View our range of Machine Embroidery Designs and Applique Designs below. Each set contains multiple designs so click through to view all the designs in the set.You can purchase either the entire set or single designs on each set page. We also have a range of free retired embroidery design and applique design sets. Try our quality for yourself with our weekly freebie embroidery design available to the left.

We are now running two sew alongs each month! A sew along brings together embroidery fans from around the world in making the same design at the same time. Members will have the chance to win free designs, gift cards, and more each month.


Embroidery Designs


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If you love machine embroidery, there is a chance you also enjoy sewing! This is why we made a collection of sewing patterns, called Sew Sweet Pea. This small collection has a variety of designs specifically made for sewing rather than embroidery.

Sweet Pea Machine Embroidery is an embroidery lovers one stop shop! We have thousands of machine embroidery designs perfect for all hoops and embroidery machines, as well as fabrics and tools to help bring your creations to life. In the hoop designs include bags, quilts, redwork, applique, and more, plus a wide range of Sweet Pea essentials including fabric, cork, machine embroidery thread, and tools. With new designs released all the time, there is sure to be something for your next hobby project or craft fair.

All designs remain the property of Sweet Pea Machine Embroidery. They may not be copied or reproduced in any way. The design files may not be sold or shared. The finished articles made with our designs may be sold.

I learned to embroider when I was a kid, when everyone was really into cross stitch (remember the '80s?). Eventually, I migrated to surface embroidery, teaching myself with whatever I could get my hands on...read more

If your embroidery fabric is tightly woven, 100% cotton or silk, washable and not too thick, your image is very clean (such as vector graphics) and your printer is very clean you can print directly onto the embroidery fabric/freezer paper without using gauze. You only use steps 1 and 2, using your embroidery fabric in place of the gauze. The cleanliness is to prevent stray specks showing up on your fabric.

c. Set your printer to a thicker paper size (photo paper, card stock, etc). This helps prevent a printer jam. As you can see from the photo, I actually had my first jam working on this tutorial because I forgot this step. The ugly black marks at the edge of the paper are where the gauze/freezer paper jammed and got smudged. I just removed the gauze/freezer paper from the printer, turned it around so that I had a clean leading edge and tried again. Since the edge of the gauze will be removed later anyway, no permanent damage was done. If this had been my embroidery fabric I would have been rather upset with myself.

a. After your embroidery is complete, remove the basting stitches that held the gauze to your embroidery fabric. Using very sharp embroidery scissors and some patience cut the gauze away from the perimeter of the embroidery. Since the gauze has some stretch to it I like to pull on it gently as I cut. This pulls the gauze slightly out from under the embroidery so you get a nice clean edge.

What a great idea! Definitely a keeper. And it has the added benefit of keeping your embroidery clean around the edges of the hoop. Thanks for the tip, will you publish it as a pdf for easier downloading and printing?

Preach it sister! I used one of these pens once and it left a big blue blob on my embroidery. Fortunately it was just a napkin. After that I just used the blue pen to mark the fabric I was going to cut off when finishing pieces.

A few weeks ago, you taught a method of transfer using a #5 art pencil. I tried it. It is such a great idea, that it is all I use. I love it, especially for things like the seasonal set of flour sack towels I am working on. I think it will be the best method for the tree pattern you sent a few days ago.

 Sandy took out my power for three days, and I spent the time in our club house. I took my embroidery with me, and it was a real comfort to have something in my hands. I am a novice at it, and I am grateful for the things I have learned from you.

Thank you,

Marny

Good morning, Mary. I sew couture and do hand embroidery. After many years of trying every new marking product that has been introduced, I only use these methods of marking and transfer: thread, fine pencil and Clover Chaco markers. Anything else WILL come back and bite you right in the backside!

I totally agree. As a professional embroidery artist, I never use these pens. I have in the past and they do reappear as you say. An HB technical pencil is my tool of choice for transferring on light colored fabrics. For dark fabrics, I use the old type of waxed carbon with a tracing of my design.

I totally agree with the contents of your article. Another way to transfer embroidery patterns is by using disposible fabric and stitching through it, it works well BUT BEWARE of the pens you use, if it is permanent ink it works well but if not when you soak your finished embroidery in cold water your ink will run in to your fabricI did this to my cost having spent hours and hours working a kingfisher the whole design now has a feint blue haze all around the edges of the stitching.

Recently, I purchased a pre printed embroidery pattern. When I ironed it on my cotton fabric something odd happened. It left a light impression on the fabric I ironed it to and a dark impression on the protective fabric behind that is protecting my ironing board. Is this normal? Any tips?

Whether you are new to machine embroidery or an enthusiast looking to level up, Hatch Embroidery is packed with creative tools and automations to help you craft stunning embroidery designs and unique projects.

Start your journey with over 200 expert lessons included with your purchase of Hatch Embroidery Digitizer 3. They will help you learn quickly and avoid common pitfalls. Create incredible designs in record time!

Hatch Embroidery software provides extensive design editing capabilities. You can resize, rotate, mirror, and combine designs easily. It also offers advanced editing tools for stitch types, colors, densities, and so much more.

Hatch Embroidery software supports various popular embroidery file formats such as .dst, .pes, .exp, .hus, .vp3, and more. You can import existing designs and export them in compatible formats for your embroidery machine. See the full list of compatible file types.

Yes, Hatch Embroidery software offers a vast collection of built-in design libraries with hundreds of designs to choose from. It also provides powerful digitizing tools for creating your own custom designs.

Absolutely! Hatch Embroidery software allows you to visualize designs on-screen before stitching where you can preview colors, stitch types, and placement to ensure your design looks perfect. The Stitch Player lets you simulate a design stitch-out on screen.

Absolutely! Hatch Embroidery software caters to experienced users with advanced features like lettering options, monogramming, appliqu tools, multi-hooping support, and so many more. It offers the flexibility needed to create intricate and professional designs, and when you are ready to take it to the next commercial level, you can upgrade to Wilcom's gold-standard EmbroideryStudio solution.

Yes, Hatch Embroidery software has an active online community where users can connect, share designs, seek advice, and learn from each other. Join our buzzing Hatch Embroidery User Group on Facebook and access valuable resources to enhance your embroidery skills with thousands of awesome Hatchers.

PLUS FREE BONUS SAMPLER OFFER:Bonus Offer applies to combined orders throughout all the mall.Shop any store, and get a FREE SAMPLER (8 bonus designs) every time you spend $25 total.Where do you choose your samplers from? View Sampler pages HERE.

I sell digital tutorials for jewelry designs, not embroidery patterns. Even so, I suspect there are some similarities in buyer behavior. I don't do any social media, etc., and I have never used advertisements, but I have sold hundreds of tutorials.

Hi there! I have just opened my Etsy shop selling machine embroidery designs digitized by me, With the help of the forums, video tutorials etc I am constantly fine-tuning. I just read that we are allowed to copy and paste the url link into our posting. Who knew? I thought that was a very handy thing to know! Best of luck to you.

I am brand new at Etsy - literally only a week. I digitize and sell my own machine embroidery designs and yes, it is a timely process. With regular tweaks such as editing my photos, changing titles to be more keyword appropriate etc I see traffic has picked up, but no sales yet. I remain optimistic though. Such fun!

The wonderful, knowledgeable and very handy Grace Duprez at the Fabric Stitch Lab in the Goldsmiths Art department has been teaching me new technologies to make custom embroidery of our original victorian label designs and typefaces. e24fc04721

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