Been working on Gryff since the new year off & on. There is quite a lot of confetti (
not 'spaghetti' as I typed for my first effort) in his tail, and I have come to the conclusion that the best way to work in this area is to cross country a thread until it runs out, but doing all the stitches of that colour in a 10x10 block before moving onto the next 10x10 block. Seems to be leading to a smaller number of stitches I have to remove and stops me getting lost. In other areas, where there are fewer colours, scanning across half or the whole page with a colour seems more effective. It's also leading to a much thinner mat on the back of the fabric.
I've not had as much time doing Gryff as I'd wanted, I have several big projects on at the moment, not the least of which is a 'new' 130kg metal lathe which I hope to convert to CNC (computer control) so I can get it to make pens for me without my manual input. I'm better at computers than I am at manual co-ordination...
Anyway, here's the chart, continuing with the top of his tail in page 11 of the chart, it's in heavy shadow which is why it's so dark:
And the progress as of this morning:
I'm getting some thinner red fishing line soon-ish for the intermediate making out. The stuff I have is 15lb breaking load, and it's a bit big for the holes in the fabric, so I have some 2lb breaking load line on order, which I should be able to put through the needle and treat like thread. That will speed up the marking out and also ease the difficulty of putting in stitches that share the fabric holes where the marking out thread passes through the fabric.
Hope this is of interest,
Regards,
Richard