- Buttonhole stitch
Buttonhole stitch and the related blanket stitch are hand-
sewing stitch es used intailor ing,embroidery , andneedle lace -making.Buttonhole stitches catch a loop of the thread on the surface of the fabric and needle is returned to the back of the fabric at a right angle to the original start of the thread. The finished stitch in some ways resembles a letter "L" depending on the spacing of the stitches. For buttonholes the stitches are tightly packed together and for blanket edges they are more spaced out. The properties of this stitch make it ideal for preventing raveling of woven fabric.
Buttonhole stitches are structurally similar to
featherstitch es.Applications
In addition to reinforcing
buttonhole s and preventing cut fabric from raveling, buttonhole stitches are used to make stems increwel embroidery , to make sewn eyelets, to attachapplique to ground fabric, and as couching stitches. Buttonhole stitch scallops, usually raised or padded by rows of straight orchain stitch es, were a popular edging in the 19th century.Buttonhole stitches are also used in
cutwork , includingBroderie Anglaise , and form the basis for many forms ofneedlelace .Variants
Examples of buttonhole or blanket stitches include:
*Blanket stitch
*Buttonhole stitch
*Closed buttonhole stitch, in which the tops of the stitch touch to form triangles
*Crossed buttonhole stitch, in which the tops of the stitch cross
*Detached buttonhole stitch, in which rows of buttonhole stiches are worked to form a "floating" filling stitch
*Buttonhole shading, in which rows of buttonhole stitch are sewn in related colors to give a naturalistic shaded effect
*Buttonhole stitches combined with knots include:
**Top knotted buttonhole stitch
**German knotted buttonhole stitch
**Tailor's buttonhole stitch
**Armenian edging stitchButtonhole bars are parallel rows of thread laid across an open space in lace or cutwork and then completely covered with closely space buttonhole stitches.
titch gallery
ee also
*
Embroidery stitch References
*Virginia Churchill Bath, "Needlework in America", Viking Press, 1979 ISBN 0-670-50575-7
*S.F.A. Caulfield and B.C. Saward, "The Dictionary of Needlework", 1885.
*Mrs. Archibald Christie. "Samplers and Stitches, a handbook of the embroiderer's art", London 1920, 1989 facsimile: Batsford, ISBN 0-7134-4796-6.
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.