Friday, May 29, 2009

Silk Ribbon Embroidery Supplies and Stitches


Before you do any silk ribbon embroidery (SRE) you need supplies. The photo above shows several brands of silk ribbon and also shows a packet of chenille needles. Stitching with silk ribbon needs a needle with a large eye and a sharp point, and chenille needles are perfect on both counts.

Silk ribbon for embroidery comes mostly in 4 mm widths although 2 mm and 7 mm widths are available. I don't have any 2 mm in my stash but the card of variegated yellow ribbon in the photo is 7 mm wide. For 18 count canvas like my example, 4 mm works just fine, although if I were doing a large and elaborate piece, I would want some 2 mm for buds and other small areas. I actually used a card of variegated purple Splendor Silk Ribbon from Rainbow Galley. It's not in the photo. I didn't think to take the picture until after the wisteria was all done. The card held 4 yards of ribbon and I used it all and needed to finish my wisteria with some of the Bucilla pale lavender ribbon you see in the picture. Brands of ribbons matter. Some are stiffer than others. I like the crisp curl the stiffer Bucilla ribbon gave to my wisteria blossoms, although the Splendor silk ribbon looks just as good. I haven't used the River Silks ribbon yet, although folks rave about it, and I haven't used the Gloriana silk ribbon yet, either, although I love the depth of color. Whatever brand you use, keep in mind that the two wisteria clusters which are each around 3/4 inch wide and 2 inches long, took more than 4 yards of ribbon. Make sure you buy enough ribbon. SRE does use a lot of ribbon.


Now let's talk about the stitches I used. I had taken a careful look at the Lee wisteria kimonos Ruth Dilts and Joan Lohr stitched and taught Judie at Thistle Needleworks, and already knew that they used mostly Japanese ribbon stitch. To do this stitch, you come up through your ground fabric (NP canvas in our case) and then lay your ribbon flat on the surface and plunge your needle down at the point you want your stitch to end. This is why you need a sharp needle--you use it to stitch right through the ribbon! You get a long stitch with a very pretty curl at the end. Here's a good diagram.
http://www.stitching.com/CDA/stitch/stitches/ribbon-stitch.html

I looked at various ribbon stitches and did some test stitching and decided I wanted to mostly use a lazy daisy stitch for my wisteria. If you look at the stitches on the left of the canvas you see a lazy daisy stitch done in dark purple as a sort of horseshoe shape. Instead of starting and ending my lazy daisy stitch loop in the same hole, I spaced the starting and stopping holes apart to make the horseshoe which I tied down as you normally tie down lazy daisy stitches.
http://crochet.about.com/library/weekly/aalazydaisy.htm

If you look back at photos of the teapot from yesterday with the wisteria partly stitched, you'll see the blossoms were painted as shaded ovals of various lengths and widths. Working from the bottom of the spray of flowers to the top, I made a lazy daisy horseshoe that fit an oval. If the oval was wide, I put a smaller lazy daisy horseshoe inside the first horseshoe. Then I finished the flower by doing the Japanese embroidery stitch in the middle of the horseshoe's empty shape. I always came up at the top of the horseshoe right under the tie down stitch and went down at the bottom between the horseshoe legs so that the curl of the stitch was at the bottom. In my sample on the canvas's left side, the horseshoe lazy daisy stitch is in dark purple and the Japanese embroidery stitch that fills the middle is in pale lavender. I hope you can see the little curl where I put the needle right through the ribbon at the bottom.

Occasionally I did a French knot in ribbon if I needed to fill a space that my other stitches didn't cover. I also put a few single Japanese embroidery stitches here and there in the very small oval areas. It didn't take long (although it took a lot of ribbon) and the only hard part was keeping the ribbon from twisting. It was pretty well behaved most of the time but it is easy not to pull your ribbon all the way snug if you aren't careful. I cut out the lighter areas of the overdyed Splendor silk ribbon to use mostly on the left spray of flowers and put most of the darker areas of the overdyed ribbon on the right side. I thought that looked better, but really I could have let the colors fall naturally if I wanted.

