menu:


translate page into German translate page into french translate page into italian translate page into portuguese translate page into spanish translate page into Japanese translate page into Korean

More Articles


 


More Hobby Craft Sites


 

 


search this site




Embroidery



From: Barry S Gilbert
Date: Sunday f 20, 2012

Embroidery Herring Bone Stitches


Herring-bone is the name by which it is customary to distinguish a variety of stitches somewhat resembling the spine of a fish such as the herring. It would be simpler to describe them as "fish-bone," but that term has been appropriated to describe a particular variety of it. One would have thought it more convenient to use fish for the generic term, and a particular fish for the specific. However, it saves confusion to use names as far as possible in their accepted sense.


It will be seen from the sampler, Illustration 20, that this stitch may be worked open or tolerably close, but in the latter case it loses something of its distinctive character. Fine lines may be worked in it, but it appears most suited to the working of broadish bands and other more or less even-sided or, it may be, tapering forms, more feathery in effect than fish-bone-like, such as are shown at E on sampler.


Ordinary Embroidery Herring Bone is such a familiar stitch that the necessity of describing it is rather a matter of literary consistency than of practical importance.


The two simpler forms of herring-bone (it is always worked from left to right, and begun with a half-stitch) marked A and C on the sampler are strikingly different in appearance, and are worked in different waysas will be seen at once by reference to the back of the sampler (Illustration 21), where the stitches take in the one case a horizontal and in the other a vertical direction.


To work A, bring your needle out about the centre of the line to be worked, put it into the lower edge of the line about one eighth of an inch further on, take up this much of the stuff, and, keeping the thread to the right, above the needle, draw it through. Then, with the thread below it, to the right, put your needle into the upper edge of the line quarter of an inch further on, and, turning it backwards, take up again eighth of an inch of stuff, bringing it out immediately above where it went in on the lower edge.


What is called "Indian Herring-bone" (B) is merely stitch A worked in longer and more slanting stitches, so that there is room between them for a second row in another colour, the two colours being, of course, properly interlaced.


To work C, bring your needle out as for A, and, putting it in at the upper edge of the line to be worked and pointing it downwards, whilst your thread lies to the right, take up ever so small a piece of the stuff. Then, slightly in advance of the last stitch, the thread still to the right, your needle now pointing upwards, take another similar stitch from the lower edge.



20. HERRING-BONE SAMPLER.



21. HERRING-BONE SAMPLER (BACK).

The variety at D is merely a combination of A and C, as may be seen by reference to the back of the sampler (opposite), though the short horizontal stitches there seen meet, instead of being wide apart as in the case of A.




The working of E on herring-bone sampler.

What is known as "fish-bone" is illustrated in the three feathery shapes on the sampler (E), two of which are worked rather open. It is characteristic of this stitch that it has a sort of spine up the centre where the threads cross. Suppose the stitch to be worked horizontally.

Bring your needle out on the under edge of the spine about quarter of an inch from the starting point of the work, and put it in on the upper edge of the work at the starting point, bringing it out immediately below that on the lower edge of the work. Put it in again on the upper edge of the spine, rather in advance of where it came out on the lower edge of it before, and bring it out on the lower edge of this spine immediately below where it entered.



The working of F on herring-bone sampler.

In close herring-bone (F on the sampler, Illustration 20) you have always a long stitch from left to right, crossed by a shorter stitch which goes from right to left. Having made a half stitch, bring the needle out at the beginning of the line to be worked, at the lower edge, and put it in eighth of an inch from the beginning of the upper edge.

Bring it out again at the beginning of this edge and put it in at the lower edge quarter of an inch from the beginning, bringing it out on the same edge one eighth of an inch from the beginning. Put the needle in again on the upper edge one eighth of an inch in front of the last stitch on that edge, and bring it out again, without splitting the thread, on the same edge as the hole where the last stitch went in.


If you wish to cover a surface with herring-bone-stitch, you work it, of course, close, so that each successive stitch touches its foregoer at the point where the needle enters the stuff (F on the sampler, Illustration 20). It will be seen that at the back (21) this looks like a double row of back-stitching.

Worked straight across a wide leaf, as in the lower half of sampler, it is naturally very loose. A better method of working is shown in the side leaves, which are worked in two halves, beginning at the base of a leaf on one side and working down to it on the other. There is here just the suggestion of a mid-rib between the two rows.



The working of G on herring-bone sampler.

The stitch at G on sampler, having the effect of higher relief than ordinary close herring-bone (F), is sometimes misleadingly described as tapestry stitch. It is worked, as the back of the sampler (21) clearly shows, in quite a different way. You get there parallel rows of double stitches. Having made a half-stitch entering the material at the upper edge of the work, bring the needle out on the lower edge of it immediately opposite. Then, going back, put it in at the beginning of the upper edge, and bring it out at the beginning of the lower one.

