Today we will continue our Dazzling Diamonds Sew-A-Long adventure!
Hopefully, you have pieced most of the blocks this past
week. Now, we are ready to embroider the seam lines. The specific embroidery
stitches used are described in the book (pages 22-27). There will be some Silk
Ribbon Embroidery (SRE) elements on many of these seams, but that instruction
will be in our post on November 3rd. Today, we will concentrate only
on the fiber embroidery elements.
Each seam begins with a BASE embroidery section. This is
then enhanced with additional elements of fiber embroidery and/or silk ribbon
embroidery as well as beads/sequins. To begin, we need a pieced block and the
base embroidery design.
Then, we need to transfer the base embroidery design directly to our pieced fabric block. There are multiple ways to accomplish this:
1) Free-hand draw the design on to the block.
2) Trace the design to thin paper (like tissue paper), overlay that to the fabric block then for stitching through.
3) Print the overlay directly to sheets of thin paper (like tracing paper), overlay that to the fabric block and stitch through.
4) Print the overlay embroidery designs directly to printable water soluble paper sheets. (This is the method described in the book)
All of the above methods of transfer have pros/cons. Other
than (a) you will be removing paper or water soluble paper after completing the
basic embroidery. If you choose the water-soluble method, steps are included in
the book on page 19. Removing water soluble requires the application of water
to dissolve the soluble material. This is best done under a running tap of
water, with the embroidered block facing down. As the water-soluble material
softens it can be gently scrubbed with your fingers (underneath the block, directly
on the embroidery, as water continues to run through the fabric block).
Wet blocks will then need to be pressed dry. If you did not
pre-wash your fabrics, then the cotton fabric block will shrink slightly. That
is fine, as each design included an extra seam allowance measurement for this
purpose.
I’ll post photos of the water-soluble steps discussed above
on my blog (shawkl.com) as I work on Block #11. So, if you need more
information on on the how-to portion, jump over there tomorrow.
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