Waste canvas is a stiffish, open-weave fabric that you stitch over, and then you pull the threads of the canvas out from underneath your stitches. The first two options I mentioned were waste canvas and soluble canvas. There’s no grid on plain weave fabric, so you have to supply a grid, if you want decent looking cross stitches. Remember, plain weave fabric is any fabric that isn’t an even-weave fabric like the kind you’d normally use for counted work. In that article, we chatted about three ways that you can work cross stitch – or any counted technique, really – on plain weave fabric, but I didn’t clarify the third way you could do it, because I hadn’t finished my little stitchy projects to test it out.īut now I’ve finished them, so here we go!Īll three methods involve some sort of something that supplies a grid for the plain weave fabric. On Monday, I shared with you a pattern for cross-stitched snowflakes of a folky sort, that can be used to embellish table linens, ornaments, and whatnot for the holiday season.
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