Thence take a long slanting stitch upwards from left to right, bring the needle out on the lower edge immediately opposite, cross it by a rather shorter stitch from right to left, entering the stuff at the point where the first half-stitch ended, bring this out on the lower edge, opposite, and the stitch is done.


The artistic use of herring-bone-stitch is shown in the leaves of the tulip, and a closer variety of it in the pink, or whatever the flower may be, in the hand of the little figure.



Related Products And Free Videos






 

Hobbies Crafts Articles


Embroidery Interlacings Surface Stitches And Diapers

... darker silk. C and G undergo a second course of interlacing. The danger of splitting the first stitches in working the interlacing ones, is avoided by passing the needle eye-first through them. Other surface work, sometimes called LACE-STITCH, is illustrated in the sampler, Illustration 34. There is really ... 

Read full article  


Embroidery Tools A Word To The Worker

... and Indian ink or colour. On a light stuff it is possible to use, instead of a pen, a hard pencil. On a dark material one must use Chinese white, to which it is well to add, not only a little gum (arabic), but a trace of ox-gall, to make it work easily. One gets by this method naturally rather a rotten ... 

Read full article  


Embroidery Art In Needlework

... described in the text, and a marginal note shows at a glance where the description is given. This should be read needle and thread in hand or skipped. Samplers and other examples of needlework are uniformly on a scale large enough to show the stitch quite plainly. The examples of old work illustrate always, ... 

Read full article  


Embroidery Bed Hangings

... have been led into evil by acting first and thinking afterwards." In another compartment, a lament goes up in which she deplores the death of her husband. "His age was sixty and eight years," she says. "The dropsy has killed him. I, his afflicted Anna Blickin von Liechtenperg who was left behind, have ... 

Read full article  


Embroidery Buttonhole Stitches

... utilitarian name to be. It is, as its common use would lead one to suppose, pre-eminently a one-edged stitch, a stitch with which to mark emphatically the outside edge of a form. There is, however, a two edged variety known as ladder stitch, shown in the two horn shapes on the sampler. By the use of two ... 

Read full article  


Embroidery Canvas Stitches

... stitches necessarily worked in vertical, whereas the ground generally is in horizontal, lines. On the face of the work the stitches cross all in the same way. The common use of cross-stitch and the somewhat geometric kind of pattern to which it lends itself. The broad and simple leafage, worked solid ... 

Read full article  


Embroidery Chain Stitches

... below where it first went in but precisely on the same line, and you have the first link of your chain. To work what is known as cable-chain (D on the sampler, Illustration 17) keep your thread to the right, put in your needle, pointing downwards, a little below the starting point, and bring it out about ... 

Read full article  


Embroidery Couching Stitches

... but one does not think very highly of conjurers. Personally, I would much rather have seen more plainly the way the cord is sewn down in the graceful cross in Illustration 51, a design perfectly adapted to couching, and yet unlike the usual thing. Where it is softish silk which is stitched down, it makes ... 

Read full article  


Embroidery Crewel Stitches

... apparent in the stem on Illustration 13. What you get is, in effect, a combination of crewel and outline stitches, as at J, which in the other case only occurs in the centre of the shape where the files of stitches meet. To represent shading in crewel-stitch, to which it is admirably suited, it is well ... 

Read full article  


Embroidery Darning Stitches

... open threads which gives to rectangular darning, like the German work in Illustration 45, character which more than compensates for its angularity in outline. The darning is there quite even in workmanship, but it is, as will be seen, of different degrees of strength lighter for the surface of the pattern, ... 

Read full article  


Embroidery Direction Of The Stitch Stitches

... Marie Antoinette, but the treatment of the stitch is clever in its way the way, as I have said, rather of painting than of embroidery, giving as it does the roundness of the birds' bodies but no hint of actual feathering, such as you find in the bird in Illustration 85. There, every stitch helps to explain ... 

Read full article  


Embroidery Embroidery Design

... case of really important work, to be executed at considerable cost not only of material, but of patient labour, surely it is worth giving serious thought to its design. The scant consideration commonly given to it shows how little the worker is in earnest. Or has she thought. And is she persuaded that ... 

Read full article  


Embroidery Embroidery In Relief Stitching Stitch

... underlay is of cardboard, pasted on to the linen. It is worked over with purse silk, to and fro across the forms, and sewn down at the margin with finer silk. This is a method of work often employed when gold thread is used. In sprig G the underlay or stuffing is of string, sewn down with stitches always ... 

Read full article  


Embroidery Embroidery Materials

... materials to embroider with than thread. Gold wire, for example, and spangles, coral and pearls, which have been used with admirable discretion, as well as to vulgar purpose. Jewels also were lavished upon the embroidery of bishops' mitres, gloves and other significant apparel, and in default of real ... 

