Embroider Sentence Examples

embroider
  • Embroider each guests name on a kernel of crocheted candy corn.

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  • Many companies that embroider custom uniform shirts outsource this part of the process.

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  • Those who will hand sew or embroider the names may offer a more detailed touch, but the process will take longer.

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  • When making an amigurumi dog for a child under the age of three, use safety eyes or embroider facial features to avoid a choking hazard.

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  • Many retailers sell monogrammed curtains, or you can embroider them yourself and give them as gifts.

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  • Again it does not behoove the historian to speculate or embroider on the precise significance of the words employed.

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  • Weave in the weft, embroider, tassel and braid with these twinkling yarns or add embellishment to your knitwear.

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  • If you're crafty, you could buy a quilt or blanket (or a kit made for such a purpose, which you should be able to find at your local craft store) and you can embroider the birth information yourself.

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  • Choose one body piece to be the front of the doll, and embroider or paint a face on the head portion.

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  • You could cross-stitch or embroider the words on a pillow or wall hanging, include the saying in a scrapbook layout, or paint a picture inspired by the thought behind it.

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  • Companies like Thirty-One have made cloth purses all the rage, because of the ability to embroider a name or initials, creating a completely customized purse.

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  • Use safety eyes or embroider facial features if the project will be used by a child under the age of three.

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  • While it has fewer choices in lab coat styles, LogoSoftWear has a huge clip art gallery of fancier logos they can embroider on lab coats.

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  • Later, it was often the habit to embroider on Greek diaconal stoles the words AFIOz Afioe Ai'Ioe.

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  • Textile Fabrics and Embroider yIn no branch of applied art does the decorative genius of Japan show more attractive results than in that of textile fabrics, and in none has there been more conspicuous progress during recent years.

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  • But in the works edited by Montholon and Las Cases, where the political aim constantly obtrudes itself, the emperor is made again and again to embroider on the theme that he had always been the true champion of ordered freedom.

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