New Cross Stitch Embroidery Panels – Especially for Beginners

Cat and Dog Stamped Cross Stitch Panels

There’s a new kind of embroidery design here at Shiny Happy World.

Stamped Cross Stitch Panels for beginners – especially young beginners. 🙂

You can find both the cat and dog here.

I tell you all about what makes them special in the description, so here I’m going to show you some quick and easy instructions. There’s a video version of the instructions here.

If you’ve never done any kind of embroidery before, you might want to take a look at some of these videos before you get started.

Step 1

First you’ll need to hoop up your fabric. The fabric should be tight – like a drum – but not stretched out of shape.

Step 2

Choose the thread color that matches the background of the area you’re going to stitch. Thread your needle and knot the end of the thread. There’s a video here showing how to tie a knot in your thread.

Step 3

Start stitching. You work cross stitch one row at a time, filling in the bottom half of all the Xs first. Just stitch right over the Xs printed on the fabric. Make sure they’re all slanting in the same direction.

Cross stitch embroidery kits for beginners - a how to at Shiny Happy World
I always make my bottom stitches slant forward.

Step 4

Now work your way back across the same row, crossing all your Xs.

Cross stitch embroidery kits for beginners - a how to at Shiny Happy World
I always make my top stitches slant back.

Step 5

Work your way down until you fill in that whole section of color.

Step 6

Repeat until you’ve stitched up all the sections of the image.

Step 7

Finish as desired. You can make it into a tiny little pillow (maybe a scented pillow to keep in a drawer with your clothes?), use it as a square in a quilt, or frame it in its embroidery hoop.

Charlie - a dog embroidery kit from Shiny Happy World

Important Tip!

It’s very important to be consistent with the way your stitches slant. My bottom stitches always slant forward and my top stitches always slant back. It doesn’t matter which way you do it, as long as you do it the same way for the entire piece. Otherwise your stitches will look slightly off.

See how easy? This is a great, portable project for summer. It took me about 4 hours to stitch up the sample – with lots of interruptions. Most beginners will take longer than that. 🙂

Happy stitching!

Flutterby – a free butterfly embroidery pattern

free butterfly embroidery pattern from Shiny Happy World

Want to learn how to embroider with an easy online workshop – totally free?

Sign up for Embroidery 101 here. You’ll learn how to get started, the tools and supplies you’ll need, and all the stitches you’ll need to embroider just about any design.

It’s a fun, inexpensive, and totally portable craft. You can do it!

When my daughter Jo was little, I made her a yellow dress lined with pink satin, embroidered with a butterfly almost exactly like this one.

She loved it and wore it ALL THE TIME. When she outgrew it she passed it on to a smaller friend who also wore it ALL THE TIME. The last time I saw it around town, it was on a new little girl. Her Mom said she loved it and wore it ALL THE TIME.

I’m sure it was the satin lining getting all the love – but all three girls called it their “butterfly dress.”

Now you can make a butterfly dress – or t-shirt or pillow or tea towels or quilt or whatever needs a butterfly stitched on it.

This is a super easy embroidery pattern.

Download the pattern here.

My favorite way to transfer an embroidery pattern is to use Sulky Sticky Fabri-solvy. You can see it in action in this video. Just print the pattern right on the stabilizer, peel off the paper backing, and stick it down wherever you want to stitch your design. It works great for stabilizing stretchy fabrics like T-shirts too!

This cute little butterfly uses only backstitch â€“ with optional running stitches if you decide to include her swoopy flight path. Those are the two easiest stitches in the whole embroidery world! And if you’re brand spankin’ new to embroidery, just click on the links to watch videos to see how to do them.

I used 4 strands of thread for everything except the butterfly’s face and antennae. I used just 2 strands for them.

Here are the thread colors I used. . .

  • For the orange body I used DMC #721.
  • For the pink wings I used DMC #601.
  • For the yellow spots I used DMC #736.
  • For the face, antennae and flight path I used DMC #3371.

Have fun!

Happy stitching!

That's me!

