted stitchery, that have a wide variety of alphabets. You can also use a book of fonts or typefaces to design your own alphabet.

Spacing

There are three kinds of spacing to consider when graphing a quote: the space between the letters of a word, the space between the words and the space between the lines. The right amount of this “white space” can make your design sing. The wrong amount can make it look crowded and amateurish.

Since it is much easier to erase pencil on graph paper than it is to take out stitching, it is important to work all of this out on graph paper first. Sometimes it takes several tries to get the spacing right.

When spacing the letters in a word, your goal is to keep a consistent amount of white space between the letters. Then the letters will look evenly spaced. This does not necessarily mean that you have the same number of unstitched meshes between each letter. For example if the word “love” was charted so that each letter is two meshes away from the next letter, the first letter looks too far away. Move the “l” over one thread and the word looks balanced.

Spacing between the words is very dependent on the amount of space you want each line to take up. Usually I start with spacing about three or four times my target distance between letters. If the letters are three meshes apart (ideally), the words are nine meshes apart.

Once you have decided these things, graph each line separately onto graph paper. Now cut them out.

The amount of space between the lines of a quote is probably the hardest thing to judge. This space acts as a visual pause in the viewer’s mind. If you put the lines to close together they will look jumbled. If you put them too far apart, they will look like they do not belong together.

The thing which makes line spacing so difficult are those letters, like l, t, d, and f, which stick up (ascenders) and those letters, like j, p, and g, which hang down (descenders). In addition to these, you may also have capital letters which are bigger than the rest of the letters.

If you put the lines too close together, the ascenders and descenders interfere.

I have found that the best spacing between lines is the size of the ascender (top of smaller letters to top of big letters) + the size of the descender (base line of letters to bottom of big letters) + 2 or 3. Using this formula, I place each of my lines on a clean sheet of graph paper. I adjust the spacing between all the lines until it looks good. Then I tape down each line to create my final chart.

Borders

Borders on samplers, if they are used, are usually one of three types: decorative stitches, mitered or corner medallions. Each one gives a very different look and each has its own challenges.

There are many decorative stitches which when worked in a single line can make dramatic borders. Some of these include herringbone, Norwich, rice (graphed here), and gobelin. For some of these stitches you need to be sure the length of each side of the border is divisible by the size of the stitch. Partial stitches and compensation do not look good on these kind of borders, and you will need to rearrange things to make the decorative stitch fit. Since I almost always count wrong, I rarely do these kind of borders.

Mitered borders are those which “turn” the corner evenly to make a graceful transition. I find these borders, challenging as well, because it is often hard for me to reverse the pattern to go along the second edge.

My favorite choice for borders is to use a corner ornament. In these kinds of borders, the border is interrupted for something different at each corner. Many modern cross stitch samplers do this, so you have probably seen many examples. These corner ornaments can be a simple square or they can be a complex decorative stitch or other design.

When choosing a border for your sampler, be sure to use or design something which is appropriate for the quote (don’t put baby blocks on a wedding sampler), equal in fanciness, and makes the quote be the focus of the border.

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Seeing Stripes? – Upcoming 25 Stitches Class

Textured stitch stripes in a needlepoint by Terry Dryden

Textured stitch stripes in a needlepoint by Terry Dryden

Bold or subtle, colorful or neutral, with this notebook class you’ll be seeing stripes. The upcoming 25 stitches class begins June 1, 2013 and focuses on these surprising useful stitches.

In the class you’ll have a chance to try out stripes large and small. Some of these stitches are small enough to add distinction to even the smallest area, while others make great backgrounds for larger pieces.

Plus you’ll learn about creating your own striped patterns, how stripes can solve dyelot problems, and tons of tips for using these stitches in your needlepoint.

All for only $25 (sign up with button near the end of this post).

Because this is a notebook class you can stitch it your way, using your scraps of canvas and leftover threads.ecause this is an email class you can take it on your time, when it works for you and your schedule.

You can sign up right now using the PayPal button below. (If you would like to pay by check, please contact me for instructions.)

Class begins June 1, 2013 so don’t delay. You’ll be on fire with ideas for these stitches.

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Seeing Stripes? – Upcoming 25 Stitches Class

Trianglepoint Christmas Tree Quilt Ornament Free Pattern

Trianglepoint Christmas Tree Ornament designed by needlepoint expert Janet M. Perry

Trianglepoint Christmas Tree Ornament

This ornament is based on Christmas quilts which have large trees made up of triangular patches of many different kinds of green fabric. A trunk of brown is added along with white and red borders. The green threads should be mostly solid or variegated with only slight changes in color. Tweeded threads add interest while not changing color.

This ornament works up very quickly and makes an unusual decoration for the tree. To make the ornament you will need:

  • 1 card Rainbow Gallery Backgrounds “Natural Silk” (BG1)
  • 5 different green threads from your stash
  • 1 shade brown yarn in a matte color
  • 1 skein red variegated yarn
  • 18 mesh canvas canvas 4″ x 6″

Begin about 1.5″ from the left side of the canvas. Following the ornament picture for color choice, make the bottom row of triangles. All the triangles are five stitches; the smallest size below.

Once the bottom row is completed, continue making the tree, following the pattern.

trianglepoint needlepoint basic equilateral triangles

sizes of trianglepoint triangles

When the tree is complete, make the trunk in brown thread about seven stitches across and eight stitches long. I used Parisian Stitch for this, but it would also look great in Tent Stitch.

Now for the background. The background for the tree itself is made up of triangles in the silk. The background for the trunk is Parisian Stitch, also in the silk. There should be a half triangle (three stitches) at either side of the base of the tree.

Next do the borders. Both borders are done in Goblein over three threads, below. Stitch the red border first, and then the white border.

upright or straight gobelin needlepoint stitch, diagrammed by needlepoint expert janet m. perry

Border Stitch for ornament

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Trianglepoint Christmas Tree Quilt Ornament Free Pattern