Part 1 – Think Before You Stitch – can be found HERE
Part 3 – Corners and Sewing 2 Pieces Together – can be found HERE
I more or less taught myself to blanket stitch by looking and doing. It was after I had been using the blanket stitch for a while, that I went in search of “how to”. Yes, I know, a bit backward! Although my stitches looked the same, I did start and stop differently than the other methods I found, and along the way I had come up with a few tricks that worked for me. I am going to teach you my way of blanket stitching. If it doesn’t work for you, there are other tutorials out there, even quite a few on Youtube.com that might feel more “right”. Crafting is all about experimentation and finding techniques that work for you. So, if you find something you are more comfortable with, feelings won’t be hurt 😉
Because blanket stitching is so important to appliqueing and work with felt, I felt it warrants close examination. Here’s what we will be learning:
USES
- Stitching on the edge
- Sewing 2 pieces of fabric together
- Appliqueing one piece of fabric to another
- Blanket stitching as embellishment
- Button Holes
TECHNIQUES
- Starting your first stitch
- Getting your stitches even
- Little boxes
- Stopping
- Perpendicular stitching
- Corners and points
- Curves
- Adding floss when you run out
- Joining last stitch to first stitch
- Reinforcing a seam
- Intentionally messy
- Making your back side neat
- Determining stitch size
Today we are going to practice stitching on the edge using the following techniques:
- Starting your first stitch
- Getting your stitches even
- Making little boxes
- Stopping
Preparation:
Cut a strip of good quality, light colored wool felt about 8” x 1 ½”. You can practice on both long edges.
Tip: If you don’t already own a toothed tracing wheel and tracing paper, go out immediately and buy them. Seriously… if you are in your jammies, throw on an overcoat and find a late night craft and/or sewing shop, and buy them… NOW! Fortunately, they are not expensive, and they are beyond useful when learning various applique, embroidery and quilting stitches. This technique gave me the “feel” of stitch size and placement when learning the blanket stitch, and helped me to achieve “perfectish” stitches fast!
Start by placing a dark piece of tracing paper, waxy side down, near the top edge of the felt. Pushing hard, run the tracing wheel along a straight edge about 1/4″ from the edge to mark your felt. Note: be careful. You can actually leave dents on the surface below the felt, so don’t work on your good dining room table! Also, marking your fabric with tracing paper is used for practice only. The marks are meant to come out in the wash, and unless you have washable felt, the marks could remain permanent on a finished project. After practicing for a while, spacing will feel second nature and you won’t need the practice dots any more.
If you don’t have a tracing wheel and tracing paper, then draw a line 1/4″ from the edge. This will help you make your vertical stitches the same height.
TIP: When working on a real project, you can usually use one of the disappearing markers on your felt, but I have found the marks won’t fading away on their own, and I’ve always needed to remove the marks by GENTLY dabbing with a damp cloth. ALWAYS try this on a scrap piece of felt before marking and dabbing a project. Some felt will not hold up to dabbing, and the area will felt, ruining a project.
STITCHING
Note: We will be working from left to right, so your first stitch should be placed at the left end of the top edge.
Using 3 strands of embroidery floss 18″ – 24″ long, knot the end. On the backside of your felt, insert your needle in the felt about 1/4″ from the top edge where you want your first stitch to be. Slide the needle between the felt fibers, coming through the top edge of the felt. If you are in the center of the felt, you should not be able to see your needle through the front or back.
Pull the thread through so the knot is against the felt in the back. Turn the felt over. You will now be working from the front of the felt. (In a later lesson, we will learn how to hide your knot so the back is as neat as the front.) The thread is now attached to the felt through the top edge.
Place your needle through the felt in the second hole. (Make sure when you push your needle through the felt that you go through the felt directly and not on an angle. If you go on an angle the stitches in the back will be shorter. More about this later.) When your needle goes through the fabric, the thread attached to the felt should be to the left of the needle, and the thread attached to the needle should be to the right of the needle. This creates a big loop. (The top part of the loop is cut off in this photo.)
When pulling the needle through the felt, pull it towards yourself, which would be inside the big loop you made. The loop will be behind the thread that is attached to the felt.
Gently pull the thread straight up. The tension should be tight enough to close the loop but not so tight that it dents the edge. The edge should remain straight.
For the second stitch, skip one of the dots and go into the next dot.
Repeat like the first stitch going between the threads, with the attached thread in front of the loop.
If your spacing is correct, you should create a 3 sided box. (Although I usually make my boxes square, they can be rectangular. The most important thing is to keep them uniform.) Use your index and middle finger on your left hand to hold the thread and control the tension gently pulling up after each stitch.
