Embroidery needles
Discover Pinterest’s 10 best ideas and inspiration for Embroidery needles. Get inspired and try out new things.
Have you been wanting to learn how to do punch needle embroidery? In this Punch Needle for Beginners Tutorial, you'll learn everything you need to know to get started with punch needle today!

Elisha Jordan saved to Embroidery stitches
Hand embroidery is a relatively inexpensive and easy craft to take up, because, unlike most other hobbies, the basic tools required for embroidery are simple, few, and affordable. While the woodworker needs saws and carving tools, the weaver needs a loom, the cake decorator needs bags and tips, t

Wilna Riekert saved to NEEDLE WORK EMBROIDERY
Learn about the difference in embroidery threads, how many strands of floss to use in your project, and how to separate those strands.
Carol Jean Rench saved to Embroidery
Hand embroidery needle is an essential tool that has its peculiarities. Learn how to choose needles for your project and take care of them.

Lori Folcarelli saved to embroidery
Punch needle is all the rage, but the information out there is all over the place. Designs done with punch needle embroidery work on most all fabrics but not with yarn width needles do not. It can make it confusing when you're first starting.

North Shore Crafts saved to How to Punch Needle
Choosing the right sewing needle
A step by step tutorial how to start and finish your embroidery thread. Including the holding stitch and waste knot method.
While rummaging through a drawer in my studio, I find a forgotten stash of hand needles. There are long needles, short needles, thick and thin needles, some with big eyes, tiny eyes, and even two eyes. As I sort through the needles, I realize: I have no clue as to what these needles are used for. My needles have lost their identity! For every type of hand stitching, there is a needle for the job. The eye, shaft, and point of a hand needle are customized for its distinctive purpose. Familiar…
Yolanda Campanelli saved to Embroidery
Most embroidery floss skeins, like those produced by DMC, are called pull skeins. They are designed so that when one end is pulled (slowly and carefully), the floss will come come out of the skein without getting tangled. Sounds great, right? The problem is, if you pull the wrong end, instead of being knot free, your s
carol saved to directions