By

Holly

10
Feb
2015

How to Sew a Straight Seam – which is not always as easy as it feels like it should be

medium sized check fabric

(Background: Two weeks ago, I spent most of the week sewing through 3,000+ yards of thread, for fifteen 5ft by 15ft pieced drapes as part of a theater project. I taught a handful of people a true sewing fundamental – proper pinning – and spent most of the time sewing super long straight seams & thinking. This is one of the things I thought. )

I’ve taught a dozen or so people to sew over the past couple years, and as it turns out there are tons of things that can screw you up when you first sit down at a sewing machine.

There are lots of new things to learn, no motion is entirely intuitive, and it turns out, that sewing a seam in a straight line is not as easy as it feels like it should be.

Intuitively, you watch the sewing machine needle. It’s the most eye catching part, it moves up & down, it’s the piece of the machine actually creating the stitch.

Except, watching the machine needle is not how you sew a straight seam.

When you’re sewing, by the time the fabric meets the needle, you have very little control over your seam. You can make a sharp adjustment, (like turning a corner), but that’s about all you can do.

The only way you have control over where your seam is going, is by focusing on the path the needle is taking instead of the place the needle is.

If you’re focused 2-3 stitches ahead of the needle, you have time to make slight adjustments and sew a straight seam.

If you’re focused on the stitch that’s being created, you don’t have time for those slight adjustments, you only have time for something drastic. Like sewing a corner, or breaking out the seam ripper.

6
Feb
2015

The Self-Made Wardrobe Week 27

The Self-Made Wardrobe is a project where I only wear garments I’ve made.
It’s sort of a year long experiment in getting dressed without clothing labels.


This week’s update is without commentary, thanks to a fuzzy head-cold and a pile of  deadlines.

Day-183

DAY 183 – JANUARY 30th

Not-So-Straightforward Basic Purple Sweater
Black Tank Top
Black Scarf
Graphic Silk Circle Skirt
Black Tights
Brown Boots
Various Rings

Day-184

DAY 184 – JANUARY 31st

The First Archer Button Up Shirt
Black Tank Top
Cascading Flowers Skirt
Various Rings

Day-185

DAY 185 – FEBRUARY 1st

Boring Black Sweater
Black Tank Top
Birds & Wheels Flare Skirt
Black Tights
Various Rings

Day-186

DAY 186 – FEBRUARY 2nd

The Transitional Weather Sweater
Black Tank Top
Black Maxi Skirt with a Slit
Various Rings

Day-187

DAY 187 – FEBRUARY 3rd

Not-So-Straightforward Basic Purple Sweater
Black Tank Top
Graphic Silk Circle Skirt
Black Tights
Brown Boots
Long Necklace
Various Rings

Day-188

DAY 188 – FEBRUARY 4th

Not-So-Straightforward Basic Purple Sweater
Black Tank Top
Black Maxi Skirt with a Slit
Black Tights
Brown Boots
Robot Clock Necklace
Various Rings

Day-189

DAY 189 – FEBRUARY 5th

Boring Black Sweater
Black Tank Top
Pirate Skirt
Black Tights
Super Long Bead Crochet Necklace
Various Rings

4
Feb
2015

my handspun sweater is done, and my winter coat will soon have pockets

Each Wednesday, I post little snippets about what’s happening, and what I’m working on.


knitting

I knit the last couple rows and bound off the shawl I was working on, now it’s sitting next to the couch waiting for a good soak & blocking.

weaving in ends

I wove in the ends on my handspun sweater.

ends of yarn

Which was a surprisingly huge number of ends.

knitting

For some brainless knitting, I pulled out the pockets of my winter coat again. Funnily enough, before I pulled them out of the project bag, I thought that I had an inch of knitting left on the first pocket, but it turns out I have an inch to knit on the second pocket. I don’t remember knitting that second pocket at all. Maybe it was elves? Or maybe I have a magic appearing pocket?

So, not a heck of a lot of knitting happened this week, it was mostly finishing things up – and working on secret projects.

(Wondering what happened to that project with 1800 yards of thread, from last week? Well, that project is done, the total thread used ended up somewhere north of 3,000 yards – to give that some perspective, we also bought the fabric shop around the corner out of white thread…)