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Autumn Leaves Cross Stitch Pattern

October 15, 2011 by Connie Barwick

I was mowing the grass today – yes, a little late for my part of the world, but we let it go to seed to save on supplies (that’s our story every year and we stick to it religiously). It was nice and cool and I thought that before I know it I will be chopping up leaves with the mower. It’s so much easier than raking!

Autumn is my favorite season. I love watching the leaves turn brilliant shades of red, orange, yellow and even the lovely browns mixed in. Then the trees are bare through winter and we wait for the buds to come back in spring. This free autumn sampler catches the spirit of the season perfectly!

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Comments

  1. Mary says

    October 16, 2011 at 12:36 pm

    I love your autumn leaves, but wish you had included more variety of leaves in the design.

  2. Brenda says

    October 18, 2011 at 7:04 am

    I love this leaf pattern but when I went to the French site that has the chart I was appalled at the pornographic advertising on the right sidebar. My 4yr old granddaughter even noticed it and knew it was something that shouldn’t be seen. I think the sites that you direct people to should be screened better.

Have you read?

Book Review: 200 Japanese Cross Stitch Designs

If you like repeating cross stitch designs, borders you can use on other projects or as bookmarks, florals and Japanese-inspired designs, you’ll want to check out 200 Japanese Cross Stitch Designs by Saeko Endo. This collection of 200 cross stitch charts is low on instruction but big on inspiration for those who are comfortable taking a chart and running with it. 

The book includes a brief introduction to the needed supplies and basics of stitching, but mostly is just photographs of finished designs and the charts that go with them. The charts vary widely in size and there can be anywhere from one to six charts printed on a single page. 

Many of the designs are repeating patterns, but the chart shows a larger version so you can see how the repeats go together. Each chart has marked what portion is repeating and how many stitches and rows it includes. Other than that the charts are not numbered, but there are darker lines every five rows to help you count. 

The patterns all range from one to three colors, and some include half cross stitches or back stitching, but most are full stitches. 

The book is arranged into categories of motifs: geometric patterns, retro patterns, traditional Japanese patterns, floral and fauna and borders and pictorial motifs. 

My favorites are the Japanese designs, many of which are recognizable from woodcuts, kimono designs and traditional shashiko embroidery.  You’ll find cherry blossoms, suns, knots, and simple line designs that would be lots of fun to stitch. 

There are a few pages devoted to different ways to modify charts such as changing colors, changing the way to design is repeated, flipping and rotating designs.

Other than that you’re on your own for how you actually want to use these designs. Of course they can just be stitched and framed but it might have been nice to see some of the projects stitched and staged in a way you might use them in everyday life (repeating motifs as coasters, or a bigger design turned into a pillow, for example). 

Sometimes it helps to see designs used in different ways to get you thinking about how you might use them yourself. If you don’t need that creative push, this is a fine book full of patterns you’ll have fun playing with in different ways. 

About the book: 112 pages, paperback, 200 patterns. Published 2025 by David & Charles. Suggested retail price $24.99.

 

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