Continue stitching until you come near the edge. Check your stitches as you go along to make sure they are parallel to one another and at right angles to the edge and stitching line. If they do not line up, you are probably not pulling your thread straight up after each stitch, and your stitches are drifting. Note: don’t be afraid to take out a stitch or two that you’re not happy with. Although there is a charm to uneven stitches (which we will talk about later), in this exercise we are trying to perfect stitch size and tension.
When you get to the end, use your index and middle fingers on your left hand to maintain tension, and with your right hand, slide the needle from the back to the front, between the top edge of the felt and the horizontal thread on your last stitch.
Pull the thread through, maintaining the tension with your left hand until the knot is against the felt edge.
From the back side, slide your needle in between the felt fibers from near the top edge, and coming out at the hole for your last stitch.
Tie off the thread and cut the thread. Later, I will show you how to hide the knot so the back of your work is nice and neat 🙂
By using the dots, your stitches should be fairly uniform. Keep practicing on straight edges until you get the hang of the placement and tension.
When you are feeling comfortable, practice with a straight line without the dots. And, of course, when you are ready, try blanket stitching along a straight edge without a line. Check your work often, and if you don’t like a stitch, take it out!
Next time we will learn how to sew two pieces of felt together, and how to turn corners and points.
Part 1 can be found HERE.
Part 3 can be found HERE.
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Hey thanks for this! I inherited my grandmother’s sewing box and found a tracing wheel and paper and never knew what to do with it. I love found treasures and now will use your tutorial for our handmade christmas ornaments.
Thank you Kimara. As allways, could’nt be better! I’m waiting for the next tutorial!
Hi kimmara!!
I’m just writing to BEG you to PUHLEEEEEZE!! (with appliquu00E9d cherries on top), finish the next installment in this series!!! I have so many projects I cannot complete until I’ve learnt this skill! :-/ please!? I have tried and tried and I can NEVER get it to look neat after adding new floss to blanket stitching ‘works in progress’! 🙁
Thank you for all the generosity and accessibility you offer, in sharing your crafting-teaching-learning wisdom and life experience!
X
Shanti
OMGoodness… I've been promising the rest of the tutorial for 2 years now! Okay… will pull some scrap felt out of the bin and get cracking. You have my permission to harass me next week if it's not up yet and every week after that until I get it done!!! I need a good does of guilt I think 😉
You and Michelle have got to be the most generous people I’ve ever “met”. I’ve been making things for my little ones since I discovered your blog, but I always look at your examples and long to craft like you guys. My husband always says, But it’s suppose to look homemade. Yeah, yeah, yeah, but I want it to look like GOOD homemade, LOL! Everything that I want to make for my children this year has a blanket stitch. This comes at a perfect time. I might be in my pjs right now, but by the time the stores open I’ll be dressed and first in line to buy a tracing wheel. Can’t wait to get practicing. I LOVE LOVE LOVE you guys.
Thank you sooooo much for doing these tutorials. I have done some embroidery work, but all the ‘finishing’ details are what I need to make my work look better. I am a perfectionist, so the back must look as good as the front, and now it will! Thank you! You guys rock!
My question isn’t exactly about blanket stitching, but I was wondering if you have any suggestions on how to keep your knots from coming undone? I learned with embroidery how to just sew the end in but now that doesn’t always work with the things that I make but I find that my knots don’t stay very secure at the beginning and end so I was hoping that you might have a suggestion!
You aren't alone on the whole knot conundrum. It can be tricky. Your question is good enough, and a common enough problem, that when I finish up my series on blanket stitching, I will do a whole post on different ways to start and stop stitching, making your project both neat and secure. Thanks for asking about it. So… hold on for a couple more weeks!
Thank you! Thank you! Thank you! I could never get my starting stitch to look right. Now I have found the secret thanks to your tut. Love your site, love you guys!
[…] Part 1 – Before You Stitch – can be found HERE Part 2 – Blanket Stitching a Straight Line – can be found HERE […]
Any suggestions on adding blanket stitch to an actual blanket without having to pull 25ft or more of thread through every time??? Do you just cut the thread to smaller lengths and keep starting over as you go? If so, what is the optimal length to work with when trying to go around an approx 4×6 or 5×7 size blanket? Thank you…
Hi Jennifer,
You will absolutely have to work with smaller lengths of thread. When you finish one length, you will have to end it. When you start a new thread, start it as if it were your first thread, but bring you need up between the last bit on thread lying on the blanket edge and the blanket. Then continue. As far as the length of thread, I cut my threads about 36 inches long. Anything longer than that, I personally would be tangling the thread. Hope this helps! ~Kimara~
Thank you so very much!!!