Best,
Wendi

Sweet Sylvia Snail – a free embroidery pattern

Sweet Sylvia Snail - a free embroidery pattern from Shiny Happy WorldSweet Sylvia Snail loves to go for a sloooooow stroll around the garden, stopping at every pretty posy for a sweet sniff. 🙂

She’s small – the total image is under 4 1/2 inches wide and fits nicely in a 6 inch hoop.

As with any embroidery pattern, you can enlarge or reduce the pattern to make it any size you like, and use whatever colors and stitches you choose.

Here are the colors and stitches I used in my sample. . .

Body ­- backstitch the outline with DMC #703. Satin stitch the stripes. Add French knots to the tips of her antennae. All stitching is done with 4 strands of thread.

Shell -­ backstitch the outline and satin stitch the stripes with 4 strands of DMC #333

Flower -­ backstitch the stem with 2 strands of DMC #699. Use the same color for the leaves in lazy daisy stitch. Lazy daisy stitch the flower petals with 2 strands of DMC #601. The flower center is a French knot with 4 strands of DMC #151.

Face -­ backstitch the eye and the mouth with 2 strands of DMC #3371.

She’s sweet. Hang her on the wall. Stitch her on a gardening apron or tea towel. Stitch her down near the hem of a pair of jeans.

Want to frame your snail in a hoop? There’s a tutorial here showing how, and one here showing how to hide the messy back.

Want the pattern? It’s free!

Download the Sylvia Snail pattern here.

Sign up for the Shiny Happy News to get more free patterns like this one – plus new tutorials, sewing tips and tricks, yummy recipes, special discounts and more. 🙂

Children’s Day in Japan!

Koinobori crafts for Children's Day

Today is Children’s Day in Japan! That means families have been flying koinobori (carp flags) outside their homes and businesses for the last month. This is a beautiful tradition that greeted us when my family arrived in Japan for a month-long visit several years ago. What an amazing experience that was!

On Friday I released a pattern inspired by all those carp flags flying. (You can get the koinobori embroidery pattern here.)

Today I thought I’d share a bunch of other craft ideas inspired by the same carp. All those images up there (and more) are in this Pinterest board. Click over there to see all the images I pinned and to click through to more info and tutorials.

My favorite are those washi tape cupcake toppers right in the center of the collage. Aren’t they great? So simple and perfect! You can find the tutorial here at Zakka Life.

Have fun!

Best,
Wendi
That's me!

Sylvester – a free embroidery pattern

Sylvester - a free embroidery pattern from Shiny Happy World

Meet Sylvester. (A free embroidery pattern for you to stitch up!)

He’s a groovy monster who drives a groovy car.

He’s so proud of his car that he drives it everywhere – even when he only has to go a block or two.

Jo informs me that this is a bird – not a monster. I told her that any bird big enough and smart enough to drive a car is totally a monster. Big birds (but not Big Bird, of course) scare me.

This is a very easy embroidery pattern – great for beginners because it only uses a few easy stitches. The pattern has links to videos teaching all of them. 🙂

You can stitch him on anything you can get in a hoop – a T-shirt, a towel, a pillow. You can even frame your finished picture in its hoop! He’d look great hanging on the wall of a kid’s bedroom – and you can customize the colors to anything you like.

Sylvester - a free embroidery pattern from Shiny Happy World

You can do it! Download the free embroidery pattern here.

Happy stitching!

Best,
Wendi
That's me!

Zen Stitching – How to Embroider a Mandala with No Pattern

Zen Stitching - How to Embroider a Mandala with No Pattern (Shiny Happy World)

Want to learn the basics of hand embroidery with an easy online workshop – totally free?

Sign up for Embroidery 101 here. You’ll learn how to get started, the tools and supplies you’ll need, the four most basic stitches, how to transfer your pattern and how to display your work.

If you already know the basics – sign up for Embroidery 201. It’s also free! You’ll learn how to stitch on specialty fabrics like felt and stretchy T-shirts. Plus you’ll learn lots and lots and LOTS more stitches – all my favorites!

This is one of my favorite kinds of stitching.

Stitching with no pattern.

If regular embroidery is coloring in slow motion, this is doodling in slow motion.

Doodling with a needle and thread. I love it!

