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Needle painting – silk embroidery tutorial

Love silk embroidery? Dip into our needle painting tutorial for an introduction to this beguiling art. Then set your inner artist free as you embroider a delicate rose blossom in pure silk.

Japanese silk embroidery
Silk embroidery on kimono, Japan, ca 1900 [1]

What is needle painting?

Needle painting is a hand embroidery technique where stitches are laid close together to fill in areas of a motif, blend colors and achieve realistic shading.

The designs on Japanese kimonos and Chinese silk are exquisite examples of the effects this technique can achieve.

What you need

To get started with silk embroidery, you will need

And, of course, the raw nerve to try something new. If you're just getting started, you can expect to make a mistake here and there. But you've got to crack a few eggs to make an omelette, right? So here we go!

Ground fabric for embroidery

The best fabric for embroidery is a sturdy, densely woven and smooth fabric. Beginners especially should avoid stretchy or sheer fabrics. Heavy linen or cotton in a plain or twill weave is a good choice. If you want to use silk, try smooth dupioni, duchesse, or organza, which is nice and stiff in spite of being sheer.

Sewers with weak eyesight and those with less experience should choose a matte fabric in a color that contrasts with the embroidered motif. Dark-on-dark patterns are more demanding. 

When you have some experience under your belt, you can branch out to more lively embroidery fabrics, like silk satin – try experimenting first with scraps from your sewing stash.

Silk floss

The main player in any embroidery project is, of course, the floss, in this case we're using smooth, flat silk floss.

Genuine silk floss turns out the finest, most perfect results. The masters of Chinese and Japanese embroidery used just this material.

Silk floss comes in both twisted and flat (non-twisted) versions. Flat silk floss is made of a single thread of spun silk. Twisted silk floss is made of two or more threads and is similar in appearance to sewing thread.

Japanese silk embroidery
Silk embroidery, detail from garment, Japan, latter 18th century [2]
Silk embroidery floss types
Different types of embroidery floss

The photo above shows, from left to right: Flat embroidery silk from Sartor, twisted silk Madeira, and cotton embroidery floss Mouliné from DMC.

For the Madeira and DMC floss shown, each strand is made of two twisted threads and wound into skeins of four or six strands each. When doing needlework, only one or two strands are generally used at a time. Flat silk is typically used as a whole, although it may be split for use in fine details.

Where to get real silk floss

You can get flat embroidery floss made of genuine mulberry silk, the traditional material used for the needle painting technique, here at Sartor. Look in the notions section under embroidery (while you're there, check out the Japanese Sashiko thread too).

Other sources for embroidery silk are Madeira (twisted floss only) and Au Ver à Soie (their soie ovale is top quality flat silk floss, but it comes at a premium price). 

You can order embroidery silk directly from China, but here you may run the risk of ending up with artificial fiber. In many parts of the world the terms silk and even natural silk are bandied about for all kinds of rayon and polyester.

needle painting thread painting embroidery tutorial
Silk floss, left to right: Sartor, Chinese seller, Au Ver à Soie, Madeira

If you want to dabble in needle painting at home without investing in silk floss, there are a few alternatives available, though not all are entirely suitable.

Types of floss to avoid

The rayon thread sold for embroidery machines, though it has a nice gloss, is not at all suitable for needle painting.

Even the popular rayon hand-embroidery floss from DMC and Anchor are poorly suited for this purpose. They are just too stiff and lack the pliancy required for needle painting .

Good alternatives

For needle painting a suitable alternative to silk is the cotton embroidery floss mouline from DMC, Anchor, and others. You are likely to have some on hand if you've done any embroidery in the past, and they're easy to work with; of course cotton floss lacks the sheen and suppleness of silk.

needle painting thread painting embroidery tutorial
Embroidered with DMC floss on silk organza

Finding a template

You can sketch a design yourself, trace an illustration or photograph, or find a template online. To start with, try a small, simple motif. A single flower with a bit of shading is ideal, and that is the project we'll be tackling here.

Needles and hoop

Get some classic, sharp embroidery needles – any brand is fine as long as they are labeled for embroidery.

You'll also need an embroidery frame or hoop. The more firmly the fabric is held in place, the less it will pucker as you work. While a hoop does not stretch the fabric as perfectly as a frame can, it is great for smaller pieces and is perfect for this project.

Get a wooden embroidery hoop with a diameter of 6 to 8 inches (15–20 cm). To keep the fabric from slipping, it's a good trick to bind the hoop in fabric. I enclosed both hoops in a strip of cotton bias tape (available in any fabric store).

needle painting thread painting embroidery tutorial
Embroidery hoop covered in bias tape

embroidery tutorial steps

Trace the template onto fabric

If you have chosen a light-colored fabric, tracing your template will be simple. Print out your design (if you don't already have it on paper), lay the fabric on top, light it from below, and trace.

You can use a special light board for this purpose (you can pick up a basic LED light board for around $20), use your phone or tablet, or trace your design against a sunny window.

needle painting thread painting embroidery tutorial
Tracing a monogram with the aid of a light board

For dark fabric, transfer your template using transfer paper or coat the back of your design paper with chalk and trace to the fabric.

Trace with a colored pencil or white gel pen. Do not use an ordinary pencil; the graphite can come off on the finished product.

needle painting thread painting embroidery tutorial

Place fabric in the hoop

Loosen the screw and take the two hoops apart. Stretch the fabric over the inner hoop, fit the outer hoop snugly in place, and tighten.

