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Needlepoint Instruction
Transfer a Line Drawing to Canvas
This needlepoint instruction shows you step-by-step (with pictures) how to take a line drawing and transfer it to needlepoint canvas for stitching. - Begin by printing or copying the design onto a single piece of paper. Even if you are using a design from a book, do this, your life will be so much easier. Enlarge it to the size you want the finished design to be.

- Trace over all the lines so they are thick and solid, as you can see from the picture above. It's better to use a thicker pen for this, but I didn't have one.
When tracing, connect or complete all lines, fill in lines that are dotted, and generally make something which will be easy to see through the thicker canvas. By beginning the process with a clear picture with heavy lines, you will find this needlepoint instruction easier to follow. - Cut out your canvas; it should be 4" wider and longer than the design in order to leave a 2" margin of blank canvas for stitching. In my case the drawing is about 8" x 10" so I'm going to make my canvas 12" x 14". I'm using 14 mesh canvas.

- Make a sandwich of drawing and canvas and line the straight lines of the drawing with the straight lines of the canvas.
This is a critical step. Most drawings have a straight line some place (in this one it's the central stem). If these lines don't line up, your design will be crooked and your needlepoint ruined. That makes this step in the needlepoint instruction important. But lines on paper which look straight might not be straight on the canvas; that's what makes it difficult. I line the paper up so that the one line is as close as possible to a straight line on the canvas. - Using a permanent, non Xylene marker trace the design onto the canvas.
Begin with the line you lined up to a thread of canvas. Draw it on the thread, so it is straight. If there are no other straight lines, just trace away. If there are straight lines, you will not trace them, you will draw them, along lines of canvas, starting from the line you first drew. This will keep the drawing on canvas straight and square, even if the drawing on paper is not.

- When you have finished tracing the design, lift the canvas from the paper and let dry 24 hours before you start to stitch.
This needlepoint instruction applies to any line drawing which doesn't have too much detail so that it can be transferred successfully to canvas.
Some Tips
Do the steps of this needlepoint instruction in good light. You could use a light table if you have one, or tape the drawing and canvas to a window for tracing. I generally do it at my kitchen table during the morning when the light is good.If you need to lift the canvas to see if you have gotten everything, line it back up using the reference line you drew first. This will keep the design in the proper orientation. Once you have completed tracing, you may want to go over sections of the design to make the lines darker. Because I plan on doing some more coloring techniques on the canvas to color the background, ultimately I traced over all the lines with a braid tip FabricMate dye pen. If your design is going to be predominantly one color, you might want to use a pen in the somewhat darker shade of that color. Pigma Microns and dye pens made to color fabric come in a variety of colors. Most of these pens are not colorfast until they have dried for 24 hours, they may run onto your threads if you start to stitch sooner than that.

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