Smocking is an embroidery technique used to gather fabric so that it can stretch. Before elastomer, smocking was commonly used in , , and in garments where were undesirable. Smocking developed in England and has been practised since the Middle Ages and is unusual among embroidery methods in that it was often worn by labourers. Other major embroidery styles are purely decorative and represented status symbols. Smocking was practical for garments to be both form fitting and flexible, hence its name derives from Smock-frock — an agricultural labourer's work shirt.Reader's Digest, p. 160. Smocking was used most extensively in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.Good Housekeeping, p. 146.
Fabric can be gathered into in a variety of ways.
Early smocking, or gauging, was done by hand. Some embroiderers also made their own guides using cardboard and an embroidery marking pencil. By 1880, iron-on transfer dots were available and advertised in magazines such as Weldon's. The iron-on transfers places evenly spaced dots onto the wrong side of the fabric, which were then pleated using a regular running stitch.
Since the early 1950s, pleating machines have been available to home smockers. Using gears and specialty pleater needles, the fabric is forced through the gears and onto the threaded needles. Pleating machines are typically offered in 16-row, 24-row and 32-row widths.
Traditional hand smocking begins with marking smocking dots in a grid pattern on the wrong side of the fabric and gathering it with temporary . These stitches are anchored on each end in a manner that facilitates later removal and are analogous to . Then a row of cable stitching (see "A") stabilizes the top and bottom of the working area.Reader's Digest, pp. 161–162.
Smocking may be done in many sophisticated patterns.
Standard hand smocking stitches are:
A. Cable stitch: a tight stitch of double rows that joins alternating columns of gathers.Reader's Digest, p. 163.
B. Stem stitch: a tight stitch with minimum flexibility that joins two columns of gathers at a time in single overlapping rows with a downward slope.Reader's Digest, p. 164.
C. Outline stitch: similar to the stem stitch but with an upward slope.
D. Cable flowerette: a set of gathers worked in three rows of stitches across four columns of gathers. Often organized in diagonally arranged sets of flowerettes for loose smocking.Reader's Digest, p. 165.
E. Wave stitch: a medium density pattern that alternately employs tight horizontal stitches and loose diagonal stitches.Reader's Digest, p. 166.
F. Honeycomb stitch: a medium density variant on the cable stitch that double stitches each set of gathers and provides more spacing between them, with an intervening diagonal stitch concealed on the reverse side of the fabric.Reader's Digest, p. 167.
G. Surface honeycomb stitch: a tight variant on the honeycomb stitch and the wave stitch with the diagonal stitch visible, but spanning only one gather instead of a gather and a space.Reader's Digest, p. 168.
H. Trellis stitch: a medium density pattern that uses stem stitches and outline stitches to form diamond-shaped patterns.
I. Vandyke stitch: a tight variant on the surface honeycomb stitch that wraps diagonal stitches in the opposite direction.Reader's Digest, p. 169.
J. Bullion stitch: a complex knotted stitch that joins several gathers in a single stitch. Organized similarly to cable flowerettes.
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