Creative Thread Sketching: Books for Textile Artists, #1
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About this ebook
Begin an exhilarating journey into the world of drawing and painting with thread and your sewing machine. Thread sketching is a fascinating craft - but where do you begin? This fully revised and illustrated Second Edition of Creative Thread Sketching guides you through everything you need to know. From equipment and tools, fabric selection and setting up your sewing machine, to free motion stitching techniques, and problem-solving, this friendly guide shows you how to put all the pieces together. Learn how to create a wide variety of stunning stitched textile art for your home or friends. Popular textile artist, author and blogger Deborah Wirsu includes six free, illustrated projects to help get you started in this comprehensive introduction to creating stunning textile art using fabric, thread, and a domestic sewing machine.
Other titles in Creative Thread Sketching Series (4)
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Titles in the series (4)
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Book preview
Creative Thread Sketching - Deborah Wirsu
PREFACE
The gift of creativity is something we all share, regardless of where we live, our background, perceived skills, education, or what we think we can do. This book is my contribution to the world of creative thread sketching for beginners—a world that some find intimidating. Yet, once they get underway, there is no stopping them.
It's for all the people who have searched—sometimes in vain—to find the basic information needed to get started. Encouragement from family, friends, colleagues, and students has kept me motivated during the sometimes-lonely task of writing a book.
Thank you to all the people who have inspired and taught me on my journey through thread sketching. It is now my turn to pass on this knowledge to anyone interested in this fascinating field of textile art. Without your interest and questions, this book would never have achieved lift-off.
1-To the Sabine Hills-EBOOKINTRODUCTION
This book was born as a result of the hundreds of emails and questions I receive asking about the basics of thread sketching and thread painting and how to get started. If you are a newcomer to thread sketching and free motion stitching, searching for creative ways to 'draw' and 'paint' with thread—and how to get started—this book is for you. Let's get started on an exhilarating journey!
Offering everything you need to know—plus tips, techniques, troubleshooting, and progressive projects—you will be guided through the 'start-up' phase of thread sketching, thread painting and free machine embroidery, and introduced to some more advanced techniques. I will set you on an exciting path of creativity.
So often, the basics are glossed over, leaving your creative mind with a rich palette of ideas, but absolutely no idea where to begin or how to solve some of those pesky little problems that face us all from time to time.
Background study_organza-cropped-EBOOK.jpgThis book is here to answer your questions and solve your problems. Be prepared for your eyes to be opened to a wonderful world, your horizons expanded, and your creativity stimulated. Containing a wealth of useful information, dip into the book anywhere, anytime for the information you require. Everyone has different needs, and comes to thread sketching from different starting points.
About the Second Edition
I'm excited to bring you this new, updated and expanded Second Edition of Creative Thread Sketching – A beginner's Guide. Designed to offer newcomers to thread sketching even more detailed information, tips, and techniques than the first edition, published in 2018.
What this book is NOT (and what it IS)
4-Xuanwu Lake-cropped-EBOOK.jpgThis is not a book about traditional free motion quilting or formal machine embroidery. Although much of the basic information also applies to free motion quilting, my aim is to help you 'draw' and 'paint' with thread to create pictures and thread paintings, using your ideas as the starting point. It is designed to get you off and running on your thread sketching journey.
Creativity and Confidence
I've learned from many years of teaching that there is no limit to our creativity. As adults, we don't lose the ability to be creative—simply the ability to be 'free' as artists. Look at the art of children. What do you see? Freedom and honesty, and above all, an innate belief that what they have created is 'good'.
‘Every child is an artist. The problem is how to remain an artist once he grows up.’ Pablo Picasso.
You can begin thread sketching and thread painting today with no prior experience in free motion stitching. Often, the issues people think they face are, in fact, more often related to ingrained habits, lack of confidence, or simply not knowing what to do first. I've seen so many people get frustrated because nobody has taken the time to rewind to the beginning, guide you through the early steps of your creative journey, and avoid problems before they occur.
My philosophy is to give you the tools to set you free to follow your own path in the world of thread sketching. You will develop new skills and build the confidence to explore new styles and techniques. Begin your journey today, learning simple techniques that even someone with no sewing or quilting experience can master. With these fundamental skills in your repertoire, there is no limit to where you can take your creative passion.
Thread Sketching, Thread Painting, and Free Machine Embroidery Explained
If you're new to this fascinating art form, you may be curious whether there is a difference between thread sketching, thread painting, and free machine embroidery. Whichever term you choose to call this technique, the bottom line is that thread sketching, thread painting and free machine embroidery all fall under the same umbrella for the simple reason that they are all free motion stitching techniques. However, there are subtle differences.
Traditionally, embroidery was first worked by hand. When sewing machines came along, patterns could be reproduced over and over. Even before computer programming, embroidery machines were 'programmed' to work stitches in a particular order or pattern to create designs.
Later, long-arm quilting machines were developed that could also be programmed to work specific designs across a quilt top to enhance and finish the quilt. At first, these designs were quite formal (and often still are).
The advent of smaller, domestic sewing machines with a free motion stitch setting led textile artists and quilters to explore stitching in any direction they chose. So the term 'free motion' is one with which we are now all familiar.
Of course, these days, nearly all sewing machines—from domestic to professional—can operate in free motion, with some designed for this purpose alone. Contemporary textile artists use free motion stitching to enhance their work in dozens of different ways.
So this is from where the terms Thread Sketching, Thread Painting and Free Machine Embroidery have derived.
Simple thread sketch example-square-ebook.jpgThread Sketching involves working an outline, shape, design, or picture with a sewing machine, with little or no 'filler' stitch within the boundaries.
This allows the underlying fabric to become part of the design. Alternatively, you can also use fabric paint to enhance the unstitched areas.
6-BumbleBee-EBOOK.jpgThread Painting, on the other hand, involves filling defined areas with free machine stitching, shading with thread, or covering all the fabric with stitch. This filler may be worked using free motion straight stitch or free motion zigzag stitch, both of which you'll be introduced to in this book. Different thread colours are often blended to create realistic forms and pictures. By blending and toning thread colours, you are truly 'painting' with thread. Often, thread painting completely covers the underlying fabric with stitch.
Free machine embroidery-square-EBOOK.jpgFree Machine Embroidery encompasses both thread sketching and thread painting. It's simply another way to refer to free motion stitching. However, it is usually less formal than computer-programmed machine embroidery.
The bottom line is that these terms are essentially interchangeable. The common 'thread' is that they are worked 'free motion', usually with the feed dogs lowered on the machine. The stitcher controls the design, rather than the design being pre-programmed, and stitched using a computerised sewing machine. Any thread sketch, thread painting or free machine embroidery can be formal or informal. The style is totally in your hands.
What is 'good’ art?
Who decides whether art is 'good' or 'bad'? Art is very objective and personal. Your taste in