Quarter Stitches, Half Stitches
Fractional stitches (1/4, 1/2, and 3/4 stitches) are
easy to do, but can be a little confusing when you see them for the
first time on a pattern or chart.
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Quarter, half, and three quarter
stitches are used to give extra detail to a design.This design
(from Jeanette Crews Designs "Cattitudes. The Thirteenth
Litter" (Yarn Tree item K7022)) uses quarter stitches to
add more detail to the eyes and nose.
Fractional stitches are shown on the graph by
a small symbol filling just a corner of the box. The stitches
in the red circles are fractional stitches.
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Here is what fractional stitches look like stitched
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Stitched On Aida.
Left to Right: a full cross stitch, a half stitch, a quarter stitch,
and a 3/4 stitch. Notice that to do the 1/4 stitch on aida you
need to poke the needle through the fabric between the holes. |
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Stitched On Linen over two threads.
Left to Right: a full cross stitch, a quarter stitch, a half stitch,
and a 3/4 stitch. |
1/4, 1/2, and 3/4 stitches are all shown the same
way on a chart or pattern (with the smaller than normal symbol). You
get to decide which stitch to use. Here are my suggestions:
If the area is outlined in backstitch, you probably
just need a 1/4 stitch. For the design above, I would just do 1/4
stitches.
If the area is not outlined in backstitch, use a 3/4 stitch for the
detail color and a 1/4 stitch for the background color.
If the stitch is next to an unstitched area, use a 3/4 stitch.
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