I always iron out wrinkles before cutting out the pattern. Rule of thumb is to PRESS your pieces, but you can iron uncut fabric, finished garments, and stay-stitched pieces. The difference between pressing and ironing is whether you move the iron on the fabric or press it down and lift it up in a manner that does not distort the weave. When fabric is not supported by selvages, you must PRESS only--no sliding or gliding, not even under a pressing cloth. Happy stitching!
That's really handy to know- 👍 do you have to let it cool before moving the fabric, you know, before letting it hang over the side of the ironing board and doing the next section?
Thank you so much! I've been sewing for over 60 years and taking classes in sewing and fashion for over three years, and I've already learned four new useful tips from your video today. These tips will make sewing prom dresses so much easier to deal with.
Thank you so much for this lesson. I really appreciate it. I have lots of silk and satin from wedding gown and prom dresses that I purchased from Salvation Army at 75% off. I bought them all. Now I need to learn how to quilt with them.
With knits, I definitely use a rotary cutter to cut out my pieces, to prevent any unwanted stretching. If your pattern has a lot of curves to it, I would invest in a smaller rotary blade. The big blades work great though if you're just doing straight lines. Be sure to do it on a self-healing mat so you don't damage any surfaces. And if you don't want to invest in fabric weights, you can just use canned goods to hold everything in place. good luck!
In practice, holding tight doesn't work most of the time because the seams are not always on straight grain. I usually back with paper and tear away after stitching.
Thank you for fast replay! I do have small rotary cutter. Just didn't think of using it! Thank you. For the weights I use a few simple round rocks. I crocheted over them and they look pretty cool.
Thanks so much. I am making a really great dress out of slinky fabric and honestly have not worked with this type of fabric before. This will be fun and I'm sure I'll have fewer issues. Great video, well done.
I use these techniques with all fabric that's slippery and hard to work with. If you're making something for the first time, make a muslin. This means use a cheap fabric like muslin so you can work through the process and test the fit before using your nicer fabric.
Your video contains great tips and valuable information. I really like how you demonstrate attaching tissue paper to silk fabric! What a fantastic idea!
Thanks for sharing this. I'm going to be making a dress for my daughter out of crepe backed satin and will be adding some tissue paper to my list of supplies!
Thanks alot.....your video is very detailed and very good tips to stitch with silk fabrics, as i am already working with the silk fabric......was very helpfull for me.Great...
This is a GREAT channel - I love how you are able to magnify the image of the needle/machine. It even looks high definition. Thank you so much for offering this help! I will check in often! Suzy
@Virgina bliss i wouldn't because newspaper is pretty dirty and the ink could stain your fabric. I can usually pick up a pack of tissue paper from the 99cent store.
I would definitely use the tissue paper trick when sewing the seams. It'll keep it from stretching as you sew and should help with the puckering. Just rip it off when your seam is done. If your fabric can handle the heat, it might be better to use steam to iron it out.
Oh these are great tips. I'm making an 1870's formal ball gown for a musical I'm in, and the bustled part in the back is black silk. This should make it much easier to work with. Thanks so much.
Your videos are always so good - very detailed and with perfect camera angles where we can see everything going on. So helpful for beginners! If you're not already, you should be an instructor at a design school.
Help! My seams pucker like you show at the end of the video - holding it tight is a great tip, but what if the fabric was cut on the bias? I have so much trouble making my seams look neat when I sew slippery fabrics on the bias, and I can't find any resources online that help with this!
Thanks for the video! before I start working with silk what material do you recommend me to start with. to practice and which exercises with a stitch sewing machine? Thank you
Hi! I would like to ask that how do I know how "heavy" my fabric is? I'm going to work with a 100% polyester silk like fabric. Thank you so much for the anwer!
Thank you for this video, it is so informative and helpful :) ! I do have a question, with regards to fabric puckering. Could adjusting tension also help fix that?
Thanks for the wonderful tips and instruction! Should I use tissue paper alterations? I want to make some tucks in a Off the Rack blouse that is made of a poly crepe.
Linda Johnson it varies according the fabric so you just want to practice on scraps. Usually I loosen the thread tension a bit and put my foot pressure at a higher number.
Thanks a lot :D In mexico fabric stores don't have tags on their fabrics, just the ones with prices (at least the ones I know). I'm just starting to learn how to sew. Are there specific situation where knowing this characteristics are necessary?
