This site offers information regarding the Hudson Valley NY Chaper of the American Sewing Guild (ASG).
Thursday, May 15, 2014
To a Tee
The May meeting of the Sewphisticuts took a look at T-shirt patterns. Several members brought along a variety of patterns to share and compare. They ranged from a decades-old McCall's pattern to a brand-new CNT design. Both Maura and Peggy have used self-drafted Lutterloh patterns for t-shirts, while Judy has used a variety of commercial patterns from Vogue and Simplicity over the years. Peg said she was dating herself by admitting that her first t-shirts were made from Stretch and Sew patterns. But she was wearing one she had made from a CNT pattern, a fairly new company which she had learned about at a recent trade show. So we saw t-shirts plain and fancy, long and short, v-neck, mock-neck and crew-neck. We also looked at and discussed various ways of sewing and finishing these knits; some were serged, while others were sewn with a conventional machine. And Judy has a machine that will do a cover stitch, yielding a very professional-looking hem finish inside and out. We discussed the merits of hems made with the blind-hem stitch vs. twin-needle top-stitching. The blind-hem method gives a hand-picked look to the hem if the stitches show at all, while the twin-needle top-stitched method makes a more textural hem line since the bobbin thread tends to pull the lines of stitching together a bit. We all agreed that fabric thickness and stretch make a huge difference in the fit of a t-shirt, so that fitting adjustments may be required even when you've made up the pattern before. Some other helpful tips that we learned were: when using a narrow zig-zag to seam knits on a conventional machine, sew a slightly wider zig-zag in the seam allowance to flatten and finish the seam allowance fabric; for unrippled hems, use a light fusible interfacing strip along the inside edge of the t-shirt, press the hem up to fuse the hem in place, then stitch the hem. The interfaced area will prevent the knit from stretching as you sew.
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