In which I make some clothes, expound on the virtues of the flat fell seam finish, and proclaim "you CAN sew your own clothes, and even wear them in public".
Sunday, December 02, 2007
Another winter skirt, continued
This is a very simple skirt. I got the side seams on the skirt and on the lining sewn up and so the two pieces were now tubes that I could put together, wrong sides together, and stitch around the top. I am going to finish the back vent at the very end, after I have hemmed the whole thing.
In the meantime, I decided not to do darts. The fabric is loose and it wouldn't look as good with hard darts sewn in. Instead I convert darts to ease, after having learned I could do this from a useful book I bought some time ago.
It is from the Taunton Press which is the company that also publishes Threads magazine. And it is calledCouture Sewing Techniques.
My understanding, having done this several times now, is that you just take the excess fabric where the dart would normally go and spread it out into tiny little wrinkles called "ease". The top photo of my skirt shows how I have pinned the excess fabric to the facing.
This photo shows what it looks like after sewing the lining and skirt (attached to each other by a line of machine basting which you can also see in this photo) to the facing.
This is what it looks like on the right side, before pressing. My hand is holding the facing.
This is what it looks like after I pressed it all flat (I haven't pressed the facing to the inside yet). And I also have not done the understitching.
Here it is, all finished along the top. The ease is right under where the clothespins are. With this fabric, you really don't notice it at all. Now I have to hem the fabric and the lining and then stick the vents together.
Very pretty Julia. Nice job on easing the fabric instead of darts. I love all books by Claire Schaeffer.
ReplyDeleteOh...I get it. Thanks for the pics. :)
ReplyDeleteThanks Marty! All those Taunton books are great.
ReplyDeleteYou are welcome Sarah!