- Bloc_Loc Rulers®
- By Annie
- Clover Products
- Creative Grids
- Daylight
- Deb Tucker
- Dritz
- Famore Cutlery
- FASTURN ® Turning Tools
- Fiskars
- Floriani Embroidery
- Ghees Products
- Havel's Scissors etc.
- Jaybird Quilts
- June Tailor Products
- Kearing
- Loralie Designs
- Martelli
- Marti Michell
- Marti Michell's Perfect Patchwork
- Missouri Star Quilt Company
- Mistyfuse
- Olfa
- Omnigrid
- Pam Damour
- Phillips Fiber Art
- Purple Hobbies
- Quilt in a Day
- Quiltsmart Fusible Interfacing
- Sew Kind of Wonderful
Tatting
Needle tatting in progress. A completed closed ring of 5ds segments with a picot loop between each is shown. Another uncompleted loop is still on the needle.
NEEDLE TATTING
Traditional shuttle tatting may be simulated using a tatting needle or doll needle instead of a shuttle. Although needle tatting looks similar to shuttle tatting, it differs in structure and is slightly thicker and looser because both the needle and the thread must pass through the stitches.This method originated in early twentieth century, but did not become popular until much later. A tatting needle is a long, blunt needle that does not change thickness at the eye of the needle. The needle used must match the thickness of the thread chosen for the project. Rather than winding the shuttle, the needle is threaded with a length of thread. To work with a second color, a second needle is used.
In the late twentieth century, tatting needles became commercially available in a variety of sizes, from fingering yarn down to size 80 tatting thread. Patterns are written specifically for needle tatting, although shuttle tatting patterns may be used without modification.
See also Tatting Books
Sort by:
Rates