Share
Pin
Tweet
Send
Share
Send
The promised master class. For a long time I wanted to try to sew such a frill of light fabric, so I decided to do the same on the remains of silk. It turned out a whole accessory)))
We process a strip of fabric on an overlock. The upper edge immediately with the assembly, the lower edge (which will be visible) and short sections with a roller seam, round corners. I had a segment of 10x142cm. But there can be many options here, more on that later.
On my yellow dress, the strip was folded in half, short sections stitched from the inside, then turned out and then worked together open sections with the same assembly.
Noting the middle of the product and the same indentation to the right and left of it to the desired distance, we pin the finished strip in a zigzag pattern from top to bottom.
Moreover, each next row passes under the previous one so that the upper processed edge of the strip is sufficiently closed. You can make the frill wide over the entire chest, or it can be completely narrow, it all depends on your imagination, the type of fabric and the model itself. It is possible to make rare rows from a wide strip, or it is possible from a narrow, but many rows and close to each other.
I tried to pin differently before attaching and looked the best. Therefore, it is better to cut a strip right away with a margin and then trim it so that you do not have to edify.
Here is how each row looks from the inside:
Stitch each row separately, starting from the top.Then we turn it off and grind the next one under it, laying a line in the direction of the corner (bending of the fabric when one row goes into another) as much as possible. Without grabbing the top row, like this:
Done:
It looks like this from the inside. My upper thread is the color of frill, and the lower one is in tone with the main fabric.
I had an idea to make such an accessory, as individual collars now wear, only I will have such a frill. To do this, I cut off the excess fabric so that it was not visible and sewn rep ribbon. Woo-a-la)))
You can wear it on top of some plain dress or under a jacket, imitating a top.
Thanks to the girls who were interested and encouraged me to create this master class, I myself would have been going for a long time)))
Share
Pin
Tweet
Send
Share
Send