This was not always the case. Many, many, many years ago in my twenties, I was a crewel fan (and still am to a degree). I loved the wools, stitches and muslin it used. At one point I joined EGA (Embroidery Guild of America) and went to a local chapter meeting where a couple of ladies seated around me asked what I stitched. I told them crewel and asked about theirs. They told me cross stitch and once I tried it I would never go back to crewel. I politely poo-pooed their claim. I guess about a year later I took a cross stitch workshop at my local public library with a friend and went away intrigued about it. It took me several attempts to figure the whole thing out, but the warning the EGA ladies gave me came to pass, I was hooked. Now the difference back then between cross stitch and needlepoint, beside the obvious ones, was that needlepoint always had to have complete coverage of a design, while cross stitch allowed unstitched areas of background, but as time has passed, I noticed that there are now more designs that have complete coverage as well. The Ladybug Lake piece is a good example of this.
So while this creative endeavor can be tedious and very detailed oriented, it is always one in which I love to count on. Pun intended!
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