IamJamie Publish time 2013-4-10 21:51

How to park threads

Edited by IamJamie at 2013-4-10 21:57

Someone asked about how to park and I was surprised that there wasnt already a tutorial here. I just copied and pasted this from another site but it seems like its well explained with nice color pictures. For anyone who doesnt already know this method, dont worry it is much easier than it seems. Hope this helps some of you!

Tutorial: Parking
Parking is a stitching technique which makes your stitching neater by not leaving "holes" between rows as you stitch, and faster because you dont anchor floss and thread a new needle as you change colors. A "hole" is a spot not stitched (yet), wholly or partially surrounded by completed stitches. Going back and inserting the stitch into a hole is more difficult than if the adjacent stitches were not already in place. (You can avoid leaving holes without parking, but then you have to anchor colors each time you finish a contiguous section, which can make the back messier in areas with a lot of color changes.) Heres how to do it.

1. Lets work through this very simple chart. It only uses 3 colors, and has 15 stitches.




2. Most people stitch left to right and top to bottom, so start stitching the As, which are red. After the first row of As, the next A is in row 3. If you make that stitch now, it will be harder to insert the first stitch in the second row neatly, so park the red floss. Come up at the beginning of the A stitch (as if you were going to make the stitch now) but then just leave the floss and needle hanging on the front of the fabric. (We are assuming that you cross by coming up at the lower left, down at the upper right, then up at the lower right and down at the upper left.) Dont worry, the needle wont fall off.




3. The next symbol in the chart is B, which is blue. Start stitching the Bs (its OK to leave gaps between stitches in the same row -- see * at the end). Do all the Bs in row 2, but then notice that while stitching the first B in row 3 will not leave a hole, stitching the second one will. You could make that first stitch and then park the blue floss, but for this example well park it now and wait to do both the remaining blue stitches together. So come up at the beginning of the next blue stitch and leave the floss and needle hanging.



4. The next symbol in the chart (youre working on finishing row 2) is C, which is yellow. You can complete all the yellow stitches without leaving holes, so do that. This is the end of C for this little chart, so anchor the floss in back and snip off the remnant.



5. Now we are ready to continue with the first parked color. In a more complicated chart, you might not know what the symbol for this color is, so refer back to the chart. Youve been highlighting completed stitches (havent you?), so its easy to compare the chart to the stitching. The parked thread is for the first stitch in row 3 and thats A.



6. This is the last A in the chart, so after you make the stitch youll anchor the floss and cut off the remainder, and your work looks like this. Refer back to the chart to determine the symbol for that other parked color (stitch 3 in row 3) and its a B, and so is the stitch next to it. Complete those stitches, and thats the end of this chart.


In a more involved chart, when you came to a parked color, you would probably make one to several stitches with that color, then park it again farther along, leapfrogging down the chart. The floss you carry along the back should be at least partially covered by the intervening stitches, so you may be willing to skip farther than you might usually do. 

Youll obviously need a needle for each color you are going to park. Some people limit parking to background areas, where there are only 3-5 colors mixed together. Other people have no trouble managing 100 parked colors.

* The reason that horizontal gaps are OK while vertical ones are not is this. When you fill in a gap between 2 stitches in the same row, you are bringing your thread up through holes that only have one stitch in them so far. If you leave a hole surrounded by other stitches, when you fill it in, you have to get your needle past up to 3 other stitches without piercing the existing floss, which is much harder to do.




bduport Publish time 2013-4-11 16:08

Edited by bduport at 2013-4-11 16:09

Hi there,
thanks a lot for this very clear explanation on how to properly park threads. :handshake
I confess I do it in a far more "messy" way.But from now on Ill try to diligently follow your instructions.
Regards,
B.

Flossie Publish time 2013-4-13 03:09

thanks nice clear tutorial

tcca Publish time 2013-4-13 15:35

This is the method I use as well, except I dont always work in a 10x10 grid. I just start a color at the top and keep stitching in one area as long as I have stitches above where I am working. This way I am starting and stopping fewer threads since I dont have to worry about a color that goes in a horizontal line across several columns.

tipsyturtle Publish time 2013-4-14 12:25

I use parking on my bigger projects, but I move a bit outside the 10 x 10 grid.I find it is quicker if I start with the most used color first, then go in order down to the least used color.

dove Publish time 2013-4-14 13:02

I dont like parking threads in embroidery.Guess its just having too many loose ends.Kind of funny because Im always parking oodles of threads in my needlepoint.Maybe its because the needlepoint is usually "nailed" to a frame and I use lots of magnets to keep the threads from getting knotted up.

maureen1959 Publish time 2013-4-14 21:37

I have parked threads before but it became a bit messy ;P Now I try not to do it :lol

rteixeira63 Publish time 2013-4-24 22:25

I have nevr heard of this term and have never done it. Very interesting

Elvira Publish time 2013-5-30 03:38

thanks.:D:$

luckyemma Publish time 2013-5-31 05:35

I think it would be nice to the tutorial writer if you included the URL of the website where you copied and pasted that from....
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