Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
It is then anchored on the other side, usually with a running stitch or two.
He started the running stitch and never moved his hands more than a few centimeters.
Using a running stitch, this gives the bag shape and volume.
Today you hardly find anyone using the running stitch."
Firstly, a row of evenly spaced running stitches is worked along the line to be covered.
A simple running stitch is used on the cloth then pulled tight to gather the cloth.
The earliest and most basic stitch found in kanthas is the running stitch.
He was lifting the needle up over his head like a cobbler after each running stitch to take up the slack.
Their fabricators use a running stitch to make complex geometric patterns and stripes on layers of fabric.
Some machines even replicate hand stitching, for example Sashiko or running stitch quilting.
Loosely spaced rows of short running stitches are used to support padded satin stitch.
In simple gathering, parallel rows of running stitches are sewn along one edge of the fabric to be gathered.
Then the four edges are stitched and two or three rows of large running stitches are done to keep the kantha together.
The Running stitch kantha is truly the indigenous kantha.
Around the edges were pictures and symbols, a repeated pattern like a running stitch around the hem of a cloak.
The quilting stitch is a running stitch.
The running stitch called "kantha stitch" is the main stitch used for the purpose.
The iron on transfers places evenly spaced dots onto the wrong side of the fabric, which were then pleated using a regular running stitch.
Sashiko stitching - Basic running stitch worked in heavy, white cotton thread usually on dark indigo colored fabric.
Hand quilting is the process of using a needle and thread to sew a running stitch by hand across the entire area to be quilted.
"In textiles, there was huge use of the running stitch in New Orleans and in Boston.
These sandwiched a layer of wadding between two outer layers of fabric, which were then quilted together using a running stitch.
Running stitches may be of varying length, but typically more thread is visible on the top of the sewing than on the underside.
The operator develops the embroidery manually, using the machine's settings for running stitch and fancier built-in stitches.
A rocking, straight or running stitch is commonly used and these stitches can be purely functional or decorative and elaborate.