When you get into the right frame of mind, it’s the most wonderful, absorbing way to embroider.

Do you think something like that mandala is way too complicated to stitch without a pattern? Or that you don’t have the skills?

Think again!

It’s almost all simple straight stitches, with just a few lazy daisies and French knots thrown in for fun. And I’m going to show you right now how to build the pattern. If you can connect dots you can do this.

One warning here – this isn’t speed stitching.

It’s sloooooow stitching.

It’s enjoy-the-process stitching.

It’s savor-the-moment stitching.

Have fun with it!

Step 1 Start with some circles of felt.

Zen Stitching - How to Embroider a Mandala with No Pattern (Shiny Happy World)These are small – they’re in a 3 inch hoop. I like to work small when I do this – large can be overwhelming.

I centered them by eye. This doesn’t have to be perfect, but I was pretty careful.

Time to start stitching. The key is to start in the center and work my way out.

Zen Stitching - How to Embroider a Mandala with No Pattern (Shiny Happy World)Step 2 I started with those green spokes. Come up in the center and stitch to the north, south, east and west points. These are going to be your guides for all the rest of your stitching, so take your time and get them nice and straight. You can stitch a plus sign, right?

Step 3 I stitched in between those spokes to add northeast, southeast, southwest and northwest spokes.

Woo hoo! I have guiding marks for the rest of my stitching!

Step 4 I filled in the wedges created by those spokes. Each wedge got a French knot, a lazy daisy, and a little straight stitch – all centered between the spokes on either side.

You don’t have to do these stitches. Do whatever strikes your fancy! Just try to keep whatever you do centered in the wedge.

Then I moved out to the next ring.

Zen Stitching - How to Embroider a Mandala with No Pattern (Shiny Happy World)Step 5 I started with the pink triangles. I stitched a straight stitch from the yellow stitch at the end of each lazy daisy (A) to a point in line with the green spokes, halfway across the grey felt ring (B). If you need to see the image bigger you can click on it.

See how I used the stitches that were already there (the green spokes and the yellow dashes) as guides? That keeps everything even and lined up and helps you build a complex-looking pattern very simply.

Step 6 After I worked the pink triangles all around, I added the purple spokes that go from the yellow dash (A) to the edge of the grey ring (C).

Step 7 I liked the look of the pink zigzags, so I worked purple zigzags all the way around, stitching from the ends of those long spokes I made in Step 6 (C) to the top of each pink triangle (B).

I just keep filling in the space, working from points already created. It’s just connecting the dots and filling in the spaces created when I connect the dots. I never plan the next step until I’m ready to stitch it.

Step 8 I created those yellow spokes, stitching from the center of each pink triangle (where the yellow French knots are) to the edge of the grey ring (D).

Step 9 Everything was looking a little stick-like at that point, so I added the French knots inside each pink triangle to change up the texture a bit.

Time to move out to the last ring.

Zen Stitching - How to Embroider a Mandala with No Pattern (Shiny Happy World)This time points C and D were my main markers, because they’re the ones that go all the way to the edge of the grey ring.

Step 10 I started with the point at the tip of the purple zigzag (C) and stitched a spoke to the edge of the pink ring. I did it in two stitches because it was a wider ring – which gave me the idea to stitch a lazy daisy coming leaf coming out of each side of that spoke/stem.

Step 11 I stitched a couple more straight stitches from just past the end of each lazy daisy to a point straight out from the yellow spokes in the grey ring (E).

Step 12 I stitched the little yellow bursts from the end of each yellow spoke (D), kind of filling in the space in those green points I created in Step 11.

Step 13 I liked those yellow bursts, so I added some little yellow rays coming out of where the lazy daisy stitches joined the spoke/stems from Step 10.

Step 14 I was still liking the pop of the yellow bursts, so I added smaller bursts at the top of each green stem/spoke.

I was almost done – I just wanted to add a bit more color and more French knots to change the texture again.

Step 15 I added blue French knots at the base of the yellow bursts created in Step 12.

Step 16 I had purple felt in the center and purple stitching in the middle ring. I felt like it needed more dark purple in the last ring, so I added French knots all around the edge, one on each side of the green points.

