{"title":"How to Finish an Embroidery Hoop (4 Backing Methods)","canonicalUrl":"https://www.craftingstepbystep.com/embroidery/how-to-finish-an-embroidery-hoop","category":{"slug":"embroidery","name":"Embroidery"},"creator":{"name":"The Authentic Embroiderer","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCgaTVFc69US5OHcr6BYO1CQ","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yy8KS4E4vXM"},"tldr":"Four ways to back an embroidery hoop: gathered fabric, felt circle with blanket stitch, fabric patch, and chipboard. Pick the method that fits your style.","totalDurationSeconds":469,"difficulty":"easy","tools":["Embroidery hoop (any small size, 3-6 inch shown)","Embroidery scissors","Hand-sewing needle","Pencil or fabric marker","Ruler","Utility knife (for chipboard method)"],"materials":["Cotton backing fabric","Embroidery floss (matching or contrasting)","Stiff felt sheet (1mm, for felt method)","Chipboard or thin cardboard (for chipboard method)","Double-sided tape (for chipboard method)","Ribbon (optional, for hanging)"],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Measure the Inner Hoop and Mark the Backing","text":"Take the inner ring of the embroidery hoop and lay it flat on your backing fabric. Trace the inside diameter and a second circle about half an inch wider. The inner circle is the size your backing needs to cover. The outer circle is your cut line.The half-inch margin is non-negotiable. Every one of the four methods below needs that extra fabric to grab onto. Cut on the inner line and you are out of options."},{"number":2,"title":"Method 1 - Gather the Excess Fabric Into a Rosette","text":"Tighten the hoop with the embroidery facing front. Flip it over and you will see a fan of excess fabric on the back. Thread a needle with a long piece of contrasting thread (use the same colour as your fabric for the final version) and run a large basting stitch all the way around the back edge of the fabric, about a quarter inch in from the raw edge.When you reach the start, pull both thread tails to gather the fabric toward the center. It will pucker into a rosette - exactly the look you see in the finished photo. Knot the two tails together twice to lock it in place and snip the excess thread."},{"number":3,"title":"Method 2 - Trace and Cut a Felt Circle","text":"For a cleaner back, switch to 1mm stiff craft felt. Place the inner hoop ring on top of the felt and trace the outer edge with a fine pen. Cut along the line.Stiff felt holds its shape and lies flat against the hoop. Soft craft felt sags inside the ring and ruins the clean look you are after. The 1mm thickness is the sweet spot - thinner felt curls at the edges, thicker felt pushes the inner ring out of the outer."},{"number":4,"title":"Method 2 Continued - Blanket Stitch the Felt to the Hoop","text":"Hold the felt circle against the back of the hoop and blanket-stitch all the way around. The needle goes through the felt, comes up over the wooden hoop edge, and loops through the working thread to form the classic blanket stitch edge.Switch thread colours as you go around for the rainbow border shown above - it takes a little longer but turns the back of the hoop into a design feature instead of a thing to hide. Knot the last stitch twice and hide the tail inside the felt."},{"number":5,"title":"Method 3 - Patch the Back With a Second Fabric Square","text":"This is the option for embroiderers who want a soft, fabric back without the felt look. Cut a square of cotton fabric slightly bigger than the outer hoop. Place the embroidered hoop face down on top of it, then fold the raw edges of the square under the inner hoop and stitch them down with a basting line.The result is a smooth fabric back with all raw edges tucked away. The embroidered front pulls taut and the back becomes a single clean cotton surface."},{"number":6,"title":"Method 4 - Build the Chipboard + Felt Backing Disc","text":"For the cleanest, most professional finish, cut a circle of chipboard (or stiff cardboard from a cereal box) about 1mm smaller than the inner hoop diameter. Apply a few strips of double-sided tape across one side, then press a felt circle the same size on top.The felt is the cushion - it pushes the embroidered fabric forward so the front looks taut and museum-framed when you assemble. The chipboard is the structure that keeps the back perfectly flat."},{"number":7,"title":"Method 4 Continued - Insert the Disc and Finish the Hoop","text":"Loosen the hoop screw slightly, slip the chipboard disc into the back of the hoop with the felt side facing the embroidered fabric, then tighten the screw down. Press the disc firmly so the felt fully contacts the fabric.The front pulls drum-tight. The back becomes a smooth, slightly recessed circle that looks exactly like the back of a framed canvas. Add a ribbon loop to the screw and it is wall-ready."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-05-24T02:56:52.861Z","published":"2026-05-24T02:56:39.536Z","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."}