How to Embroider Daisies | 6 varieties with different Hand Embroidery Stitches
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- Опубликовано: 7 июл 2022
- Learn to make 6 different varieties of daisies for different embroidery projects.
---------Stitches used in this pattern---------
1. French Knots: 0:10
2. Lazy Daisy: 2:17
3. Granitos: 5:12
4. Satin Stitch: 7:33
5. Double Cast-On: 10:53
6. Woven Picot: 15:34
7. Leaves: 21:49
7. Lettering-Back Stitch: 23:54
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Calm and Peaceful by LesFM | lesfm.net/relaxing-background...
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Creative Commons CC BY 3.0
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OMG ! Thank you so much! Amazing tutorial ❤.
Thank you for this. I’m going to use this to help me embroider my cutoff shorts.
Fantastic! Great to make a sampler garden with flowers of all sizes and colors... Hmmm... I see a project in my horizon... I need MORE THREAD! 😃 Thank you, inspiring as always!
Thankyou, Paty ❤️ have fun with the stitches.
i can't believe this has only 400+ views. this video deserves more‼️ great tutorial, i will come back here once i put daisies on my sneakers 😁
thank you. ❤️ Share the video.
Wonderful thank you 😊 I'm loving stitching the woven picot.
You are so welcome!
So beautiful 💮
Just started embroidery and searched for this info, beautiful work and thank you for sharing the knowledge, much appreciated.
Awesome ❤️. Always a pleasure, Caroline.
It is so beautiful.Thank You.🌼
Always a pleasure ❤️
Magnifiques fleurs avec le fil pèrlé.Merci beaucoup.😍😍👌👌👏👏👏😊❤
Very pretty daisies and equally lovely is ur way of teaching .all the daisies r pretty in their respective stitches .very useful share .thank you 🙏🏼
Thank you☺
I love all the daisies ❤ n the way you explained.....good
Liked n subscribed your channel
Waiting for more videos ❤
Thanks and welcome :)
I appreciate your videos. They are slow and easy to understand. You are a great teacher! Thank you.
Thank you so much. :)
Great tutorial! A wonderful array of these flowery stitches! I will attempt the 3D stitches for my next project, which entails an array of different flowers! I learned embroidery about 35 years ago, when I was still a toddler but I haven't done it for a couple of years and my skills might be a bit rusty, so these videos are ideal to brush up! I'm so happy see this beloved technique gaining fans again! When I first learned it, it always was expected for the reverse to look as similar to the front as possible. We'd never have stitched lettering with gaps using one continuous threat and it made me flinch to see the long threads in between showing through the fabric. This might be a generational difference, though. I would knot off every letter individually and I also wouldn't alternate petals because depending on the stitch, that can change the look of the reverse quite a bit. I'm curious to know if younger artists just consider the look of the reverse to be of little to no importance (to be honest, apart from long threats showing through, you'd probably be right) or whether that's just this artist's personal style. That said, the embroidery is beautiful on the side that matters! 👍🏻😊🪡
Hi Mary. Thank you for dropping by. It is always nice to share experiences. I have noticed that mature artists are more particular about how the reverse of their fabric show. I think it also depends on what kind of project you might be working on. If you are going to frame your work and the reverse of your work will never see day light, then it might not be the most important thing to worry about. Also, when someone is a beginner, they are more concerned about the front than the back. I have noticed that as they gain confidence with their stitching, they tend to work on a neater back . :)
Thank u dear for sharing ur talent with us. So neat n well explained. 👍 ❤
❤😊