Done! Just take it one step at a time, work your way all the way around each ring, then build up the next level. As long as you stay lined up with your original points – those green spokes in the center – everything will line up and you’ll end up with a very complex-looking pattern.

Zen Stitching - How to Embroider a Mandala with No Pattern (Shiny Happy World)

What do you think? Anyone else want to try this kind of stitching? Do you want more info or to see more sample ideas? I’d love to share!

I hope you liked this tutorial. Want more? Sign up for the Shiny Happy News! I’ll keep you up to date about all the new tutorials here and also give you early access to any sales!

Happy stitching!

Best,
Wendi
Wendi_Gratz_Shiny_Happy_World

Four Free Embroidery Patterns

Free Embroidery PatternsIt’s been a little while since I released an embroidery pattern – and now you know why! I’ve been working on this set of four free patterns – commissioned by Sulky, the maker of the thread I used. I posted a review of the Sulky thread here.

Now they’re ready to see the world – and you can make them!

All the samples are framed in 5-inch hoops but you can easily enlarge or reduce the patterns to be any size you like.

Tweet - a free bird embroidery pattern

Tweet

Tweet is a very pretty bird whose stitching looks more complicated than it actually is.

It uses just five very basic embroidery stitches!

If you’re just learning how to embroider, this is a terrific pattern to start with.

Download the free Tweet pattern here.

Blossom free embroidery patternBlossom

This single flower is a great way to practice your French knots. I love using them all clustered together as a fill stitch, like in the center of this flower.

I used variegated thread for a nice mottled effect without needing to change thread.

You’re not scared of French knots, are you? I used to be – but then I figured out The Trick and now I get a perfect knot every time. Watch this video and learn how.

Download the free Blossom pattern here.

Full Heart cover 1000 pxMy Heart Is Full. . .

This is a great pattern to practice tiny stitching.

I made it sampler-like, with each row of pattern in the heart showcasing different stitches.

None of them are very complicated stitches – but they’re small. 🙂

Download the free My Heart Is Full. . . pattern here.

Jackie cover 1000 pxJackie

Jackie is another great pattern for beginners.

She uses just five embroidery stitches – all of them very basic.

My favorite part is the polkadots outlined in a contrasting color. That seems like a tricky extra step – but it actually helps cover up any raggedy edges on your satin stitches. ***shhh. . . don’t tell***

Download the free Jackie embroidery pattern here.

Like all patterns from Shiny Happy World, the pattern has links to videos teaching you all the stitches and techniques used. And you can sell anything you make using the pattern – as long as you make it yourself. 🙂

Happy stitching!

Best,
Wendi
Applique Wendi (with fabulous hat)

How to Use Pendant Frames for Embroidery – video

Make a Pretty Pendant with these Easy to Use Frames - a video tutorial

Want to learn the basics of hand embroidery with an easy online workshop – totally free?

Sign up for Embroidery 101 here. You’ll learn how to get started, the tools and supplies you’ll need, the four most basic stitches, how to transfer your pattern and how to display your work.

If you already know the basics – sign up for Embroidery 201. It’s also free! You’ll learn how to stitch on specialty fabrics like felt and stretchy T-shirts. Plus you’ll learn lots and lots and LOTS more stitches – all my favorites!

The Kiddie Cameo pattern was made for the pendant frames in the shop. I decided to also record this video showing just how to assemble the pendants – and it also gives a sense of the size because you see them in my hands.

You can shop for pendant frames here.

That flower image in the video is from a new pattern called Bitty Blooms – 30 tiny little flower patterns sized especially to fit in the pendants as well.

I’ll be adding more patterns especially for these frames – all will show the images in the frames on the pattern cover so they’ll be easy to spot among all the embroidery patterns. 🙂

Are any of you stitching these up for Mother’s Day? I’d love to see them!

Happy stitching!

Best,
Wendi
applique wendi

Free Pattern – Flora the felt bird

Flora the Felt Bird - a free pattern from Shiny Happy World

This little felt bird was such a delight to make! Seriously – I loved every minute of it. I want to make a whole flock of them in rainbow colors! And now you can make her too.

