Counted-thread embroidery
Technique in embroidery
Counted-thread embroidery is any embroidery in which the number of warp and weft yarns in a fabric are methodically counted out for each stitch, resulting in uniform-length stitches and a precise, uniform embroidery pattern.[1] Even-weave fabric is usually used, producing a symmetrical image, as both warp and weft yarns are evenly spaced.
The opposite of counted-thread embroidery is free embroidery.
Types of counted-thread embroidery
Among the counted-thread embroidery techniques are:
- Assisi
- Bargello, or Florentine work
- Blackwork
- Canvas work
- Cross-stitch
- Hardanger
- Needlepoint
- Drawn thread work
- Tatreez
References
- ^ "Embroidery styles: an illustrated guide · V&A". Victoria and Albert Museum. Retrieved 3 February 2024.
See also
- Pixel art
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Embroidery
- Assisi
- Bargello
- Berlin work
- Blackwork
- Broderie anglaise
- Broderie perse
- Candlewicking
- Counted-thread
- Crewel
- Cross-stitch
- Cutwork
- Darning
- Drawn thread work
- Goldwork
- Hardanger
- Hedebo
- Machine
- Needlepoint
- Quillwork
- Smocking
- Stumpwork
- Surface
- Suzani
- Whitework
- Butler-Bowden Cope
- Bayeux Tapestry
- Bradford carpet
- Great Tapestry of Scotland
- Great Tapestry of Scotland: People's Panel
- Hastings Embroidery
- Hestia tapestry
- Magna Carta (An Embroidery)
- Margaret Layton's jacket
- New World Tapestry
- Overlord Embroidery
- Oxburgh Hangings
- Prestonpans Tapestry
- Quaker Tapestry
- Scottish Diaspora Tapestry
- Fragments of a Cope with the Seven Sacraments
- Emilie Bach
- Leon Conrad
- Shahin Ebrahimzadeh-Pezeshki
- Kaffe Fassett
- Juanita Growing Thunder Fogarty
- Constance Howard
- Marilyn Leavitt-Imblum
- François Lesage
- Ann Macbeth
- May Morris
- Jessie Newbery
- Mahtab Norouzi
- Tetiana Protcheva
- Charles Germain de Saint Aubin
- Mary Elizabeth Turner
- Dimitri Vlachos - Castano
- Kathleen Whyte
- Erica Wilson
- Lily Yeats
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