There has been a total of 9 hours this week spent on the Wall Flower (I'm sticking with this name). The first 3-hour attempt was a total failure and had to be removed with a scissor. It was a really picky business thus taking all that time. What I'm about to show you represents 6 hours of embroidery.
Pretty underwhelming isn't? But then I have to say the clear, clean lines are such an improvement over the previous look supporting my decision to frog the project using intarsia. I'm pleased.
You can see the graph at the top of the photo. It is being closely followed to determine what colour each of the 126 vertical stitches should be in each vertical column. That is how the embroidery is done by following one vertical line of "Vs" from the bottom to the top. Today's photo shows there are 10 out of 90 horizontal rows completed. Applying mathematics, in only 54 more hours I'll have this project done. Or alternatively I can hope the embroidery will gain speed as my technique improves. We'll see if that happens.
I'll close for now because perhaps there's another 3 hours of embroidery tonight. I am more determined than ever to finish this thing because I can see it will turn out better than I had hoped it would. Yeah!
November 2 - Wall Flower |
You can see the graph at the top of the photo. It is being closely followed to determine what colour each of the 126 vertical stitches should be in each vertical column. That is how the embroidery is done by following one vertical line of "Vs" from the bottom to the top. Today's photo shows there are 10 out of 90 horizontal rows completed. Applying mathematics, in only 54 more hours I'll have this project done. Or alternatively I can hope the embroidery will gain speed as my technique improves. We'll see if that happens.
I'll close for now because perhaps there's another 3 hours of embroidery tonight. I am more determined than ever to finish this thing because I can see it will turn out better than I had hoped it would. Yeah!
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