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Posts Tagged ‘counted cross stitch’

I am still doing a lot of cross stitching and thought that I would mix things up a bit today by featuring two projects that I have recently completed that feature cardinals, one of my favorite birds. I have not figured out how/if I will frame the pieces, but figured it might be interesting to show you the variety of styles that attract me.

The first photo shows a piece called “Autumn Bird” that was designed by Jody Rice at Satsuma Street. Jody’s style is associated with modern cross stitching with its use of bold colors that are not necessarily related to the colors that you actually see in nature. You won’t, for example, see colorful autumn leaves that look like the ones that I stitched.

The second photo shows “Quirky Quaker Cardinal” by Darling and Whimsy Designs and is more reflective of traditional cross stitching, with its use of a limited palette of muted colors and traditional motifs. I love the simplicity of this approach and this project was a fun and easy stitch for me.

The world of counted cross stitch has changed a lot in recent decades, and many people now use digital patterns and software to display their patterns as they are stitching. I’m a bit of a traditionalist and like to use the paper patterns that I can purchase at my local cross stitch store. For the moment at least, these two approaches happily co-exist.

In many ways, the “modern vs. traditional” debate in cross stitch is similar to the range of approaches that exist for wildlife photography. I happily continue to use a digital single lens reflex camera with its mirror and optical viewfinder and am not quite ready to embrace the more modern mirrorless camera, with digital viewfinders and built-in image processors.

Autumn Bird

Quirky Quaker Cardinal

 

© Michael Q. Powell. All rights reserved.

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During the last few months I have been cross stitching a lot, spending time that in previous years I might have spent in the wild with my camera. The hot, humid weather is one factor that has kept me indoors, but I have also rediscovered my love for counted cross stitch. I haven’t yet figured out how I will frame or otherwise finish these pieces, but I thought I would show you some of the autumn-themed ones that I have finished stitching.

The first one is from a pattern that appeared in the Halloween 2025 edition of Just Cross Stitch magazine. It is called Tiny Pumpkins and was designed by Sara Louise Greer of Wickham Cottage. In the past I really enjoyed stitching on black fabric and decided to give it a try again. My eyes are older and require more light than when I was young, but the project turned out pretty well.

The second piece also appeared in the Halloween 2025 edition of Just Cross Stitch magazine. It is called Hallows’ Eve Sampler and was designed by Tracy Richards of Wrought Iron Stitching. I love the vintage autumn vibe of this piece that the designer was able to achieve using only four colors.

The final two pieces were designed by TheCozyDH, a Canadian independent cross stitcher, designer, and content creator on You Tube and Twitch. They have an Etsy shop where you can purchase downloadable cross stitch patterns that are “a lil cute, a lil cozy, a lil spooky” and also a Ko-fi shop, which tends to have lower prices because the platform has lower fees than Etsy.

The two skeleton guys, known as the Bobs, are described by the designer as follows:  “Once there were two large skeleton brothers, separated by season and preference of caffeinated beverage. Now, in this tiny adorable form, the brothers are together again. Tiny Cozy Bob sips his Pumpkin Spice Latte while Tiny Sweaty Bob enjoys a chill boba milk tea.”

I suspect that in the coming months I will continue to balance my wildlife photography with my cross stitching. Two two hobbies allow me to express myself creatively in different ways.

Tiny Pumpkins

Hallows' Eve Sampler

Cozy Bob

Sweaty Bob

© Michael Q. Powell. All rights reserved.

 

 

 

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During the past couple of months the weather has frequently been inhospitable for wildlife photography, either hot, humid, or rainy (or some combination of those three conditions). Some times in the past I have gone out anyways with my camera, but this year I have been increasingly staying indoors.

What have I done to keep myself occupied? During the mid-1980’s I was introduced to counted cross stitch. One of my friends used to stitch quite often and I commented to her that someday I should try it myself. I was a bit shocked the next time I saw her when she gave me a pattern, a needle, an a cross stitching kit. When I was growing up, I remember my Mom cross stitching some pillow cases, with the pattern printed onto the fabric. This “new” version that I was introduced to was counted cross stitch, i.e. the fabric was blank and I had to replicate the pattern with a series of x’s in the designated colors.

I discovered that I really liked this new hobby and found it to be both creative and therapeutic. I continued to cross stitch regularly throughout the late 1980’s and 1990’s. Cross stitching seemed to be really popular at that time and I remember subscribing to multiple cross stitching magazines (and accumulating a lot of cross stitching patterns and materials).

My life style changed when I retired from the Army in 1997 and my attention shifted to other aspects of my life. I gradually stopped cross stitching completely, though I never did get rid of my “stash.”

I returned to stitching a few years ago after I finally stopped working and had a bit more free time. Several ladies from my church work at a wonderful local needlework store called “In Stitches” that focuses exclusively on needlepoint and counted cross stitch and they encouraged me to get more involved in activities there, including stitching nights twice a month.

I’m discovering that cross stitching has had a kind of resurgence in recent years and there are numerous FlossTube channels on YouTube in which stitchers of all sorts showcase their works in progress (WIPs) and completed projects. More recently I’ve been involved with a number of cross stitching channels on Twitch. I used to think that Twitch was only for gamers that wanted to watch others play video games and only recently learned that there is a whole series of “Makers and Crafters” channels in which you can watch others working on their own projects and chat with them as they do.

On one of the Twitch channelsI was watching, the streamer @TheDaceman0 was working on a sampler called 100 Owls by Owl Forest Embroidery. I loved the pattern, which is available as a free download here, but did not want to commit to stitching all 100 Owls. I started with the Long-eared Owl (Asio otus) in the second photo below and recently stitched the Great Gray Owl (Strix nebulosa) that you see in the first photo below.

As you can see, my wildlife interests are sometimes reflected in the subjects of my stitching as well as in my photography. Last year I happened to stitch yet another owl pattern, shown in the third photo below, that was a bit more stylized and was included in the Halloween edition of Just Cross Stitch magazine. It’s fun to rediscover a dormant hobby and to see how it has evolved during the period when I was inactive. There are now a lot more options for fabrics and threads than in the past, but, for the moment at least, my tastes have not changed and I continue to use the same materials and techniques that I used in the 1980’s and 1990’s.

 

Gray Owl

Long-eared Owl

Owl

© Michael Q. Powell. All rights reserved.

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What do you do to cope with the heat at this time of the year? I stay indoors a bit more in my air conditioned house and decided this week to work on a cool little cross stitch pattern. Yesterday I finished the pattern, which is available as a free download from Silver Creek Samplers. (https://www.silvercreeksamplers.com/dog-days)
Although my ears are not quite as long as those of the dog in this image, I confess that I have been spending a lot of time in front of a fan as we cope with a heat wave that has enveloped much of the United States this past week.
As I noted in a blog posting earlier this month, I returned this year to cross stitching, which I did a lot during the 1980s and 1990s, after a break of about 20 years. I am working on a bigger project, but sometimes it is fun to knock out little projects like this one that make me smile.
dog days of summer
© Michael Q. Powell. All rights reserved.

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