Thank you so much for this! I've only ever seen the fabric being stitched to 2 sides but no one has shown how to use the twill tape to fix the perpendicular tension! I'm building my own frame and now I know what to do! Thank you so much!
Tank you this was very very helpfull. This step is rarely explained with that much level of detail, thank you this makes me a lot more confident about setting up my fabric for the first time !!
Thank you so much! I ordered my silk organza yesterday, and I'm going to start building my frame tomorrow! Your videos have been so incredibly helpful!
If you know how to handle the materials well, it does not damage the fabric. You will see holes in the fabric, but the threads of the fabric are just pushed aside. With steam these threads bounce back to their original place/shape.
Thank you so much for these videos! I just started and I am having trouble with my thread breaking. What am I doing wrong? I am using Fil au Chinois thread, as recommended. And it's been happening after about every 20 beads. Should I cast off more often? How many beads can I place before you recommend I cast off again, just to secure it and be safe? Thank you so much!!
Hi 👋! Your thread shouldn’t break at all. Which type of thread do you use? Fil Au Chinois is a brand name. You need the Fil à Gant from Fil Au Chinois 👍✨
Hi @@SaskiaterWelleRisseeuw ! I just checked and I am using Fil à Gant, so strange! I have only just started learning tambour, so I'm probably not doing the stitch right yet. I think I sometimes might not hook the thread perfectly, and therefore pulling up only part of the thread instead of the whole thing, making me split the thread. And other ideas what I might be doing wrong?
@@woezzelboefje most people starting with Tambour embroidery tend to hold the thread quite tense (trying to concentrate really) … this might be the reason.
@@SaskiaterWelleRisseeuw I think that was exactly it! I've been practicing a lot this weekend and I haven't had any more threads breaking! I was putting way too much tension on it! Thank you so much for replying!
@@SaskiaterWelleRisseeuw So you don't deliver? may I know the price, I need a frame that can accommodate till 70cm*100cm, is it possible? Thanks for replying
The embroidery frame for tambour embroidery is large enough to be put on two trestles so you can sit behind it with your legs under with both hands free. The fabric is sewn to the the twill tapes on the large sides, and pinned with strips of twinkle tape to the smaller sides to get the right tension.
Thank you so much for this! I've only ever seen the fabric being stitched to 2 sides but no one has shown how to use the twill tape to fix the perpendicular tension! I'm building my own frame and now I know what to do! Thank you so much!
You’re welcome! Enjoy🙋♀️
i love this video. everyone teaches the stitching and I'm looking for prep like this. Thank you!! I subscribed!!!
Thanks! What other content are you looking for? What is your main purpose for this type of embroidery?
I thought this was Ana excellent video too as many don’t show the basics!!
Tank you this was very very helpfull. This step is rarely explained with that much level of detail, thank you this makes me a lot more confident about setting up my fabric for the first time !!
Great 👍! Off you go … 👌🌟
Thank you so much for sharing it in such a detail showing ❤️ love your work
Very clear and easy to follow. Thanks!
You’re welcome!
Thank you so much!
I ordered my silk organza yesterday, and I'm going to start building my frame tomorrow! Your videos have been so incredibly helpful!
Great to hear! Happy embroidery 🪡!
Amazing English too! Thanks
Thanks Anitra! 🤩
Such a brilliant vid. Thank you
Thanks! 🙏😊
Thanks for the tutorial! Does this damage the fabric near the pins and stitching area?
If you know how to handle the materials well, it does not damage the fabric. You will see holes in the fabric, but the threads of the fabric are just pushed aside. With steam these threads bounce back to their original place/shape.
@@SaskiaterWelleRisseeuw Thank you so much!
Thank you so much for these videos! I just started and I am having trouble with my thread breaking. What am I doing wrong? I am using Fil au Chinois thread, as recommended. And it's been happening after about every 20 beads. Should I cast off more often? How many beads can I place before you recommend I cast off again, just to secure it and be safe? Thank you so much!!
Hi 👋! Your thread shouldn’t break at all. Which type of thread do you use? Fil Au Chinois is a brand name. You need the Fil à Gant from Fil Au Chinois 👍✨
Hi @@SaskiaterWelleRisseeuw ! I just checked and I am using Fil à Gant, so strange! I have only just started learning tambour, so I'm probably not doing the stitch right yet. I think I sometimes might not hook the thread perfectly, and therefore pulling up only part of the thread instead of the whole thing, making me split the thread. And other ideas what I might be doing wrong?
@@woezzelboefje most people starting with Tambour embroidery tend to hold the thread quite tense (trying to concentrate really) … this might be the reason.
@@SaskiaterWelleRisseeuw I think that was exactly it! I've been practicing a lot this weekend and I haven't had any more threads breaking! I was putting way too much tension on it! Thank you so much for replying!
where i can find your frame, thanks
@@joedolceland I sell these frames in my studio
@@SaskiaterWelleRisseeuw So you don't deliver? may I know the price, I need a frame that can accommodate till 70cm*100cm, is it possible? Thanks for replying
@@joedolceland I do, but it depends where you are located.
@@SaskiaterWelleRisseeuw I'm in Italy
good evening, I loved the video however I do not know the name of the embroidery frame which I want to acquire
could someone tell me please
The embroidery frame for tambour embroidery is large enough to be put on two trestles so you can sit behind it with your legs under with both hands free. The fabric is sewn to the the twill tapes on the large sides, and pinned with strips of twinkle tape to the smaller sides to get the right tension.