Quick Continental Note

November 28, 2011

Originally posted 2008-10-21 06:35:46. Republished by Blog Post Promoter

Continental has oblique (diagonal lines not on true diagonals) on every row. If you stitch so that these lines are only on every other row, that is not Continental.

What you are stitching is a combination of Continental and Half-cross. Many teachers and book call this Continental — it’s not, it’s incorrect and causes ridges and major distortion. I know many fine needlepointers who think this and therefore mistakenly malign the true Continental Stitch.

The source of the problem is thinking you must always go up in a clean home and down in a dirty hole. If you think that then the combination stitch will result.

Correctly done, in Continental every other row (the even rows) will come up in a hole which already has some thread in it, and down in the empty hole.

There is no other way to do this stitch properly, no matter how you turn the canvas.

Watch the video, see what I mean, and enjoy this wrongly maligned stitch.

Related posts:

  1. When Only Continental Will Do
  2. Why Continental?
  3. How to Stitch Irregular Continental
  4. Quick Guide to Needlepoint Slang
  5. How to Repair a Hole in Canvas

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One Response to Quick Continental Note

  1. lavon on October 23, 2008 at 12:32 pm

    I have some plastic canvas I can practice this when I get home. Love the video. Thanks so much

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