Read full article  


Embroidery Feather And Oriental Stitches

... needle strokes in the centre closer together or farther apart according to the effect to be produced. It owes its name, of course, to the more or less feathery effect resulting from its rather open character. Like buttonhole, it may be worked solid, as in the leaf and petal forms on the sampler, Illustration ... 

Read full article  


Embroidery Figure Embroidery Stitches

... severe simplicity, for rendering in needlework than later and more pictorial forms of composition. That needlework can, however, in capable hands, go farther than that is shown in Illustration 79, a rather threadbare specimen of 15th century work, in which the character of the man's face is admirably ... 

Read full article  


Embroidery Information

... covered with elaborate devices. In the fourth century the Bishop of Amasia ridiculed the extravagant dress of his contemporaries. "When men appear in the streets thus dressed," he says, "the passers by look at them as at painted walls. Their clothes are pictures, which little children point out to one ... 

Read full article  


Embroidery Inlay Mosaic Cut Work Pattern Patternwork

... of what the mediaeval glaziers did in coloured glass. Admirable heraldic work was done in Germany by this method, and it is still employed for flag making. The stuffs used should be as nearly as possible of one substance. In patchwork of loosely-textured material each separate piece of stuff may be cut ... 

Read full article  


Embroidery Laid Work Stitches

... give variety of colour. The lines of sewing vary according to the lines of the laid floss, but do not cross them at right angles. The important thing is, of course, that they should catch the laid "tresses" at intervals not too far apart. If the lines which sew down the floss have also to express drawing, ... 

Read full article  


Embroidery One Stitch Or Many Stitches

... one stitch throughout, or a variety of stitches. Much will depend upon the effect desired. Good work has been done in either way, but one may safely say, in the first place, that it is as well not to introduce variety of stitch without good cause there is safety in simplicity and in the second, that stitches ... 

Read full article  


Embroidery Plea For Simplicity

... suggest the sewing machine. Embroidery does not to-day take quite the place it once did. It was used, for example, by the early Coptic Christians to supplement tapestry. That is to say, what they could not weave they stitched, it was only to get more delicate detail than their tapestry loom would allow, ... 

Read full article  


Embroidery Quilting Stitches Stitching

... the stitches has a tendency to rise, the two layers of stuff do not lie close except where they are held together by the stitching, and a very pleasantly uneven surface results. This effect is enhanced if between the two stuffs there is a layer of something soft. If, now, you keep down the groundwork ... 

Read full article  


Embroidery Rope And Knot Stitches

... which may not have worked out quite to the embroiderer's liking. The obvious fitness of knots to represent the stamens of flowers. Worked close together, they represent admirably the eyes of composite flowers, as on the sampler, they give, again, valuable variety of texture to the crest of the stork. ... 

Read full article  


Embroidery Satin Stitch And Its Offshoots

... href="http://homepage.ntlworld.com/webhost/41satin.jpeg">

41. OFFSHOOTS FROM SATIN AND CREWEL STITCHES.
42. OFFSHOOTS FROM SATIN AND CREWEL STITCHES (BACK). The distinction between the stitches so far described is ... 
Read full article  


Embroidery Shading Stitches

... merely mechanical worker could not have got. In fact, there are indications that this is the work more of a painter than of an embroidress, who would have acknowledged by her stitches the feathering of the birds necks as well as their roundness.

... 
Read full article  


Embroidery Silver Gold

... the eighth century. Vitruvius tells how to preserve the gold in old embroidery, or in worn-out textiles where the metal has been extensively used. He says, "When gold is embroidered on a garment which is worn out, and no longer fit for use, the cloth is burnt over the fire in earthen pots. The ashes are ... 

Read full article  


Embroidery Stitch Groups Stitches

... for example, some are best suited for straight lines, others for curved, some for broad lines, others for narrow, some for even lines, others for unequal, some for outlining, others for veining. And, further, of all-over stitches some give a plain surface, others a patterned one, some do best for flat ... 

Read full article  


Embroidery Textiles

... others, who delighted in the rendering of rich stuffs, later, they abound in the creations of Veronese and Titian. A "favourite Italian vegetable," as Dr. Rock quaintly expresses it, is the artichoke, which, often, set in oval forms, is either outlined or worked solidly in the fabric. Almeria was a rich ... 

Read full article  


English Embroidery

... Perrin Gale, and Henriet Gautier. In the "Book of Rules" by Etienne Boileau, governing the "Embroiderers and embroideresses of the City of Paris," one of the chief laws was that no work should be permitted in the evening, "because the work of the night cannot be so good or so satisfactory as that accomplished ... 

Read full article  


Mediaeval Embroideries

... Ciclatoun was also a brilliant textile, as also was Cendal. Cendal silk is spoken of by early writers. The first use of silk is interesting to trace. A monopoly, a veritable silk trust, was established in 533, in the Roman Empire. Women were employed at the Court of Justinian to preside over the looms, ... 

Read full article