All-needle embroidery (X)
First put it on by mesh 1, then put it on by mesh 2, then put it on by mesh 3, then put it on by mesh 4, then put it on by mesh 5, then go down by mesh 2, then go up by mesh 3, then go down by mesh 6, and so on.
Half-stitch embroidery (1/2X)
Half-needle embroidery is composed of a diagonal line, which is half of full-needle embroidery.
Quarter embroidery
1/4 needle embroidery is composed of half of the diagonal line. If you want the remaining part in the side square to show different colors, you need 1/4 needle embroidery to show it.
Three-fourths embroidery (1/2X)
3/4 embroidery is a "human" shape formed by a complete diagonal line and a half diagonal line.
Back stitch embroidery (sideline)
The first needle comes up from the mesh 1 and then goes down from the mesh 2; The second needle comes up from the mesh 3, then goes down from the mesh 2, and then comes up from the mesh 4 and returns to the mesh 3. Except for the first needle, every other needle returns to the original mesh in the form of a return stitch. Clip is generally used to embroider threads, outlines and letters.
french knot
Lift the needle to the position of 1, thread it around the needle, and insert the needle at the position of 2. Hold the end of the embroidery thread with the fingers that are not embroidered, tighten the knot, then thread the needle through the fabric and hold the embroidery thread until it must be loosened. If you tie a big knot, you can appropriately increase the number of strands of the thread, but only once.
Flat petal needle
Thread the needle from the position of 1, rewind the thread, then thread the needle from 1, thread it from 2, hold down the looped thread, tighten the thread into a petal shape, and then thread the needle from 2 ————————————————————.
Continuous single cross stitch: hemming and hemming stitch;
French knot/lock embroidery