How to Stitch Irregular Continental

November 18, 2011

Originally posted 2009-10-09 07:51:15. Republished by Blog Post Promoter

Almost all the time, The Needlepoint Book is spot on for telling you how to stitch something. But as long as I have had this book (which is since 1977) Christensen’s explanation of Irregular Continental has left me flustered.

I love the random look of it and I certainly can see plenty of reasons to choose it. I like that it is random, but still goes into the holes in the canvas.

I haven’t chosen to stitch it largely because the explanation confused me. I have only done this stitch once for some mountains in a background. but the important this about irregular continental is that it is RANDOM. That is a very hard thing to get in needlepoint.

I would use two sizes of stitches, over 1 and 2 intersections. The longer stitches should never have more than 2 together in any direction.

The hard part is getting random. I’m lazy so mostly what I would do is scatter a bunch of longer stitches around, bout 25% of the area and then fill in the short stitches. If, as I was going along I thought a long stitch was needed, I’d throw it in.

But if you want to go in rows, you could use a die or a deck of cards with no face cards. Shuffle the cards. Roll the die or pick up the top card. If it is odd, stitch over 1 thread. If even, stitch over 2. If three evens come up in a row, throw in one or two odd stitches before continuing.

Doing that method you get random, but can still stitch in rows.

Related posts:

  1. When Only Continental Will Do
  2. Why Continental?
  3. Making a Stitch Notebook
  4. Needlepoint Notecards from Sandy Grossman-Morris
  5. Quick Continental Note

Tags: ,

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

New Cyberclasses with Art Needlepoint

Beginning in February 2012, I have several great classes coming up with Art Needlepoint, suitable for stitchers at any level. The projects are large and small. One focuses on threads but the others emphasize stitching. Contact me for the schedule & for more information.

Support Nuts

Keep this blog ad-free by supporting it through your donation. Monthly donation of $5.00 gets complementary pattern (changes monthly).

Learn about the services I offer in-person and through email at ThumbTack. fabric arts Blog This Here Online Marketing
Add blog to our directory.