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A picture of the back of some pink embroidery on calico. Overlaid is a blue square with white text saying - hand embroidery, what is 'thread chicken' and how to win

What is 'thread chicken' and how to win!

November 10, 2021

If you’ve been crafting for a while you will no doubt have played thread chicken or thread roulette (although you may not have called it that)! I’ve encountered it in embroidery, knitting, crochet and dress making.

It’s where you have just a few more stitches to make to finish a line or section and it will be touch and go whether you will get there with the thread you have left on your needle. Extreme thread chicken kicks in when you have no more of that thread in your stash!

You may decide not to play and just tie off and start a new length of thread. That’s OK & it’s probably perfectly normal not to be competitive with inanimate craft materials.

But I like to use every possible inch of my materials to reduce wastage so I’ve learned a thing or two about playing this game and how to maximise my stitching.

A picture of the back of an embroidery showing how much thread is used for two different stitch methods.

Efficient Stitching

Some stitches have more than one method for how to stitch them for example back stitch and split stitch. In each case one method uses slightly more thread per stitch than the other.

This is what the two different split stitch methods look like from the back. You can see that the method that splits the stitch from above (top row of stitching) uses up much more thread than the method that splits the stitch from underneath.

I find that satin stitch is one of the stitches where I play thread chicken most often, I sometimes decide not to stitch fully across the back so that I have enough thread to complete the stitches on the front although this does have an impact on how the stitches lie if you use it for a large area.

A picture featuring some brown felt with vertical lines of stitching. The threaded needle is weaving between the vertical stitches eye first.

Use your needle creatively

As you get to the very end of your thread you will find it hard to pass the total length of the needle through the fabric. There are a range of options here:

  • switch to a shorter needle - sounds simple but it will buy you valuable room for manoeuvre

  • pass the needle part way through the fabric and then thread the fabric end (this can be tricky if the end of the thread has frayed)

  • depending on your fabric you could even turn your needle around and lead with the eye end of the needle (watch your fingers if you do this though!)

The back of an embroidery showing long lengths of thread linking the different areas of stitching

Managing how you move from one area of stitching to another

If you are stitching in different sections then it may be a more efficient use of thread to tie off, snip and then restart in the new section rather than trail thread across the back of your stitching. It can also help to plan the order in which you stitch sections of the same colour so you are not criss-crossing across the back of your work.

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