Feathered Chain Stitch is made up of long tailed chain stitch worked in a zig-zag manner. Long-tail chain is simply a chain stitch with a long tie stitch. If you are a beginner you need to be able to work chain stitch before doing this variety.
Work each long tail chain stitch on a diagonal slant, alternating from left and right. I find it easier to work this stitch from top to bottom between two imaginary lines bit if you want a neat zigzag line some people find it useful to mark the fabric with two parallel guide lines.
How to work Long Tail Chain stitch
Bring the needle up through the fabric on the right-hand line. Insert the needle back into where it emerged from and take it through the fabric bringing the point of the needle diagonally across the line as illustrated. The needle should point towards the left.
Wrap under the needle point as you would for chain stitch and pull the needle through. On the same diagonal line tie the chain down with a long straight stitch. The tie stitch should finish on the left hand line.
When you work this stitch in a single unit it is called a long-tailed chain. I think you can see why. You can arrange long-tailed chain stitch in all sorts of ways. Circles are a common pattern as they then look like flower petals. There are also varieties that weave the spokes created by long-tail chain when arranged in a circle.
You can find some of these varieties illustrated here
How to work Feathered Chain stitch
To make the second stitch bring the needle up through the fabric on the left-hand imaginary line, close to the end of the tie stitch. Have a thread or two between where the tie stitch went into the fabric, and where your needle emerges.
Work another long tail chain stitch pointing back towards the right-hand imaginary line.
Continue in this zig-zag motion downwards.
This is not a true feather stitch as such, but that is how it is referred to in books. I think of it as zig-zag chain stitch.
I have an old embroidery book that calls this chain stitch – zigzag. So that’s how I remember it. I have last year’s TAST written in list form and I kept forgetting what this one looks like. Now I know why.
Yes Samantha stitches are often named differently in various parts of the world. It is why I have a collection of stitch dictionaries! My rule of thumb is that is it appears 3 times under the same name from a British and American publishing house it’s safe to say that is what it is. I agonise over the stitches that don’t have clear names.
Thanks. My sampler is here.
http://hobbysewing.blogspot.com/2020/10/tast-36-beyond-tast-36.html
Love this stitch, whatever we call it !! Will certainly use it for a variation on my “traveller’s blanket”. Thank you. Andy
The beaded version, #113 Beaded Feathered Chain is now on my blog:
http://queeniepatch.blogspot.jp/2014/05/tast-113-beaded-feathered-chain.html
My sampler got some new stitches, TAST #112:
http://queeniepatch.blogspot.jp/2014/05/tast-112-feathered-chain-stitch.html
Hmmm Im not sure Im happy with this stitch. It doesnt feel like a feather stitch. It feels like lazy daisy when you work it. So I change it to what I feel is more feather. Start by making the first feather stitch but catch it with a chain loop. Catch the chain loop with another feather stitch (the straight part of the chain and swing it over to the left like a normal feather catching it again with a chain loop. Continue working left and right with the chain loops and you get a feathered chain. It looks very different because you get the loop chain effect in the centre not on the outside and it has the natural rhythm of the feather stitch, Just a thought. You could still add beads to the straight part of the stitch.
I dont think it is true feather stitch but it is what it called in books – I think of it a zig zag chain stitch
My samples for last 4 stitches can be found at
http://crazyqstitcher.wordpress.com/ I used the Beaded Feather chain stitch on one of my needle pages for my hussif.
Thanks Sharon! That is a great stitch! http://princessbubblescreates.blogspot.ca/
It has been a while since I used the feathered chain stitch. I do like that one! I look forward to using it again and trying out the beaded version.
This week I posted my examples of stitches 110 and 111, the rope stitch and zig zag coral stitch. Thank you for sharing them! I enjoy learning new stitches!
http://monkeyandmutt.blogspot.com/2014/05/tast-051314.html
Today I shared a few old samples of feathered chain stitch on my blog. They are a bit different, because I used the instruction in my embroidery book:
http://fat-quarter.blogspot.nl/2014/05/old-feathered-chain-stitches.html
Hi Sharon,
Three stitches in two weeks! its great!
I started exploring the possibilities of feathered chain stitch here-
http://jizee6687.wordpress.com/category/tast-2014/18-112-feathered-chain-stitch/
Thank you,
Chitra