Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional festivals - Handmade diy brooch tutorial

Handmade diy brooch tutorial

Handmade diy brooch tutorial is as follows:

(1) First of all, design the embroidery style. The brooch is relatively small, so the design should not be too complicated. Then, we should put the designed pictures on the paper with a pencil. Draw drawing carbon paper and water-repellent pen on the cloth, and stretch embroidery. There are usually 6 strands of embroidery thread, and we usually draw 2 strands when we embroider. How to use a few strands sometimes depends on personal experience. As the saying goes, practice makes perfect.

(2) After embroidery, iron it, preferably both sides. Cut out the embroidery pattern according to the lines drawn before. Sew a circle with a flat needle at a distance of 4cm from the edge, wrap the accessories for brooch inside, tighten the thread, and sew it several times to fix it. Finally, install accessories on the back of the brooch. When installing, align the two parts, press down, you will hear a click, and then clamp, and the embroidered brooch will be completed.

Embroidery is a general term for all kinds of decorative patterns embroidered on fabrics with needles and threads. There are two kinds of embroidery: silk embroidery and feather embroidery. It is a decorative fabric with embroidery marks by puncturing silk thread or other fibers and yarns on embroidery materials with certain patterns and colors with needles. This is an art of adding people's design and production to any existing fabric with needles and threads. Embroidery is one of the traditional folk handicrafts in China, which has a history of at least two or three thousand years in China.

Chinese embroidery mainly includes Su embroidery, Xiang embroidery, Shu embroidery and Yue embroidery. Embroidery techniques include: wrong needle embroidery, disorderly needle embroidery, net embroidery, ground embroidery, silk locking, silk knitting, silk knitting, Ping Jin, shadow gold, sheet metal, velvet laying, velvet scraping, yarn poking, thread sprinkling and flower picking. The uses of embroidery mainly include life and artistic decoration, such as clothing, bedding, tablecloth, stage and artwork decoration.