Needlepoint Stitch Guide: Complete Tutorial with Step Photos

Sampler of 5 different needlepoint stitch patterns on one canvas: tent, basketweave, gobelin, cross, hungarian

Learning needlepoint stitches changed my entire approach to textile art. For the first two years, I only used one stitch — the continental tent stitch. It worked fine, but every project looked the same. Flat. Predictable. Boring.

Sampler of 5 needlepoint stitches: continental, basketweave, Gobelin, cross stitch and Hungarian stitch

Then I discovered that needlepoint has dozens of stitches. Each one creates a different texture. A different feel. A different story. For more, see our guide on The Different Needlepoint Stitches: Complete Guide.

This guide walks you through the essential stitches with step-by-step instructions. I have included estimated speeds, wool consumption, and the exact situations where each stitch shines.

Avant de Commencer : Préparer Ta Toile

point croix sur canevas tapisserie

point continental tente tapisserie gros plan

comparaison point gobelin hongrie tapisserie

Before any stitch, you need a properly prepared canvas. This applies to every technique in this guide.

  1. Cut your canvas with 5 cm margins on each side
  2. Tape the edges with masking tape or seam binding — this prevents fraying
  3. Mount it on a frame — a Métier à tapisserie (tapestry frame) keeps the canvas perfectly taut
  4. Mark the center with a removable stitch marker or a loose thread

A loose canvas produces loose stitches. Take the time to mount it properly. Your stitches will thank you.

Canvas recommendation: Mono canvas 10 count (12 EUR per meter). It works for all stitches in this guide. A 35 x 35 cm piece costs about 4 EUR.

Stitch 1: The Continental Tent Stitch

The continental tent stitch is the foundation of needlepoint. It is the first stitch every beginner should learn.

What It Looks Like

A small diagonal stitch covering one thread intersection. From bottom-left to top-right. Simple, elegant, precise.

Step-by-Step

  1. Bring your needle up at position A (bottom-left of a thread intersection)
  2. Insert it at position B (top-right, one thread up and one thread right)
  3. You have one diagonal stitch
  4. Bring the needle up again at position C (bottom-left of the next intersection)
  5. Insert at position D (top-right)
  6. Repeat across the row

Working in rows: Complete a full row of diagonal stitches from left to right. Then turn your frame and work the next row from right to left. This creates a consistent slant across the entire piece.

Speed and Wool Consumption

  • Speed: 300-500 stitches per hour for an experienced stitcher
  • Wool consumption: Medium — a 30 x 30 cm project needs 5-7 skeins of DMC Colbert
  • Coverage: Good — the canvas is fully covered when stitched correctly

When to Use It

The continental stitch is perfect for details, lettering, faces, and small areas. It creates a dense, durable surface that resists wear.

Claire's frustration: For my first big project, I stitched the entire background with the continental stitch. The canvas distorted badly — it pulled diagonally and would not lie flat. I had to block it with a heavy board and steam for 24 hours. I learned the hard way: for large background areas, use the basketweave stitch instead.

Hands stitching the continental tent stitch on canvas with tapestry needle and red wool thread

Stitch 2: The Basketweave Tent Stitch

The basketweave is the continental stitch's smarter cousin. It looks identical from the front but is stitched differently from the back.

Why Basketweave?

The continental stitch pulls the canvas diagonally. Over a large area, this distortion becomes severe. The basketweave stitch alternates the tension direction, keeping the canvas perfectly square.

How to Stitch It

The basketweave works in diagonal rows, not horizontal ones.

  1. Start at the top-right corner of your area
  2. Stitch a diagonal row moving down and to the left
  3. At the bottom, turn and work a diagonal row moving up and to the right
  4. Continue this zigzag pattern

The back of basketweave shows a woven pattern (hence the name). The front is identical to the continental stitch.

Speed and Wool Consumption

  • Speed: 250-400 stitches per hour (slightly slower than continental)
  • Wool consumption: Low — uses about 15-20% less wool than continental
  • Coverage: Excellent — no canvas distortion

When to Use It

Use basketweave for backgrounds, large color blocks, and any area larger than 10 x 10 cm. It keeps the canvas flat and stable.