The embroidery is all easy – just three of the most basic stitches – backstitch, lazy daisy, and French knot.

Flora is all hand sewn from wool blend felt and colorful embroidery thread, making her an easy, portable project, perfect for carrying around in your purse.

Here’s what you’ll need:

Step 1
Download the pattern here.

Transfer the pattern to the felt. When I discovered Sulky Sticky Fabri-solvy it changed my life. I made a video showing how awesome it is here. I call it The Magical Embroidery Stuff and I use it for everything. Here I’ve printed the pattern directly onto the Sulky Sticky Fabric-solvy, roughly cut around each piece, and stuck it to my felt.

Step 2
Stitch the design. I used two strands of embroidery thread and the following stitches: backstitch for all lines, French knots for all dots, lazy daisy stitch for the flowers. (Those links all go to video tutorials for each stitch.)

Stitch right through the stabilizer and the felt.

Step 3
Cut out the shapes.

Step 4
Soak off the stabilizer and let the pieces dry.

I lay the pieces face down in a bowl of cold water and just let them sit there for about an hour. Longer is fine – I’ve forgotten mine and let them soak overnight with no problem. The soaking will make the stabilizer all mushy and soft. Rinse it off under cold water. Use a kitchen sprayer if needed to get off any stubborn bits, but try not to rub the surface of the felt. Lay them out on a towel to dry. Don’t wring them, twist them or even smoosh them – just lay them dripping wet on the towel and leave them alone.

Step 5
Time to start putting it all together! Use 2 strands of matching embroidery thread to whipstitch all the pieces together. (This video shows how to whipstitch pieces together.)

Sew one embroidered wing to one “naked” wing, all the way around the edge. Repeat for the second wing.

Step 6
Sew the belly to one side of the bird.

Start sewing at the tail of the bird, matching it to the wider end of the belly piece, and sew all the way to the top of the belly piece.

Step 7
Sew the other side of the belly to the other bird piece.

Start again down at the tail and sew all the way up to the top, but this time keep going past the belly, sewing the two sides of the face together.

Slip the beak between the layers of the face and keep stitching. Instead of whipstitching up and over the edges of the felt, stitch through the beak. (This video has help for catching the beak in that stitching.)

Step 8
Sew up the back, starting at the tip of the tail. Stop sewing about halfway up the back and stuff the tail. Mix a few large nuts (from the hardware store) into the stuffing to weight her bottom, otherwise she’ll tend to tip forward. Sew up a bit higher on her back and stuff in more stuffing. Finish sewing and stuffing until she’s nice and plump, and all sewn up.

Step 9
Pin the wings in place, one on each side of the body.

Use the grid pattern you embroidered to line them up exactly. Thread a long needle and knot the end. Starting sewing underneath one wing, near the top. Sew through the body and out the other side, through the opposing wing. Take a small stitch back into the wing, through the body and out through the first wing. Stitch back and forth like this a few times to secure the wings. Don’t pull the thread too tight or you’ll distort the shape of her body. Knot your thread underneath one wing and bury the tail.

She’s finished! don’t you want to sew a whole flock of these beauties?

Read more about working with felt in these posts.

Happy stitching!

A Playdate with Made by Joel – and a Giveaway!

Free Christmas gift bag pattern with free embroidery pattern.

What do you get when you combine Joel’s Free Holiday Gift Tag printable with my Free Goody Bag pattern?

Red Christmas gift bag embroidered with a white cat wearing reindeer antlers

This! A cute, reusable Christmas gift bag!

The Joel, of course, is Joel Henriques, the amazing dad who blogs at Made by Joel and author of Made to Play – a book showing you how to make tons of great, creative handmade toys.

Want to make a Christmas gift bag yourself? It’s easy!

Get Joel’s free printable gift tags here.

Get the free Goody Bag pattern here.

Free Christmas gift bag pattern with free embroidery pattern.

Transfer the images from the gift tags to the fabric you’re going to use for the bags and stitch them up. I used a simple backstitch – easy peasy. There’s a video here showing how to backstitch.

Free Christmas gift bag pattern with free embroidery pattern.

Now you have bunches of fun reusable Christmas bags!

Have a great day everyone!