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List:       mojonation-users
Subject:    [Mojonation-users] [SPAM] placed with deliberate int
From:       Pienta <antichrist () autopaas ! nl>
Date:       2009-08-31 2:46:13
Message-ID: 4A9B37BD.6050405 () pco-lelystad ! nl
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inch of the stuff on your needle. [Illustration: THE WORKING OF G ON
CREWEL-STITCH SAMPLER.] [Sidenote: TO WORK D.] THICK OUTLINE-STITCH (D
on sampler) is like thick crewel-stitch with the exception that, as in
ordinary outline-stitch (B), you keep your thread always above the
needle to the left. [Sidenote: TO WORK E.] In BACK-STITCH (E), instead
of first bringing the needle out at the point where the embroidery is to
begin, you bring it out 1/8th of an inch in advance of it. Then, putting
your needle back, you take up this 1/8th together with another 1/8th in
advance. For the next stitch you put your needle into the hole made by
the last stitch, and so on, taking care not to split the last thread in
so doing. [Sidenote: TO WORK F.] To work the SPOTS (F) on
sampler--having made a back-stitch, bring your needle out through the
same hole as before, and make another back-stitch above it, so that you
have, in what appears to be one stitch, two thicknesses of thread; then
bring your needle out some distance in advance of the last stitch, and
proceed as before. The distance between the stitches is determined by
the effect you desire to produce. The thread should not be drawn too
tight. [Illustration: 13. CREWEL WORK AND CREWEL-STITCH.] [Sidenote: TO
WORK G.] You begin STEM-STITCH (G) with the usual half-stitch. Then,
holding the thread downwards, instead of proceeding as in crewel-stitch
(A) you slant your needle so as to bring it out a thread or two higher
up than the half-stitch, but precisely above it. You next put the needle
in 1/8th of an inch in advance of the last stitch, and, as before, bring
it out again in a slanting direction a thread or two higher. At the back
of the work (Illustration 12) the stitches lie in a slanting direction.
[Sidenote: TO WORK H.] To work wider STEM-STITCH (H). After the first
two stitches, bring your needle out precisely above and in a line with
them, and put it in again 1/8th of an inch in advance of the last
stitch, producing a longer stroke, which gives the measure of those
following. The slanting stitches at th

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