My Recommendation

For your first project, learn continental first. It is simpler. Then graduate to basketweave for your second project. The les différents points de tapisserie guide on our site covers both in more detail. Hands stitching the basketweave tent stitch on tapestry canvas with blue wool thread

Stitch 3: The Gobelin Stitch

Named after the famous Gobelin tapestry manufactory in Paris, this stitch creates tall vertical bars. It is one of the oldest needlepoint stitches.

Variations

Variation Height Effect
Gobelin straight 2 threads Compact, dense
Gobelin elongated 3-4 threads Open, airy
Gobelin encroaching 2 threads, staggered Smooth color transitions
Gobelin inclined 2 threads, angled Soft diagonal texture

Step-by-Step (Gobelin Straight)

  1. Bring your needle up at the bottom of a thread column
  2. Count 2 threads up
  3. Insert the needle straight above (not diagonally)
  4. You have a vertical bar covering 2 thread intersections
  5. Move one thread to the right and repeat

When to Use It

The Gobelin stitch is excellent for skies, water, and large background areas. Because it covers 2 thread intersections per stitch, it is faster than the continental stitch. A 30 x 30 cm sky background takes about 6-8 hours with Gobelin versus 10-12 hours with continental.

Wool consumption: High — the vertical bars use more wool than diagonal stitches. Budget about 7-9 skeins of DMC Colbert (3.50 EUR each) for a 30 x 30 cm piece. Hands making the gobelin straight stitch on canvas with needle and green wool thread

Stitch 4: The Cross Stitch (on Canvas)

Cross stitch is different from the other needlepoint stitches. It forms an X instead of a diagonal bar. And it is typically worked on Aïda fabric rather than mono canvas. For a detailed comparison, see our article on Cross Stitch vs Needlepoint: What Are the Differences?.

For the full comparison, read Point de croix vs point tapisserie on our blog.

How to Stitch It

  1. Bring the needle up at bottom-left
  2. Insert at top-right (first diagonal)
  3. Bring up at top-left
  4. Insert at bottom-right (second diagonal, completing the X)

Cross Stitch on Needlepoint Canvas

You can work cross stitch on mono canvas too. Use 1 strand of DMC Colbert for 10 count canvas. The X will be larger and more textured than on Aïda fabric.

Speed and Wool Consumption

  • Speed: 150-250 crosses per hour (slower than tent stitches)
  • Wool consumption: Moderate — each X uses two diagonal stitches
  • Coverage: Good

Stitch 5: The Hungarian Stitch

The Hungarian stitch creates beautiful zigzag patterns. It is decorative rather than utilitarian. Save it for borders, accents, and special projects.

The Pattern

The stitch works in a repeating height pattern: 1 thread, 2 threads, 3 threads, 4 threads, then back down: 3, 2, 1.

This creates a diamond or wave effect across your canvas.

Step-by-Step

  1. Start with a stitch covering 1 thread intersection
  2. Next stitch: 2 threads high
  3. Next: 3 threads high
  4. Next: 4 threads high
  5. Descend: 3, 2, 1

Repeat this sequence across the row. The visual effect is stunning — like woven fabric.

When to Use It

The Hungarian stitch is slower (150-200 stitches per hour) but creates show-stopping results. Use it for decorative borders, picture frames, or as a textured background for monograms.

Comparison Table: All Stitches

Stitch Difficulty Speed (st/h) Wool Use Canvas Distortion Best For
Continental 1/5 300-500 Medium High Details, small areas
Basketweave 2/5 250-400 Low None Backgrounds, large areas
Gobelin straight 2/5 200-300 High Low Skies, water, fills
Cross stitch 1/5 150-250 Medium Medium Geometric patterns
Hungarian 3/5 150-200 Medium Low Borders, decoration
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Claire Moreau — Fondatrice de MonCanevas

Passionnée de tapisserie depuis 8 ans, Claire transforme vos photos en grilles de canevas personnalisées. Elle partage ici ses conseils et astuces pour vous aider à créer des tapisseries uniques.

How to Read a Stitch Diagram

Whether you use continental, basketweave, or Gobelin, you need to read a stitch diagram. Comment lire une grille de tapisserie (reading a tapestry grid) is a universal skill.

The key principle: each square on the grid represents one stitch. The symbol inside the square tells you the color. For more, see our guide on How to Read a Needlepoint Chart Easily. The legend tells you the DMC color code.

Special note for Gobelin: The grid might show one square per thread intersecti