Here are two sewing techniques plus some good sewing tips on how to sew a reversible vest or a lined vest. One is stitched and turned; the other is stitched and bound.
Try both to help you resolve your popular sewing technique.
T Shirt Images
For both methods, ensue these cutting and sewing instructions:
Image Sport If Fastpitch Was Easy - Short Sleeve T-Shirt Best
Rate This Product :
Image Sport If Fastpitch Was Easy - Short Sleeve T-Shirt Feature
- 100% cotton
- Comfortable Fit
- Quality Designs
- Softball Apparel
Image Sport If Fastpitch Was Easy - Short Sleeve T-Shirt Overview
100% preshrunk cotton with design printed on the front, 6.1 oz with double-needle topstitched banded neckline and armhole. Double stitched hem.Customer Reviews
*** Product Information and Prices Stored: Jan 17, 2012 11:16:25
Choose similar weight fabrics for a reversible vest.
Preshrink all fabrics and interfacing.
Interface the vest with a fusible knit interfacing.
Test the interfacing on a scrap of fabric first to make sure it will be Ok.
Depending on the fabric, you may pick to interface both of the fronts and back of the vest.
Note: You may want to interface the fabric and then cut the vest pieces out of the interfaced fabric.
Carefully cut two fronts and one back from each fabric.
Make sure the front and back vest pieces are the same size in both fabrics after you cut them out. Lay one over the other to check it.
Apply any pockets or designs to each front and back layer.
For each layer:
Place right sides of the fabric together and stitch the front and back shoulder seams together. Do Not backstitch.
Instead begin and end each seam with short stitches (18-20 per inch) for about 1 to 1-1/2 inches.
Sandwich press the seams.
Press the seams open.
At the neck and shoulder point of the shoulder seam, trim the shoulder seam discount back at an angle for about 1-1/2 inch to eliminate bulk when the neck and armhole seams are made.
Also trim the shoulder seams of one of the layers to be just slightly less than the other layer to stagger or grade the seams when they lay on top of each other.
Continue with whether method I or method Ii to cease the vest.
Method I - How To Sew To unblemished A Stitched And Turned Reversible Vest
Place the two vests right sides together.
Note: Generally, when sewing a lined vest, it is a good idea to trim off about 1/8 inch from the lining before attaching it to the outer layer. This keeps the lining from showing on the outside when the vest is worn.
For a reversible vest, you may or may not want to do this.
If a bit of one of the layers shows on one of the sides, it may look like narrow piping. You are the designer. Create the look you want.
Stitch the vests armhole edges together using short stitches (18-20 stitches per inch) all the way.
Sandwich press these seams.
Press the seams open.
Trim the armhole seams to 1/8 inch seam allowance. The short stitches will hold this seam.
If this is a lined vest, understitch the armhole seams and all of the other seams as well. If it is reversible, you may not want the understitching to show on the edge.
Sewing Tip: always use short stitches and trim to 1/8 inch seam discount to stitch a curve. Then understitch if possible. It produces a much cleaner, sharper curve instead of trimming to 1/4 inch and clipping. Try it!
After the armholes are finished, place the two right sides of the vest back together again lining up all the edges. Pin to hold the layers.
Stitch the front and neckline together.
Begin stitching about 2 inches from the side seam on the lowest of the front and stitch over the lowest of the front, up the town front and colse to the neck and down on the other side of the front stopping about 2 inches from the other side seam.
Use a regular stitch distance to stitch over the lowest of the front and up the front. Convert to a short stitch distance to stitch the curve colse to the neck.
Sandwich press the seam.
Press the seam open.
Trim the curved area colse to the neck to 1/8 inch.
Trim the rest of the seam to 1/4 inch.
Hold the scissors at an angle when you trim to help layer or grade the seam allowances or use "duckbill" scissors to help do this.
Sewing Tip: always stagger the edges of seam allowances when they end up laying on top of each other in a closed garment.
Turn the vest right side out by pulling the fronts straight through the shoulders one side at a time.
Press well setting the seam lines exactly on the edge.
With right sides together, match the armhole seams and pin exactly straight through the stitching line to hold one on top of the other.
Stitch the side seams of both layers in one continuous step carefully walking the needle over the underarm pin.
Sandwich press the seam.
Press the seam open.
You may want to leave the full seam discount here in case you have to let the vest out sometime.
Now, you have the lowest of the back open and about 2 inches on whether side of the side seam toward the front.
Turn right sides together matching up the side seams. Put a pin exactly in the line of stitching in the side seams to hold one on top of the other.
Starting at one front side where you stopped stitching previously, stitch over the lowest until you come to about 2 inches from the next side seam pin and stop leaving about a 4 inch opportunity on that side.
Sandwich press the seam.
Press the seam open.
Press under the unstitched seam allowances as though they were stitched.
Trim and grade the seam allowances to about 1/4 inch.
Turn the vest right side out straight through the 4 inch opportunity at the side lower edge. This opportunity is great than having the opportunity in the middle of the town back. It isn't as noticeable.
Press well again.
At the opening, turn in and line up the edges.
To cease this opening, slip stitch it closed by hand or place a narrow strip of fusible web and fuse it closed.
If desired, topstitch the vest 1/4 inch from the edges.
Make buttonholes on both sides of the vest.
Sew 2 buttons together production a thread shank in in the middle of them. Use these double buttons straight through both buttonholes like cuff links. You can even use 2 distinct buttons as
long as they are the same size to fit straight through the holes.
Method Ii
Another method to cease your reversible vest is to sew each vest with shoulder seams and side seams.
Place the vests with wrong sides together.
Stitch 3/4 inch all colse to the armholes and the outer edges of the vest holding the 2 layers together.
Trim off 5/8 inch all around.
Bind all the outside edges whether with self fabric, contrasting fabric, or a fold over trim or braid to finish.You can even use a decorative serged edge to cease the vest.
This is fast and easy!
It's your choice. You are the designer!
Enjoy your vest!
It just makes sense!
2 Sewing Techniques On How To Sew A Reversible VestTime-Lapse hand-drawn Tshirt design for Rise Records' "Legend" - Random Awesome Video Clips. Duration : 3.73 Mins.I mainly do recording studio work (like the song you're hearing), but I love doing merch designs for bands when I have the time. I figured it would be cool to keep a camera rolling while I worked on the design so that I could compile a quick time-lapse version of the process. The back of the design can be seen here: c3.ac-images.myspacecdn.com More of my art can be found here: www.myspace.com LEGEND www.facebook.com/LEGENDmi www.myspace.com/LEGEND If you are looking for custom, hand-drawn merch designs like this one, or studio recording like the song you're hearing, please visit my website for more info. Thanks! www.RANDOMAWESOME.com www.twitter.com/randomawesome www.myspace.com/randomawesomerecording www.facebook.com/randomawesome
Keywords: time, lapse, photography, film, rate, picture, drawing, art, photoshop, pen, pencil, sharpie, marker, free, hand, tutorial, how, to, draw, merch, design, slow, mo, fast, speed, tshirt, legend, rise, records, random, awesome, studio, recording, long, motion, lapsing, laps, lapes, lapps, lappse, lapsse, lappsse, sped, up, speedy, quick, show, progress
No comments:
Post a Comment