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New! Caron One Pound, Caron Simply Soft and Herrschners 2-Ply Afghan palettes - thank you to BetwixtTheStitch!
New! The Herrschner's Worsted Palette - thank you to BetwixtTheStitch!
New! We've just added the palette for Deborah Norville Everyday Yarn! If you knit and/or crochet, this is for you. This is a beautiful yarn with a nice feel to it, a good alternative in worsted weight acrylic! (Thank you again to BetwixtTheStitch!)
New! The Red Heart Super Saver Palette - thank you to BetwixtTheStitch!
Welcome to Stitchboard! Feel free to sit and stay awhile. Check out our new Premier features. In addition to the ability to create larger patterns (up to 500 stitches wide), illusion knitting and private labeling (no more worries about editing those pesky and messy PDFs), we've just introduced Filet Crochet, our most popular request! We have many more features planned, too!
New! The Herrschner's Worsted Palette - thank you to BetwixtTheStitch!
New! We've just added the palette for Deborah Norville Everyday Yarn! If you knit and/or crochet, this is for you. This is a beautiful yarn with a nice feel to it, a good alternative in worsted weight acrylic! (Thank you again to BetwixtTheStitch!)
New! The Red Heart Super Saver Palette - thank you to BetwixtTheStitch!
Welcome to Stitchboard! Feel free to sit and stay awhile. Check out our new Premier features. In addition to the ability to create larger patterns (up to 500 stitches wide), illusion knitting and private labeling (no more worries about editing those pesky and messy PDFs), we've just introduced Filet Crochet, our most popular request! We have many more features planned, too!
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Jodee,
You're welcome! Hope all goes smoothly!
Ali,
That sounds exhausting!
My suggestion would be to take a step back and consider what you want to accomplish before doing any more work on it. I understand why you'd prefer embroidery floss, considering the number of colors available, but frankly, crocheting with that many colors - and so tiny - would drive me nuts!
Perhaps rethinking the project would be a better idea here. Because I'm also thinking about anything I've done with embroidery floss or similar cotton, and honestly, it's really a tough thread to work with, as in very unforgiving (can feel like crocheting with cardboard!), not all that flexible and not soft like an afghan should be. If you're going to use it for a wall hanging, that's better, but as an afghan that's going to be used...does it really feel comfortable, like something you'd want held against your skin?
How about this instead...you could purchase a cotton yarn in a neutral or dark shade, or perhaps a shade that's closest to your main color, maybe in a worsted weight...crochet the entire afghan in that color only...and cross stitch the design on. You can save yourself a lot of trouble that way. Then your stitches don't have to be tiny...and no bobbins required! You could use a suitably soft cotton for the afghan (just be sure to care for it properly; cotton tends to wear more easily) and you technically won't have to cross stitch any squares that are in a color that's already the correct one (perhaps you could use a suitable border color for the afghan itself, so you won't have to stitch a border and can leave some stitches on the image itself blank, as well, as one would do with a regular cross stitch project).
You could then work your afghan in a Tunisian stitch that's more square than rectangular, then send your image through as a Tunisian pattern (important to work a gauge swatch here).
If you think you can stick with the whole thing as bobbins from start to finish, that's great, but if it's going to end up a UFO anyway, it may not be worth continuing.
Hi Melanie!
I've bought BeadTool4 and very happy with it!
I will put a free pattern here that I made myself.
José
To read a particular post, simply click on it!
Hi Everyone!
I started stitching about 8 1/2 years ago, and recently picked it back up again about 3-4 months ago after a long hiatus. I'm so happy to have my hobby back, and look forward to seeing everyone's creative ideas and projects!
Jodee,
You're welcome! Hope all goes smoothly!
Ali,
That sounds exhausting!
My suggestion would be to take a step back and consider what you want to accomplish before doing any more work on it. I understand why you'd prefer embroidery floss, considering the number of colors available, but frankly, crocheting with that many colors - and so tiny - would drive me nuts!
Perhaps rethinking the project would be a better idea here. Because I'm also thinking about anything I've done with embroidery floss or similar cotton, and honestly, it's really a tough thread to work with, as in very unforgiving (can feel like crocheting with cardboard!), not all that flexible and not soft like an afghan should be. If you're going to use it for a wall hanging, that's better, but as an afghan that's going to be used...does it really feel comfortable, like something you'd want held against your skin?
How about this instead...you could purchase a cotton yarn in a neutral or dark shade, or perhaps a shade that's closest to your main color, maybe in a worsted weight...crochet the entire afghan in that color only...and cross stitch the design on. You can save yourself a lot of trouble that way. Then your stitches don't have to be tiny...and no bobbins required! You could use a suitably soft cotton for the afghan (just be sure to care for it properly; cotton tends to wear more easily) and you technically won't have to cross stitch any squares that are in a color that's already the correct one (perhaps you could use a suitable border color for the afghan itself, so you won't have to stitch a border and can leave some stitches on the image itself blank, as well, as one would do with a regular cross stitch project).
You could then work your afghan in a Tunisian stitch that's more square than rectangular, then send your image through as a Tunisian pattern (important to work a gauge swatch here).
If you think you can stick with the whole thing as bobbins from start to finish, that's great, but if it's going to end up a UFO anyway, it may not be worth continuing.
Hi Melanie!
I've bought BeadTool4 and very happy with it!
I will put a free pattern here that I made myself.
José
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