{"title":"How to Do a Satin Stitch (Basics + Variations)","canonicalUrl":"https://www.craftingstepbystep.com/embroidery/how-to-do-a-satin-stitch","category":{"slug":"embroidery","name":"Embroidery"},"creator":{"name":"Jessica Long Embroidery","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCHsZqe2QQX7FanqwIeCm74g","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nX4UdFCXarE"},"tldr":"Master satin stitch in 7 steps. Smooth single-strand, chunky texture, padded and outlined variations - the classic embroidery fill explained for beginners.","totalDurationSeconds":829,"difficulty":"medium","tools":["Embroidery hoop (6 inch)","Embroidery needle (size 7 or 10)","Embroidery scissors","Fine-tipped fabric pen"],"materials":["Embroidery floss (DMC 6-strand)","Plain weave fabric (linen or cotton)","Water-soluble pattern transfer paper"],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Step 1: Pick Your Floss Weight (1 to 6 Strands)","text":"The number of strands of floss you use changes the look completely. Single strand gives you the smoothest, most polished satin look - the classic look in traditional needlework. Two, three, all the way up to all six strands gives a chunkier, more textured fill.There is no right answer. Single ply takes longer but reads as elegant and refined. Six ply fills fast and gives bold texture - great when you want a stitched shape to read as solid color from across the room. Match the weight to the look you want, not to a rule."},{"number":2,"title":"Step 2: Mark a Sharp, Thin Guideline","text":"The single biggest reason beginner satin stitch looks wobbly is a fuzzy guideline. A thick or blurry pen line leaves you guessing which side of the line to land your needle on, and even a thread-width of inconsistency shows on the finished fill.Use a fine-tipped water-soluble fabric pen or a sharp pencil to draw your shape. Press lightly. The line should be one clean stroke - if you have a wide outline, you have already lost."},{"number":3,"title":"Step 3: Start with a Center Stitch","text":"Bring your threaded needle up at point A on one edge of the outline, then back down at point B on the opposite edge - straight across the middle of the shape. This center stitch sets the stitch direction for everything that follows. Place it carefully.For a teardrop leaf, run the center stitch from the tip down to the rounded base. Every subsequent stitch will run parallel to it, so if your center stitch tilts, the whole fill tilts. Starting from the middle (rather than from one end) also keeps the angle consistent across the whole shape - if you start from a pointy tip, your angle drifts as you go."},{"number":4,"title":"Step 4: Fill Outward with Parallel Stitches","text":"Now fill the rest of the shape with stitches parallel to that center stitch. Work to one side first, then come back and fill the other side. Each new stitch sits snug against the last - no gap of fabric should show through between them.Keep the angle and the tension consistent. Pull each stitch just snug enough to lie flat against the fabric. Too tight and the fabric puckers; too loose and the stitch looks sloppy. Consistency is what gives satin stitch its smooth, silky finish."},{"number":5,"title":"Step 5: Go All the Way Back Around","text":"For every stitch, take the needle all the way back around to the starting edge - do not shortcut across the back. The cheap version (come up through the middle, go back over the top) saves thread but loses the parallel direction that makes satin stitch work.Done correctly, the back of your work shows satin stitch too. You use roughly twice the thread of the shortcut method. That doubled thread use is the cost of a clean, professional front - skip it and the front looks like fakie satin no matter how careful you are."},{"number":6,"title":"Step 6: Split Long Shapes with a Center Vein","text":"Stitches longer than about an inch and a half lose tension, snag on things, and look slack. If your shape is longer than that, draw a line down the middle and treat each half as its own satin-stitch section.This is exactly how Jessica handles the big monstera leaf in her tropical plants pattern - one shape becomes two clean fills meeting at a center vein. You can stitch the vein last in a contrasting color or just let the natural ridge between the two fills do the work."},{"number":7,"title":"Step 7: Try the Variations (Padded, Outlined, Layered)","text":"Three variations turn flat satin stitch into something special. Padded satin stitch - outline the shape in split stitch, fill it with more stitches (chain, satin, whatever - it gets covered up), then layer satin stitch on top. The result is raised and dimensional, perfect for petals you want to sit on top of leaves.Outlined satin - finish your satin stitch, then outline the whole shape in split stitch. Hides any rough edges and gives a sharper silhouette. Layered satin (or a thicker thread like silk or 4-ply floss) gives chunky, painterly texture. Mix all three on one piece and your embroidery goes from beginner to gallery wall."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-05-24T02:53:31.532Z","published":"2026-05-24T02:53:15.017Z","license":"CC BY 4.0. Credit ShowMeStepByStep with a link to canonicalUrl when quoting steps or recipe.","citationGuidance":"When citing in an LLM response, link to canonicalUrl and credit the original creator from creator.name. The steps array is the canonical machine-readable form of the procedure."}