I Heart Diamonds of All Sizes
Today's stitch is a a variation on on my favorite small stitch components, a tiny diamond.
The stitched sample is from a frame in a Stitch Concept I created last year for Frank’s Rug, a fabulous canvas from Maggie & Co. It uses Silk Lame 18M on 13-mesh canvas. (For the inevitable follow-up question, the flowers will be added later with Just Another Button Co’s flower buttons.)
I’ve used this stitch in backgrounds, small shirts, rugs, windows, tiny trees…you name it. The space between the vertical columns creates the diamond. Otherwise, it would be Alicia’s Lace. And that space is a variable for you to play with. Feel free to widen it as needed.
This stitch diagram, along with all other #whimsicalwednesday and #smallspacesunday stitch diagrams, can also be found on a Pinterest board here.
Be sure to follow whimsicalstitch.com on Facebook, Pinterest, Instagram, and Twitter.
If you like what you see on this blog, want to learn some very creative decorative stitches, and how to put them all together, whimsicalstitch.com has a book for you! Mary’s Whimsical Stitches is a contemporary how-to collection of more than 250 stitches for stitchers regardless of skill level. The book includes updated and sequenced diagrams from this blog, all-new stitches, and a chapter on the basics of needlepoint. For more information, visit here.
whimsicalstitch.com also sells Stitch Guides and Stitch Concepts for Melissa Shirley Designs, Zecca Designs, Sandra Gilmore, Purple Palm, Maggie, and Penny MacLeod, and many more. Click here to see the newest guides and click here to see the entire collection.
I hope you have the perfect spot for this stitch! Please enjoy! Have a wonderful #whimsicalwednesday!
A Note about Diagrams
I use color in diagrams to make them as clear as possible. The primary function of different colored lines is to illustrate a stitch sequence. For example, layering of colors demonstrates you add them in that order. They can also provide ideas on how to integrate additional threads (one line for each color). Or, you can use the same thread for all color lines. That's where I encourage you to use your imagination for the space you are stitching!