![]() Pre-marking on the Solvy makes portable stitching super easy. ![]() Or, you can do what I did, and use a water-soluble marker (or something similar – don’t use a Sharpie!) to pre-mark the design, so that I didn’t have to refer to a chart while actually stitching. Then you just work your cross stitch on the grid, using the dots or the intersections on the grid as your stitch placement guide. I like to print a dotted grid (I’ve included a PDF printable for this particular dotted grid below), rather than a full-line grid, but you can do either. So, using Sticky Fabri-Solvy for cross stitch is not really much different from using it for surface embroidery, except that, instead of printing a design, you just print your grid. They do have some drawbacks – and you certainly wouldn’t use them on any kind of embroidery that you couldn’t wash! – but this type of printable, water-soluble stabilizer is terrific for projects on washable household items, like flour sack towels and the like. They supply an easy way to print a design and get it onto your fabric, to start stitching right away. Mostly, Transfer-Eze and Sticky Fabri-Solvy are used in the hand embroidery world for surface embroidery. It comes in printer-sized sheets (12 to a package), and it’s very easy to use.Īlthough I haven’t written an article devoted solely to Fabri-Solvy, I’ve written a tutorial and review about Transfer-eze, which came out before Fabri-Solvy, and which is exactly the same concept. It’s called Sticky Fabri-Solvy, and it’s a printable, stick-on, water-soluble stabilizer. It involves another product, and you might even have some on hand. A Third Option for Cross Stitching on Plain Weave Fabric Soluble canvas by DMC is a plastic sheet with evenly spaced holes in it, and you stitch into those holes. 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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