Pages
- Home
- New in 2024
- Needlepoint Finishers
- Interviews
- Podcasts and Videos about Needlepoint
- Tutorials and Tips
- Monthly Clubs
- Needle Felting on Needlepoint Canvas UPDATED
- Beading on Needlepoint Canvas
- Blog-Stitching Links
- Teach Yourself Needlepoint & Embellishment
- Needle Painting with Thread on Needlepoint Canvas Tutorial
- Recommended Online Shops
- Counted Canvaswork Designers
- Counted Canvaswork Shops
- Where to Donate Unwanted Stash
- Where to Sell Unwanted Stash
- Where to Have Designs Put on Needlepoint Canvas
- How To Paint Your Own Needlepoint Canvas
- Learn How To Finish Needlepoint And Assemble Self-Finishing Items
- Turkeywork Tutorials
- Copyright, Trademark and Needlepoint
- Stitching Services
- Thread Colors for Faces and Skin
- Creating Needlepoint Plaids
- How to Clean or Restore Needlepoint
- Lefties Learn Basketweave
- Appraisers for Needlepoint
- Stitching with Ribbon on Needlepoint Canvas
- Trapunto, Repousse and Padding Explained
- Tips on Creating Bullions
- Cover A Canvas Entirely In Squares
- Monogram and Alphabet Sources
Tuesday, October 15, 2019
Using the Binding Stitch on a Belt Canvas
Labels:
belts,
binding stitches,
finishing,
tutorials,
videos
I've finished all the basketweave on my belt canvas so now I need to finish the edge with binding stitch. Not all belt finishers want a binding stitch, so check with your finisher or the shop that is arranging finishing for you first. Some will want two extra rows of tent stitches instead. I like the binding stitch, however, and the finisher I'm using does as well, so I have to master it before I can send my belt out.
I found several tutorials on doing the binding stitch on a belt. Note that she counts holes, not threads, when figuring out where each part of the binding stitch goes. You may prefer to count threads as I do, but it's easy to just count two threads instead of three holes.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=niT5P--H35U
Here's another video. She folds the raw edge down, which might make it easier for you to count or stitch the binding stitch. I find it a little too easy to get my thread twisted if I turn down the edge myself to work this way. There's great information on starting/ending a thread here whether you use her turn over technique or not.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GXFSMtRsAwU
M's Canvashouse also has a good video by Tink Boord-Dill. I think this "back three, up one" technique is the fastest way to work binding stitch. The video makes clear that you always work from the right towards the left and that you only bind the two long edges, not the ends of the belt canvas. I used this technique to work my binding stitch. But pick the technique that works best for you. Like much in needlepoint, there isn't one right way to do binding stitch.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F6kenW41SbQ
If you prefer the written word in a tutorial, Serendipity has a nice write up.
https://www.serendipityneedleworks.com/needlepoint-binding-stitch/
Many thanks to Hingham Square Needlepoint, Serendipity Stitch, M's Canvashouse and Eye of the Needle for help with binding stitch.
Written by Jane/Chilly Hollow
Blogging at http://chillyhollownp.blogspot.com
and at http://chstitchguides.blogspot.com
© Copyright October 10, 2019 Jane M. Wood. All rights reserved.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment