Embroidery on Clothing is a hands-on embroidery workshop held in Port Royal, South Carolina, United States. Over three hours with instructor Susan Stone, the class teaches basic stitches beginning on sturdy jeans before moving to delicate fabrics, giving students the confidence to repair, personalize, and embellish everyday garments.
The session takes place in a small studio on the second floor (accessibility: second floor), capped at eight students—an intimate setting that makes individualized feedback possible. Susan guides participants through running, satin, back, and French knot stitches, demonstrating how different needles, thread tensions, and fabric choices affect the final result. The curriculum emphasizes starting on heavy denim before attempting sheer or finely woven textiles, so beginners leave with both techniques and a realistic sense of what each material requires.
This is more than a craft class; it’s a practical route into low-impact clothing care and creative self-expression. In Port Royal’s Lowcountry context—salt air, live oaks, and marshlight visible outside the studio windows—students often translate regional motifs into coastal-inspired patches, subtle repairs, or decorative flourishes that extend the life of a favorite jacket. For travelers, the workshop is an appealing way to learn a durable skill, meet local makers, and leave with wearable souvenirs that beat mass-produced trinkets.
Practical details matter: the minimum age is 14, group size limits hands-on time to small cohorts, and the class runs roughly three hours. Cancellation policy: full refund for cancellations 24 hours or more before class; day-of cancellations convert to a gift certificate. Bring your own garment if you want specific repairs or projects; the instructor covers both heavy and delicate materials during the lesson.
Why book this in Port Royal? It’s a compact, approachable creative experience that pairs well with exploring the town’s historic streets and marshfront trails. For anyone interested in sustainable fashion, craft tourism, or learning a new practical skill on vacation, this class turns idle fabric into a personal statement. Expect patient, technique-focused instruction from Susan Stone, hands-on practice, and a small, focused group that makes progress in a single afternoon. The result: a repaired or reworked piece of clothing and the know-how to keep improving long after the class ends.
During the session expect a short materials demonstration followed by guided practice on your chosen garment; Susan offers corrective tips on tension and stitch placement so pieces look intentional rather than improvised. Beginners should arrive with patience and curiosity rather than prior experience—the class assumes no previous embroidery knowledge. If you plan to travel light, pack a small project bag with scissors, thimble, and any sentimental garment you want to work on. After class, many students head to nearby waterfront cafes or local library to compare notes and plan projects together.