How to Tie a French Knot

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By mortaine

What's a French Knot?

Unrelated to a French kiss, a French knot is a type of knot which uses only one hole in your fabric and leaves a "dot" or knot behind.

It's used in embroidery and cross-stitch to create small dots. Since the shapes you can make with a needle and thread in embroidery and particularly cross-stitch are limited to variations on a short line, having a "dot" option is very handy.

This tutorial is for what I call the "quick and dirty French knot" because it's not a proper French knot. In this version, you only make one loop. For a proper French knot, I think you're supposed to do a double loop. But it's a step up from making a simple quarter-stitch, which I've also done to avoid doing "real" French knots, and means you don't have to buy and store a whole bunch of seed beads (the other common alternative to making French knots in cross stitch). 

Cross stitch sometimes needs more than lines!
See all 4 photos
Cross stitch sometimes needs more than lines!

Step 1: Anchor the thread

My first instinct is to bring the needle to the right side of the fabric, make a knot, and pull it through. Instead, run the needle and thread under a couple of stitches on the wrong side of the piece before pulling it through the fabric.

Step 2: Loop around the thread

Most French Knot instructions say to wrap the thread around the needle twice and pull back through the fabric. This basically makes a spiral, which my needle (and thread) go all the way through, leaving no knot.

Instead, I start by making a single loop with the thread, using the needle as its center.

Step 2 Photo: Loop around the thread

Loop your thread around the needle.
Loop your thread around the needle.

Step 3: Twist the loop

Twist the loop and poke the needle through the "back" side of the loop. You are basically making a loop, twisting it once, and using that twist as the knot. 

Step 3 Photo: Twist the Loop

Twist the loop to pull through.
Twist the loop to pull through.

Step 4: Finish the knot

Tug gently on the loop of the thread, keeping it a little taut while you pull the needle through to the other side of the fabric. On the last millimeter or so (1/8"), let go of the loop to make it a nice thick knot. French knots easily pull through to the other side of the fabric if they're too tight, and then you have to start over!

Step 4 Photo: Finish the Knot

Finish the knot
Finish the knot

Comments

moonlake profile image

moonlake Level 7 Commenter 3 years ago

Good information. I always have a little trouble doing french knot. This helped.

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