I like how this turned out and learned a great deal about SRE that I hope to put to good use on two other pieces I have in my stash that will benefit from silk ribbons. The next area is the latticework which as you see I've padded with long stitches of DMC white cotton perle that I'm overlaying with 4 plies of my white Gloriana silk. I am not sure that I have the stitches the proper length in some areas that I had to compensate so I'll be studying this and thinking it over for a while.

Meanwhile the sun is supposed to be out today and perhaps that means my finishing of the pet guardian angels can continue. Wish me luck on both projects, ok?

Jane/Chilly Hollow
Main blog at http://blog.360.yahoo.com/chillyhollow

12 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hi Jane,

This piece came out beautifully! I LOVE Silk Ribbon Embroidery! It always looks so lush and different from everything else; give real "oomph" to the canvas! And, it works up so fast! You did a terrific job!

Denise

The Chilly Hollow Needlepoint Adventure said...

Thank you, Denise. I hope this inspires other folks to try SRE. It has endless possibiliites and looks lovely when finished.

NCPat said...

You did a great job!!

The Chilly Hollow Needlepoint Adventure said...

Thanks, Pat. It was really easy, although now I know I need to check out several brands of ribbons to find the one I like best. It makes a difference in the crispness of the stitches.

Anonymous said...

I can't find the silk and organza ribbon called for in the patterns that I have. Where can you get 5mm 7mm 9mm & 13mm. I can't start my project with what I have left from several years ago.
Sue skhall@snowcrest.net

The Chilly Hollow Needlepoint Adventure said...

Personally, I think I'd talk to Needle in a Haystack in California
http://www.needlestack.com/WebStore/thread.html

or Needle Works in Austin, Texas to find the ribbons you need.
http://www.theneedleworks.com/catalog/index.php?cPath=31_140

Another good choice is Fireside Stitchery in Pennsylvania.
http://www.firesidestitchery.com/fs/threads/index.cfm

All three places have a good stock of silk and organdy ribbons and can replace what you want with another brand if you don't want to wait for a special order. I've ordered from all of them and can vouch for their customer service.

Alana Albertson said...

I love your work! I'm working on an Edie and Ginger fairy tale and I'm using Gloriana ribbon for the flowers. Someone told me to stitch under the ribbon with floss. Do you do that?

The Chilly Hollow Needlepoint Adventure said...

Morning, Chica. Nice to meet you!

Do you mean do I stitch the canvas underneath where I am going to put the ribbon flowers or do you mean do I attach the flowers with floss? The answer to both is yes maybe. It is a question of common sense whether you will stitch your canvas before you put in the flowers. Sometimes that anchors them well and prevents any bare canvas from showing. Sometimes (like a pot of flowers or a field of them) you don't need any background coverage because the ten million French knots you are going to use will cover. Also, sometimes you need a bit of floss to tack down a flower petal in the way you want it to go and sometimes you don't.

You just have to decide what will work best for you and do it. Silk ribbon embroidery can be ripped out (mostly I cut the ribbon in several places front and back and carefully pull the pieces out) if you make a mistake. Just redo.

I hope that is what you are asking. Communication via the Internet isn't always easy!

Alana Albertson said...

Thank you Jane - You answered my question. I meant if I should stitch all the bare canvas or could I just cover it up with the ribbon. I don't want any bare canvas showing through so I will stitch underneath. I'll post pictures when I finish. Thanks!

The Chilly Hollow Needlepoint Adventure said...

Excellent! Communication is hard, and I wasn't quite sure about what you wanted to know. I think I'd stitch under the silk ribbon flowers myself, just to be safe. If you are worried that it'll be hard to go through the thread and the silk ribbon both, go down a ply or two with the floss you are stitching over where the flowers will go later. Then a sharp needle should go through the thread just fine.

OregonPatchWorks said...

Superb....Really something extra in this beautiful art....i like this lovely post..amazing thread work ..!!!!
Thanks for sharing this wonderful art piece with us

Embroidery

The Chilly Hollow Needlepoint Adventure said...

Thanks, OPW. My mother loves this ornament and hangs it with her collection of blue and white china. If you do any tiny quilts to hang on a wall, try some silk ribbon embroidery on them. It's really easy, particularly if you do the embroidery before the quilt back goes on. I think it will add a lot to the right piece.