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Definition of Chain stitch
1. Noun. The most basic of all crochet stitches made by pulling a loop of yarn through another loop.
2. Noun. A looped stitch resembling the links of a chain; used in embroidery and in sewing.
Definition of Chain stitch
1. Noun. An ornamental stitch like the links of a chain, used in crocheting, sewing, and embroidery. ¹
2. Noun. (context: machine sewing) A stitch in which the looping of the thread or threads forms a chain on the underside of the work; the loop stitch, as distinguished from the lock stitch. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Lexicographical Neighbors of Chain Stitch
Literary usage of Chain stitch
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The House and Home: A Practical Book by Lyman Abbott (1896)
"Tambour-work, high in favor with the colonial belles of America, is a variety of
chain-stitch worked with a hook in a frame. Limerick lace is still made in ..."
2. The Encyclopaedia Britannica: A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, and General by Thomas Spencer Baynes (1888)
"S.—chain stitch. projected so that when next the needle descends tta loop is formed
... To a certain extent this imperfection in the chain-stitch machine is ..."
3. Potter's American Monthly (1880)
"Cut four double crochet stitches into the third stitch of the chain, * one chain
stitch, pass over two stitches in the foundation chain, and make four ..."
4. Leading American Inventors by George Iles (1912)
"But where was CHAIN-STITCH LOCK-STITCH Hunt's machine to be found, so as to be
producible in court? It lay as rubbish in a workshop in that very Gold Street ..."
5. Clothing for Women; Selection, Design, Construction: A Practical Manual for by Laura Irene Baldt (1916)
"... let the thread fall naturally toward the right hand, or hold down with the Fio.
236.—chain stitch. left thumb, put the needle in on the upper edge of ..."
6. Art in Needlework: A Book about Embroidery by Lewis Foreman Day, Mary Buckle (1907)
"The difference between them is that chain - stitch is done in the hand with an
ordinary needle, and tambour - stitch in a frame with a hook sharper at the ..."
7. The Great industries of the United States: being an historical summary of by Horace Greeley (1873)
"The third class is the chain-stitch, or the twisted loop-stitch, which is made
with a single thread, and consumes about four yards of thread in sewing a ..."