OUR CHILDREN’S NEEDLEPOINT STOCKINGS

I am so happy to finally see three finished needlepoint stockings hanging on our mantel! Anyone who has picked up needlepoint knows that larger canvases like Christmas stockings are such a labor of love but extra worth it in the end. I will look forward to bringing these personalized stockings out as part of our holiday decor for many years to come and I hope eventually our children will too! They’re definitely still too young to appreciate them this year as our two-year-old son just asked me if his preschool teacher had made his for him. 😉

I learned to needlepoint from my Grandy the summer before our wedding six and a half years ago and it’s been my favorite hobby ever since! I started small with a couple Christmas ornaments and key fobs before moving on to a needlepoint belt for my husband and it was a few years before I felt ready to tackle a needlepoint canvas this large. I’ve had people ask me how long it takes to needlepoint a stocking and it totally depends on the size of your canvas, the stitch(es) you use, and how frequently you stitch and for how long. I needlepoint exclusively in the continental stitch because it’s what I know best and can execute most easily and I would estimate I spent at least six months on each of these, stitching an average of maybe 30-45 minutes, 4-5 nights a week. Needlepoint stockings are custom projects with thousands of stitches on each canvas, which makes them some of the most satisfying projects to complete in my experience!

needlepoint christmas stockings
bauble stockings jingle bells stocking canvas
bauble stockings winter wonderland stocking canvas

I started our first son Teddy’s needlepoint stocking once we already knew we were expecting our second son Peter, so I knew I wanted their stocking designs to feel cohesive and coordinated but not identical. I went with Bauble Stockings needlepoint canvas designs that are available at KC Needlepoint (Bauble Stockings also sells miniature finished versions of each of these designs on their website here and here and releases a limited run of finished full-size stockings once a year in January if you’d prefer not to stitch your own). I ordered this jingle bells stocking canvas for Teddy from the KC Needlepoint website (where you can have your canvas personalized with a name painted on for an additional cost) and picked out my Silk & Ivory threads at my local needlepoint store Stitch Stash in Darien (I like to compare and combine thread colors in person, but you can always order threads online at Lycette Designs or Penny Linn Designs if you don’t have a needlepoint store near you).

needlepoint christmas stocking

I ordered this winter wonderland stocking canvas for Peter and I will say this canvas was a little bit more fun to stitch because there were more colors to switch between so it felt a little less monotonous than the gray bells, green leaves, and navy background of the first design. That said, I absolutely love the way the two designs look hanging next to one another so I knew I would order a third Bauble Stocking canvas when we found out we were expecting our third son Tucker. This Bauble Stockings holiday trimmings design is from their collaboration with Dogwood Hill, but I stitched the background in the same navy blue as the first two stockings so the three designs would feel more cohesive. This is the first year I get to see all three of them hanging in a row and there is something so satisfying about knowing I made each of these heirloom quality pieces myself! I like to think Grandy would be proud. ❤️

Bauble Stockings has a bunch more needlepoint stocking canvases that I love and will likely order from when we feel ready to try for a fourth baby at some point down the road. I adore this topiary Christmas tree and this Nutcracker stocking if you’re looking for more ideas, but of course I can’t wait to see what other new arrivals they’ll release in the mean time!

needlepoint stockings holiday decor

I’ve been asked whether I use canvas stretchers or anything to make the canvases for these large stockings a little less unwieldy and the answer is I don’t! I watched my Grandy stitch for many years without any accessories and I guess that’s just what I know and I haven’t deviated. I’m working on an even bigger canvas than these right now and will occasionally roll up one side of the canvas and keep it in place with a large binder clip, but any warping that occurs during stitching can be easily corrected when you drop it off your local needlepoint store to be finished, so I really don’t strive for perfection! Handmade with love is the name of the game here. 🙂

P.S. Our plate wall is another new addition to our mantel this year! I shared the details of each plate and how we hung them in this post. The preserved boxwood garland is available at Ballard Designs here and the stocking holders are Restoration Hardware stocking cachepots in an antique silver finish that my parents used in our childhood home but that occasionally pop up for sale on eBay (a couple current listings here and here!).

P.P.S. Many more needlepoint posts in this category on my site! Here are a few on how I started needlepointing, the first needlepoint belt I made, framing needlepoint canvases, turning a needlepoint canvas into a lucite tray, how I organize needlepoint threads, and the needlepoint project I worked on this summer.

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