Practice Makes Presentable

Not everything I make turns out the way I want it to. I don’t know if this is because I am constantly making things without planning ahead, or if it’s just a natural part of the creative process, but my holiday ornament project just reminded me that sometimes things don’t work.

When I find a new embroidery stitch, I only test it out if it looks difficult. Most of the time I’m too impatient to do a sample. More complicated stitches get added to my sampler, partly so I remember therm, and partly for the practice. Ideally, practice keeps you from making mistakes when it matters.

Ideally.

When I saw buttonhole bars (which must have been called picot stitch by someone, only now I can’t find that video), I got excited. They added dimension with a traditional feel, and were a simple modification of a stitch I already knew.

Despite my confidence that I could do it, I was a good girl. I practiced the stitch on my test sampler. Five whole times. That seemed like enough. 

Close up of embroidery sampler showing 5 uneven buttonhole bars with the label "picot" all in blue.
An extreme close up of my “picot” (buttonhole bar) stitches. It’s not obvious from this angle, but they are different sizes.

When I added buttonhole bars to a heart-shaped ornament in progress, however, it did not go well. Some of the stitches look okay and some of them really don’t. The more I did, the worse things got. What had seemed simple was suddenly confusing and I couldn’t figure out what I was doing wrong. 

Unfinished heart embroidery with concentric outlines. Outermost line of stitching is uneven and wonky buttonhole bars in olive green.
I started on the right and moved to the left with the green buttonhole bars… what is happening on the end there?
Close up of a line of uneven and messy buttonhole bar stitches in olive green.
Buttonhole bars gone wild… or at least extremely wonky.

In the end, I abandoned this ornament. I considered ripping the bars out, but that would damage the felt. Besides, I don’t like the rest of it either. Why put in the effort trying to save something I don’t like?

This little embroidery mess reminded me that not everything is easy. Some things take practice, and not just five stitches worth.

I don’t like all the ornaments I’ve made, but that’s okay. Every time I make a mistake I learn something new. 

A felt butterfly ornament with wings that don't match. The butterfly is decorated with red, yellow, and green embroidery and beads.
This non-symmetrical butterfly is an example of what happens when you don’t test your patterns out first.

Like practice makes presentable.

Do you take the time to practice new skills before “doing the thing?”

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