Last week at my monthly quilting class, we were taught how to make ruched flowers. They will eventually find their way onto yet another Christmas quilt that I have started (pictures coming soon…I hope!). We made them with a strip of fabric, and because of possible fraying, had to do a few folds to hide any raw edges. The whole time I was thinking I could definitely come up with a better, easier way to make these. And of course, I was also sitting there wondering what else I could use them for. It hit me last night. Why not use ribbon? No folding necessary since there are no raw edges to hide! I played around with some pink and green ribbon, my two favorite colors,
and that led me to the very large stash of pink and green papers that I have accumulated, and before I knew it, I had a cute card with a ruched ribbon flower embellishment. (Don’t you love when you find a completely different purpose for your newly found favorite technique?) Below you will find a tutorial on how to make the flowers. Feel free to ask any questions, and if you can think of any other uses for these goodies, please share!
Enjoy,
Nikki, In Stitches
Materials:
36″ of 5/8″ wide ribbon
Needle
Coordinating embroidery floss (1 strand) or any heavy thread that will not break when pulling to ruche ribbon
*Note: I used black embroidery floss in the pictures below so it would stand out.
Directions:
1. Mark the wrong side of your ribbon, moving from right to left. Along the bottom edge, mark every inch. Along the top, first mark 1/2″ in, then mark every inch the rest of the way across. If you’ve done this correctly, your marks should be evenly staggered the entire length of your ribbon, as shown in the picture provided.
2. With a long piece of thread (approximately 36″), hand baste from mark to mark, creating a zigzag pattern, stopping occasionally to gather (“ruche”) the ribbon. Stopping every eight to ten inches to gather your ribbon is recommended. Any longer and you risk breaking your thread. Also, put a hefty knot at the start of your thread so that as you pull to gather it doesn’t pull through your ribbon.












Great idea to use the ribbon. They turned out great!
This would look cute pinned on a sweater, like a broach, or at the waist on a plain skirt.
Nice job! I wonder what the effect would be if the material (fabric in this case, of course) started out thinner and then widened. Do you think that the finished flower might have wider petals around the perimeter than those in the center? Hmmmm, going to have to play with this. I think another option for the ribbon would be the organza style that is one shade on the left edge and it transforms to another shade on the right side….that could give further give dimension to the perception of depth in the flower…..How cool!!! Thanks.
Chris,
You and I are always on the same page! I used the pink and green ribbon because it was what I had in my stash, but I was thinking the whole time how beautiful it would look with a variegated silk ribbon!
And you have my wheels turning with the idea of making the band wider as it gets longer. Yes, you would definitely get the look of bigger petals in the background. I’m also thinking what if you stopped with one piece and then picked up another coordinating / contrast piece for the background layer of petals?
Send me pics if you try any of these!!
Nikki
Thanks for posting this – was this was exactly what I was needing for project I’m working on!
I really like this!
Thank-you
Hello Nikki! Thanks so much for your comment! I hope you aren’t bother that I linked your tutorial and I didn’t tell you anything, but it’s just that I find all those great tutorials online and it’s personally easier for me to add them somewhere in the blog… =) By, the way, congrats on the tutorial, very easy to follow, and neat!
As for the fair, it’s already tomorrow… I will surely tell you how it goes. I’m a bit nervous, but I’ll share my stand with my mother (as the blog) and we’ve been checking a few details. I still need to get some bags to give the costumers with their shops… I didn’t have much time to prepare the fair and being my first time I really don’t know if I am missing something… oh well… tomorrow we’ll see…
wow..I really loved this!
added it to my favourites and will try it surely. I hope you can post more ribbon embroidery tutors.
thank you
Nikki-may I post this to my Tuesday Tutes in the near future? This will work wonderfully on the projects I an my readers do….Children’s clothing.
WOW – that flower is so fun ! TFS
HOW gorgeous is that, thanks so much!
thanks Nikki for this beautiful flower tutorial. i am going to try it out.
best wishes
Thankyou for this tutorial 🙂 🙂
Mine are just beautiful! I sewed a black purse and made three of these flowers, one of bright pink, two of a lighter pink, and overlapped them slightly with a sparkly button on the top (bright pink) one. I get loads of complements and it was a hight school project (got 100%!!!!) Thanks for the awesome idea!