In my previous post, I’d
written on stitch direction of long and short stitches.To see whether the
method really works, I decided to embroider a leaf.To those of you who wants to
learn the right way of embroidering a long and short leaf, please click here.
For this leaf, I’d used one strand of
stranded cotton and 2 strands for the veins.
Draw a leaf and also lines from the outline
pointing towards O.I’d outline the leaf with outline stitch.Work long stitches
on the lines.
Work long and short stitches on the left from
the middle to the base and from the middle to the tip.
The same was done on the right side.
This is the result after 2 or 3 rows.
A darker shade was used here.
Embroider the vein using stem stitch.
Decided to add more veins (straight stitches),
though they should be embroidered before working the mid-vein.
Although the directional lines are there, more
than once I ‘lost’ my way.In the process, I found a simpler method – just point
your thread towards point O each time and stitch.My work became easier and
faster.Next, I’ll show you how I’m going to embroider a long and short leaf
without drawing the directional lines.