Quilting Arts - USA (2021 - Spring)

(Antfer) #1
Want to learn more?
Watch Susan demonstrate this
technique on “Quilting Arts TV” Series
2600 available at quiltingartstv.com
or your local PBS station.

ribbon and hold the bead tightly
so it doesn’t unravel.


  1. Tack the end of the ribbon down
    with the quilting thread, tucking


the knot inside the fold so it
doesn’t show. (fi gure 3)


  1. Wrap the thread around the bead
    tightly and back to where you
    started and take a securing stitch.
    Wrap tightly again in a slightly
    different direction and take a
    securing stitch each time you
    come back to where you started.


NOTE: If you just wrap and don’t
take a securing stitch, the thread will
slip off the bead.


  1. To go in a different direction, go
    slightly past where you started,
    take a securing stitch, and then
    wrap the next time perpendicular
    to the last wrap. The goal is
    to hold down the loose bits of
    ribbon and to add color.

  2. When you get near the end of the
    thread, knot it and tuck it under
    an edge of the ribbon, and then
    push the needle through the bead
    and cut off the tail. (fi gure 4)


NOTE: If your hands are not strong
enough to push the needle through,
position the needle in the bead going
the direction you want it to go, and
place the bead on a cutting mat or

fi gure 3


fi gure 4


fi gure 5


fi gure 6


cutting board with the needle on the
mat. Push down on the bead, taking
care not to stick yourself with the
needle as it comes out the other end.
When you have to push the needle
all the way through the bead, or
once the bead is tightly compacted
after it is wrapped, you might need
the pliers to pull the needle through.


  1. Cut a 24" piece of perle cotton
    size 3, and repeat the wrapping
    process described in Steps 6-8.
    (fi gure 5)


NOTE: I used a contrasting color.


  1. Cut an 18" piece of perle cotton
    size 8, and use it to secure
    the intersections in the perle
    cotton—the places where strands
    cross—by stitching little Xs
    across the threads. You can do
    this in a neat, deliberate way or
    you can make it random and a
    bit messy—whichever suits your
    aesthetic. (fi gure 6 )
    Use the beads to make a
    necklace or to create an
    embellishment.

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