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I still need to close those side seams, stitch the button holes to their linings, and add buttons. But first: hey look a waistcoat!

#Sewing #Tailoring


Pressed. It's starting to look a lot more like a finished garment.

#Sewing #Tailoring


So I had to step away to run some errands (there were girl scout cookies at the farmer's market, which I'm sure you all understand was a situation requiring my prompt attention). Back at the table now. Here's the waistcoat, basted and ironed.

I tacked the button holes to their counterparts with the button hole linings folded out of the way, so they won't get caught in the stitching.

Time to sew.

#Tailoring #Sewing


Yesterday, I used the stretch to convert a dart, easing 3/4" of fabric into a smooth seam.

When I stitch the lapels and armholes, however, the pieces are the same length, and I want them to stay the same length. I do not want the layers moving around because one side is stretching more than the other (and the way machine stitching works, one side is very likely to stretch more than the other).

So I baste to keep everything stable and aligned. #Sewing #Tailoring


I'm very excited to be about ready to stitch this whole mess together. But first, I have a whole lot more basting to do: the lapels, neck, and armholes, and the front seam along the button holes to make sure they stay aligned.

#Tailoring #Sewing


And that's the dart converted to ease 🙂. Claire Shaeffer's books on couture sewing techniques have a great explanation of this process, with accompanying video.

#Sewing #Tailoring


Conversion time. First, I pin the back shoulder to the front shoulder, right sides together. I leave the area around the dart (about 3x as wide as the dart) open.

You can see how the extra fullness creates a gap. If I just ran it through the sewing machine like this I'd end up with tucks in the seam (and I'd break a needle. Don't put pins through your machine).

#Sewing #Tailoring


I'm going to nerd out about this. Welcome to my TED talk.

Ease is the term for the difference between the dimensions of a garment and the body dimensions of the person the garment is meant to fit. Ease is different from size: consider a pair of skinny jeans vs a pair of straight-cut slacks. The same person could own both garments in the same size and both would fit them, but the skinny jeans have a lot less ease, because they're more form-fitting.

#Sewing #Tailoring


The buttonholes have been tacked, and are approaching their final form. I added an interfacing panel that's currently just tucked behind the button hole linings, to give the center front a little extra stability.

#Sewing #Tailoring


After slashing the button holes, I:

1. Pushed the rectangular linings through to the back,
2. Pressed, with lots of steam.
3. Turned the piece right side up and pressed again.
4. A detail shot of some of the pressed button holes.

#Sewing #Tailoring #LinedButtonHoles


Well it's been a minute, but I'm back at the sewing table. Tacking the buttonhole lining in place makes it easy to machine-stitch the buttonhole box without anything shifting around.

#Sewing #Tailoring


Greetings, #sewing and #tailoring friends! When last we left this waistcoat I was stitching the darts. I'm finally back at it and just completed the scariest step of welt pocket construction: slashing open the pocket.


Got the side seams closed and the buttons on last night. It is finished.

#Tailoring #Sewing


Bag is done! Tomorrow, I'll make the little belts to fasten it to the bike. #sewing


I am always amazed that humans figured out the geometry for this. #sewing


Hole for the front pocket's zipper. I always need to look at a video of how to do this. #sewing


Making a little bag for the front of my wife's bike. #sewing


Fellow #sewing friends - I found this youtube channel with tutorials on how to make really well-finished bags. https://youtube.com/c/MikoCraft

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