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Sewing Tips and Techniques
Embroidery can bring a sewing project to life, but clothing asks more of your stitches than a small hoop sampler project does. A stitched motif on a blouse, dress or jacket has to move with the fabric, cope with washing and still feel comfortable to wear. That is why the best hand embroidery stitches for clothing are not always the heaviest or most decorative ones.
In this guide, you will learn which embroidery stitches are most useful on garments, where each one works best, and how to avoid common problems such as puckering, bulk and distortion. If you are planning a custom make, it helps to choose your design while you are still selecting your sewing patterns, so you can place the stitching where it will flatter the finished garment.
Embroidery for display is often worked in a hoop on fabric that will stay flat and rarely be handled. Embroidery on clothing is different. Your stitches need to cope with movement at the bust, elbow, shoulder and hem, and they also need to sit neatly after pressing and washing.
A garment-safe stitch usually has four qualities:
As a general rule of thumb, line-based stitches such as backstitch, stem stitch and split stitch are easier to wear than dense blocks of satin stitch. They add detail without turning part of the garment into a hard patch.
Before you start, gather the basics: hand sewing needles, hand embroidery thread, embroidery hoops and embroidery stabilisers. For machine-stitched accents or mixed-media finishes, machine embroidery thread is a must.
Choose a crewel or embroidery needle with an eye large enough for stranded cotton without roughing up the thread. For most dressmaking fabrics, a fine embroidery needle is a good starting point. On loosely woven cloth, use the smallest needle that still lets the thread pass smoothly.
For thread, cotton gives a soft matte finish and is easy to control. Polyester is stronger and can be a sensible choice for garments that will be washed often. If you are comparing options, this guide on how to choose embroidery thread for clothing projects is worth reading before you begin.
A hoop helps keep woven fabric evenly tensioned, but it is not always essential. On small garment areas such as cuffs, collars and pocket tops, hoopless stitching can be more practical. The key is to support the fabric rather than stretching it out of shape. For delicate or drapey cloth, a wash-away or tear-away stabiliser is often the difference between crisp stitching and puckering.
| Stitch | Best for | Avoid on | Difficulty | Durability |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Backstitch | Outlines, names, small motifs | Very open knits | Easy | High |
| Split stitch | Softer outlines, curves | Fine sheer fabric without stabiliser | Easy to medium | High |
| Stem stitch | Stems, vines, flowing lines | Areas needing sharp corners | Easy | High |
| Satin stitch | Small filled shapes | Darts, seams, stretch points | Medium | Medium |
| Chain stitch | Bold outlines, decorative borders | Very lightweight fabric | Medium | Medium to high |
| Lazy daisy | Petals, scattered florals | High-abrasion areas | Easy | Medium |
| French knots | Flower centres, accents | Seat area, tight sleeves, heavy wear zones | Medium | Medium |
| Running stitch | Borders, visible mending style details | Areas needing dense coverage | Easy | Medium |
| Blanket stitch | Hem and edge decoration | Bulky seams, very fine cloth | Easy to medium | High |
| Feather stitch | Light trailing detail, boho finishes | Busy stretch zones | Medium | Medium |
Backstitch is one of the most useful embroidery stitches for beginners because it is simple, neat and durable. Use it for outlining floral shapes, lettering, geometric motifs and pocket-top details.

Split stitch creates a slightly textured line by splitting the previous stitch. It gives a fuller look than backstitch, so it is useful when you want a hand-worked outline that stands out a little more.


Stem stitch is ideal for vines, tendrils and flowing outlines. It has a gentle twist that looks elegant on clothing, especially when you want the embellishment to echo a floral print rather than compete with it.
Satin stitch gives smooth, solid coverage and works well for tiny filled petals, dots and monograms. On garments, keep it small. Dense satin stitch over a large area can make the fabric rigid.

Chain stitch is decorative and slightly raised, so it suits bold outlines and folk-style borders. It shows up well on plain areas of patterned garments where you want definition.

Best garment placement: hem borders, yokes, jacket fronts.
Lazy daisy is a detached chain stitch, usually used for petals and leaves. It is one of the easiest embroidery stitches to learn and a lovely way to add light floral detail.

French knots add tiny dots of texture and are best used sparingly. On clothing, they work beautifully for flower centres and scattered accents, but too many can feel rough from the wrong side.

Running stitch is simple, flexible and surprisingly effective on clothing. It works for borders, sashiko-inspired details and subtle stitched lines that follow a seam or print.

Blanket stitch is useful when you want to decorate an edge or secure an appliqué-style shape. It has structure, so it can look smart on garments with a slightly craft-led finish.

Feather stitch creates an airy, trailing line that suits bohemian or botanical designs. Because it is open, it tends to stay softer on the fabric than dense filling stitches.

If you are unsure where to begin, start with combinations that look polished without adding too much weight.
Backstitch + French knots for simple floral outlines on collars or pockets.
Stem stitch + lazy daisy for soft floral sprays on lightweight blouses.
Running stitch borders for hems, cuffs and plackets on casual makes.
These combinations are easier to control on real garments and help you learn how your fabric reacts before you try denser embroidery stitch patterns.
Most puckering comes from too much tension, too much stitch density or too little fabric support. A good rule of thumb to avoid puckering is to test your stitch on a scrap cut from the same cloth, with the same interfacing or stabiliser behind it.
Plan your embroidery before assembly where possible. A flat sleeve piece or bodice front is much easier to stabilise and stitch than a completed garment. Use flexible stitches on areas that need movement, and keep dense stitching away from darts, gathers and stretch zones.
After stitching, press from the wrong side over a towel or pressing cloth. That protects raised stitches and helps the fabric recover without flattening the detail.
Look at the garment as a whole before you start stitching. The best embroidery on clothing feels intentional, balanced and comfortable to wear. Match your stitch to the fabric weight, think about how the area moves on the body, and keep dense stitches small unless the cloth is firm enough to support them.
If you are new to hand embroidery stitches, begin with one motif on a collar, cuff or pocket rather than a full garment panel. You will learn far more from testing one small area carefully than from rushing into a large design.
Backstitch, running stitch, stem stitch and lazy daisy are good starting points. They are easier to control and stay flexible on garments.
The best stitches for clothing are usually backstitch, split stitch, stem stitch and running stitch because they add detail without too much bulk. Small amounts of satin stitch and French knots can work well too.
Backstitch makes a clean, flat line, while split stitch creates a slightly textured and fuller outline. Split stitch is often better for soft curves and a more hand-worked look.
Backstitch, split stitch and blanket stitch are among the strongest choices for wearable garments. They hold their shape well and cope better with repeated washing.
Some can, but only to a point. On knit fabric, use light, flexible stitches and proper stabilising, and avoid dense satin stitch in high-stretch areas.
Backstitch is the simplest choice for crisp outlines. Stem stitch and split stitch are also excellent when you want a softer or slightly fuller line.
Support the fabric with the right stabiliser, do not pull the thread too tightly, and test stitch density on a scrap first. Keeping the fabric smooth rather than stretched in the hoop also helps.
The stitches themselves do not usually shrink much, but the fabric and thread can react differently after laundering. Pre-washing fabric and choosing a thread suited to the garment helps prevent surprises.