If the fabric is not taut enough, don't try to fix it by tugging at the edges – you'll stretch it out of shape. Take the hoop apart and try again.

A small hoop is easy to hold in your hands; a larger one may require a stand or a table to prop it up. You can also use a scrap of cloth to protect the fabric around the edge of the hoop from getting soiled.

Prepare the silk floss

If your floss is in skeins, you have to get it ready before you sit down to work.

  1. Unwind the skein – Our embroidery floss conceals two smaller skeins. Separate them.
  2. Find the spot where the skein is tied – The two ends of the floss are tied in a knot here. Untie or snip apart.
  3. At the spot where the skein was tied together, cut all the way through – This will give you a bundle of strands of equal length.

Another option is to wind the whole skein onto a spool, but that is tedious work and the floss can be easily damaged or soiled.

needle painting thread paiting embroidery floss
A skein of floss from Sartor
needle painting thread paiting embroidery floss
A skein of floss unwound
needle painting thread paiting embroidery floss
Divide the two smaller skeins
needle painting thread paiting embroidery floss
Snip the loop
needle painting thread paiting embroidery floss

File your nails

Seriously now, silk floss can get caught on a rough fingernail or hangnail. So before you sit down to embroider, give your hands a little tender loving care; you'll thank yourself later.

How to store embroidery silk

A little embroidering hack that simplifies handling your floss and keeps it from tangling, is to make a floss organizer by punching holes in a bit of cardboard (a bookmark, an old greeting card, whatever). Then loop each bundle of thread through a hole and braid it loosely. Floss is satiny smooth, so you can pull a strand right out without even undoing the braid.

needle painting thread painting embroidery floss
Store your embroidery floss card in a zip-lock bag

embroidery stitches

Thread painting requires mastery of a few basic embroidery stitches: 

  • Stem stitch
  • Satin stitch
  • Chain stitch
  • Split stitch

Flat silk floss really shines in areas worked with a satin stitch – straight stitches laid down side by side. For shading, short and long stitches are alternated, which makes the colors blend more smoothly.

Choosing colors

Choose colors based on your source image or use your imagination. If you want to try shading, you will need multiple shades of each color.

For the example in this tutorial, I worked with a palette of four shades of green and five reds, plus two shades of yellow for the center of the flower.

needle painting thread painting embroidery tutorial
Embroidery with colored areas filled with satin stitch, Spanish shawl, 20th century [3]
needle painting thread painting embroidery tutorial
Needle painting, shaded leaves and blossoms, France, 1790–1800 [4]

Where to start

Embroidery is always done from the bottom up – if one part of the design overlaps another, start with the part that goes underneath. For the rose in this example, I embroidered the bud first, then its leaves, the leaves around the rose, the rose petals, and finally the center of the flower.

Tidy edges

Sewing around each part with a split stitch first helps make the edges nice and tidy.

When sewing around the contours like this, the same rule applies – work from the bottom up, doing each part in its turn.

Secure the beginning of the thread with a few stitches under a finished part; don't use a knot! If there is nothing to tuck your thread under, secure it with a small back stitch in a spot that will later be covered by embroidery or leave a longish end free on the reverse and tuck it in later.

needle painting thread painting embroidery tutorial
Secure the thread with a small stitch
needle painting thread painting embroidery tutorial
Trace the edges with a split stitch
needle painting thread painting embroidery tutorial
Split stitch: Bring up the needle from the back a short distance from the end of the last stitch...
needle painting thread painting embroidery tutorial
... and poke it back in at the middle of the last stitch. Repeat until done.

Filling and shading

From here it's a little like a kid with a coloring book. Fill in each part with stitches laid side by side. Start filling in the area near the edge, bringing up the needle inside of the area and sticking it back in just beyond the edging contour.

needle painting thread painting embroidery tutorial
Bring the needle up inside of the area you want to fill...
needle painting thread painting embroidery tutorial
... and stick it back in just beyond the edging.

When you get to the central part of the design (once the border areas are done), the direction reverses: Bring up the needle among the completed filling stitches and stick it back in more towards the center of the space you are coloring in.

needle painting thread painting embroidery tutorial
Bring the needle up among completed stitches...
needle painting thread painting embroidery tutorial
...stick it back in at an empty spot.

If you want to achieve a shaded effect, use long and short stitches. Alternate the stitch length so that the border between the two shades is not straight, but nuanced.

For the next shade – darker or lighter – do the same. Alternate long and short stitches so that the shades blend naturally. 

needle painting thread painting embroidery tutorial

Fill in the flower with stitches of various lengths.

needle painting thread painting embroidery tutorial
First two shades on the petals

After finishing the flower petals, I filled the middle with little French knots, but you could also fill this area with a chain stitch, a stem stitch in the shape of a spiral, or shading – whatever strikes your fancy.

needle painting thread painting embroidery tutorial

Photo sources: [1] Victoria and Albert Museum, [2] [3] Wikimedia Commons; [4] Metropolitan Museum of Art

Comments(1)

Rachel Dye 6 / 10 / 2023

This article is so helpful, and the end result is so beautiful! Is there anyway you can attach a list of the thread colors you used? Thank you!

1 response hide responses
Marcela 6 / 10 / 2023

Reaction to: This article is so helpful, and the end result is so beautiful! Is there anyway you can attach a list of the thread colors you used? Thank you!

We are glad you found this article interesting. Unfortuneately Ada did not take note on the embroidery floss used, so we are very sorry that we cannot tell you the exact color codes. We will think about this detail next time.

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