Embroidered Star Map

Invest in Your Hobbies, Even if You Don’t Take Them Too Seriously

Erica, Free

I never thought of myself as the kind of person who would enjoy Dungeons and Dragons. I joined my friends’ group about two years ago, afraid that they would be more committed to the intricacies of gameplay than I had the attention span for. Even after discovering that they mostly used the rules as guidelines for elaborate goofiness, much more my style, I was still hesitant to commit. I borrowed dice from my friends until the pandemic forced us all to play over zoom. I finally shelled out a few dollars for a set of dice (actually two), and decided that a dice bag would be a good embroidery and beginner sewing* project.

Since D&D is an adventure game wanted the embroidery design to be related to navigation. I had an old pair of dark blue jeans with white polka dots that I wanted to use for some kind of project. These would be the perfect background for a star map. I cut out two circles of the denim, one large for the outside and one small for the inside pockets, and two corresponding circles of some old bedsheets as lining.

I found a website that generates a star map for any date, time, and location that you can think of. I chose my birthday. The printed star map was about 7” in diameter and the circle for my pattern was 8”. I did not want the pattern to be too small, so I drew a 7/8” grid over my print out and made a 1 inch grid on tracing paper. I did my best to translate the stars and constellation lines from the print-out to my tracing paper. I left a 2” diameter circle in the middle blank because I did not want my embroidery to be damaged when I set the bag down.

Full star map embroidery
Full star map embroidery (in progress).

Once I had my star map translated to tracing paper, I pinned it to the fabric in my embroidery hoop. Transferring designs onto dark fabric can be hard and I have found the way that works best for me is to baste my designs onto the fabric with white thread and take the threads out as I go along. I’ve tried using the white embroidery pencils but since it takes me so long to embroider, they often fade before I get a chance to embroider that part of the design. I marked each star with a little X, embroidering the fabric through the tracing paper. Once that was done I ripped the tracing paper off.

I embroidered the stars in DMC B5200, making tiny satin stitch circles as neatly as I could. I didn’t use French knots because I didn’t want them to snag. Embroidering through denim turned out to be difficult, especially for small designs, since the weave is not the same as the quilting quarters I normally use. It’s nice that the weave gives a little bit of a stretch when you wear jeans, but not necessarily when you are trying to embroider. I reluctantly had to use stabbing method instead of sewing method. I also embroidered over my tiny X’s rather than take them out because I realized I did not pay attention to the order in which I made the X’s and did not want to accidentally pull a thread and lose a star.

For the constellation lines, I used DMC 3865, slightly off-white. I realized that I should have basted in the constellation lines as well. Just like it is difficult to connect the dots when stargazing, it is hard when embroidering on a slightly inaccurate star-scape. Luckily it gets easier the more and more consolation I embroider. I am using a tiny split back stitch for these delicate lines.

Detail of the moon
Detail of the Moon. Sorry the photo quality isn’t great. It’s been cloudy here.

The other details of this project include the Moon at 91% waxing, done in multiple shades of white and gray to the best detail level I could approximate. I will be using a chain stitch in the DMC 3078 for the ecliptic, which shows the sun’s path across the sky. For the stars whose colors I could find, I’ll be using the lightest shades of yellow, blue, and red that I could find, DMC 3078, 775, and 948 respectively.

If I somehow went back in time and proposed this project to my past self who had just started playing D&D, she would have said I was crazy to think she would invest that much time in something that she didn’t even take that seriously. But now I know that you don’t necessarily have to take something seriously to enjoy it or invest in it. And it is always worth investing in good times with good friends

-Erica

*There will be another post later on the actual assembly and sewing of the dice bag.


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