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I started an epic pokemon pattern recently (gen 2) and I thought to myself, I don't want this happening to me, so I spent an hour or 2 making pink lines to outline each page with groups of 10 so it will be easy to line up my stitches. When I was almost done I realised I had the outline in the complete wrong place! And because I didn't have large boarders to begin with I decided to undo it all and start again. Then when I finally got around to starting the actual stitcheng I made a mistake anyway and had to undo about 20 min of stitches... at least I noticed it pretty quick.
So yeah, I feel your pain.
I am known across campus as "The girl who knits in lectures"
Sometimes I don't bother to remove the stitches and start again if I go wrong - it depends on whether it really changes the whole look of the design. A lot of the time I'll just adapt the pattern to make the mistake work and sometimes I think it looks better in the long run. Also I know then that my work will always be an original as nobody else will have made the same mistakes as me!
Ive been making tetris christmas decorations, and nearly had all the pieces of one sewn up, until I realised last night I did something completely wrong Now I have to not only undo that seam(s) but enough of the connecting ones to secure them while I fix it.
Ugh I also hate taking out my work. I have used a seam ripper before but one of the last times I used it I ripped a hole right in the middle of my cloth, so I put the seam ripper away for awhile.
I always think of taking out my work as surgery lol. A surgery with lots of cursing. I am unable to leave in a mistake as it bothers me to no end so I have had lots of undoing, I really need to learn to grid my work, although I imagine I would mess that up too.
I tried stitch-gridding twice before I gave up and just bought a blue embroidery marker. For the SUPER-SECRET JOHLOH PROJECT, though, I was using black aida and therefore had to grid with white thread. I somehow managed to keep it from becoming permanently integrated with my stitching, but it was this shy of a nightmare.
Mostly hibernating here. Find me on Twitter @rmdcade.
I have just removed about 3 hours worth of work, mostly because I was only one stitch out. Even though I hate removing them, personally, I couldn't fix it as I go along. I have to follow the chart exactly
No matter how frustrating it is to remove stitches, it is completely worth it in the end. Although like most others, I have no motivation at the moment to work on this. Hopefully that motivation will return soon since I am working on Christmas prezzies.
While making my glow-in-the-dark contest entry I had to cut out 35 glow stitches because I bought a new colour of glow floss. I didn't realize it was going to glow a different colour since the four other colours I had glowed the same colour. It wasn't until I went & looked at it in the dark that I realized my mistake. They were worse then regular stitches to take out especially since they were tweeded so they took extra long to stitch in the first place.
Alondria wrote:I have just removed about 3 hours worth of work, mostly because I was only one stitch out. Even though I hate removing them, personally, I couldn't fix it as I go along. I have to follow the chart exactly
No matter how frustrating it is to remove stitches, it is completely worth it in the end. Although like most others, I have no motivation at the moment to work on this. Hopefully that motivation will return soon since I am working on Christmas prezzies.
I would have rage quit the project if this happened to me.
"I need to feel your cross stitch. Feels like 8-bit" - my three year old