Today I have a tip for improving your tracework using a tool straight out of an over-the-top nail art salon!
When I began stitching, I couldn’t get my head around transferring a pattern onto fabric. It cost me a lot of trial and error before I’ve figured out something that worked for me. Where I live, iron-on patterns are unavailable or hopelessly dated (ducks in bonnets, yarn-covered kittens…). I’ve also had bad experiences with iron-on pencils turning out to be barely visible on the fabric. Drawing on the fabric directly seemed a daunting task for a perfectionist like me. The only method that sort-of worked was transferring a pattern using carbon (dressmaker’s) paper.
The problem was that it cost a lot of effort finding balance between the right amount of pressure from a blunt pencil and the visibility of the line underneath. Press too light and you can’t see a thing (and while you’re peeking, the paper shifts from it’s original position…), press too hard and it tears. There had to be a solution…
