![]() ![]() A thread weight of Wt 80 or Wt 100 is suitable for background quilting, but thread weight Wt 40 or Wt 30 will stand out more. Working with thin or thick thread will change your stitching significantly. There are so much stitches per centimeter, you will not notice smaller or larger stitches after embroidery. Overall, the appearance of the Stippling – when it if finished – will look great. The lines between those dots are not of the same length, which is different with hand stitching. Using the ‘Show Stitches’ icon, zooming in, you can see the needle penetration points = white dots. ![]() Via ‘Stitch Player’, the sequence of embroidery is shown – you can see that your machine will not embroidery via a single continuous line, but in a logical order – lines are interrupted, started somewhere else again, but in the end, it looks like a continuous line. It’s just a sample, so it is fun to add nodes for straight corners (left mouse button) or curved lines (right mouse button). I’ve started with one rectangle again, changed it with the ‘Reshape’ tool. Notice the rectangle lines? They will NOT be embroidered, unless you are boxing the shapes, surrounding them with an outline. I have changed the color of each ‘rectangle’ shape, giving it a nice appearance. Check the docker ‘Color Film’ to see every shape separate, where the underlying stitches are removed. First I had to Ungroup them via ‘Arrange’, then removed the overlaps with ‘Edit’, choosing that option. I have placed three rectangles on top of each other – the stitches are overlapping, which will be a mess after embroidery. As soon as you release the mouse button, a triangle shape is filled with Stippling.Įvery time – after drawing a rectangle – new shapes are filled up. When your meandering is very dense, it is called ‘stippling’ too.Īnd these are the three icons to use: the first is a Stipple Run Fill, to cover sections with by meandering.Īctivate the icon, make a rectangle, using that option with the left toolbar ‘Toolboxes’, then ‘Digitize’. ![]() With the wonderful (BERNINA) machines you can use your Free Quilting foot, or the BSR, meandering large figures or small. Normally, when I quilted by hand, I did a small part of the ‘negative’ space, not that much, but many antique quilts are showing this much quilting, to emphasize sections of the quilt – leaving feathers and other shapes more open, thus giving it all a ‘Trapunto’ look. The picture above shows hand stippling, where the quilting covered a large area. You can find these fills at the Stitch Bar.īut first, let’s see what is the definition of ‘Stippling’? It’s the art or process of drawing, painting, or engraving using numerous small dots or specks’. Stipple Fills are fun: you can find them in the BERNINA Embroidery SoftwareV8: users asked me to explain more about this topic. ![]()
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