I'm trying to sew a chiffon onto a silk charmeuse at the hemline. I washed the chiffon and now i'm wondering if I should iron the material before i cut out the pattern. The finished chiffon will be ironed but it stretches a lot when I do that. I don't want the seems to pucker when the customer washes the dress.
Does your machine just seem to get stuck in position? I hate when that happens! I find that the tissue paper trick seems to work well. So on the wrong side of your fabric you should have interfacing covering the buttonhole are. On the right side, lay a strip of tissue paper over the area you're going to do a buttonhole. Transfer your buttonhole mark to the tissue paper. You may want to pin your tissue paper to the fabric to hold it. Stitch buttonholes, tear off tissue paper. voila!
Thank you for this. I just bought some material for a costume and it's a silk-like material. I'm terrified I'm going to mess up. This video makes me a little less nervous about tackling this project. :D
+Jennifer Powers practice on some scraps to gain some confidence. :) I think the sewing isn't so bad, it's the cutting that can be the trickiest with slippy fabric. You can do it!
Jennifer Powers yea, I just bought LOADS of poly satin for a costume and I've only ever sewn cotton and canvas. I'm freaking terrified, but I figured I've gotta start sometimes so better sooner than later.
Thank you so much for your satin videos! Do you have any suggestion on the tension setting for bridal satin? It feels a lot heavier to me than the usual silky satin stuff I've seen. I bought 80/20 needles. Do you think that will do the trick? I also bought Coats & Clark Dual Duty XP extra fine thread, but now I am wondering if it's going to be too thin for the material I have. I'm so nervous! I am making my own wedding dress for the reception.
A Schwengler omg, that reminds me when my mom made my bridesmaid dress, years and years ago. The bride choose satin and all the seams in my dress were rippling. It had that "homemade" touch. haha. I think you'll be fine with 80/20 needles and I'd use just regular all purpose thread (or if the satin is actually silk satin, you can use a silk thread). If you have a walking foot, it would probably help, but definitely use the tissue paper trick. And practice on scraps until you have nice looking seams. You can do it! :)
oh no! That's exactly what I am afraid of! I want to make sure I do it right, and I won't wear it if it looks terribly homemade! :/ Haha. Yes, I have many presser feet and a walking foot is one of my favorites! I will make note and do that! Thank you! I read somewhere that Coats and Clark Dual Duty XP Extra fine was good for satin, but my satin is heavier weight. I suppose I may just need to try it on a swatch of fabric! Thank you for your input!
How do I do this with double sided silky fabrics? And this is a huge fabric piece, and I am almost hesitant to cut it up in case I need the extra space
+Vai Mardti I would say it depends on how slippery the fabric is. If it doesn't slip around much, then I would say you're probably fine but maybe use a rotary cutter to get a more accurate piece. If it's really slippery, I would take the time to cut on a single layer. This means for pieces on a fold, you need to place it on the fabric, use chalk to trace it, then flip the piece, lining up the center front and draw the other side, and then cut it all out.
Thank you for: 1. talking slowly and focusing the camera :) 2. breaking everything down to step-by-step slowly 3. the scotch tape trick 4. showing me how to thread the machine. I had actually figured out the holding the cloth part but the tension was off (your other video shows how to adjust that, i put it on 3.5). The fabrics I am using are all very thin and all very shiny, like silk, they are all from lessemf. can you help me figure out how to design & sew a cloth cpap mask?
I always iron out wrinkles before cutting out the pattern. Rule of thumb is to PRESS your pieces, but you can iron uncut fabric, finished garments, and stay-stitched pieces. The difference between pressing and ironing is whether you move the iron on the fabric or press it down and lift it up in a manner that does not distort the weave. When fabric is not supported by selvages, you must PRESS only--no sliding or gliding, not even under a pressing cloth. Happy stitching!
Great tip. Thank you
That's really handy to know- 👍
do you have to let it cool before moving the fabric, you know, before letting it hang over the side of the ironing board and doing the next section?
Brilliant 🌟 trick with the taping of the needle hole 🕳️ !!!!
Thank you so much! I've been sewing for over 60 years and taking classes in sewing and fashion for over three years, and I've already learned four new useful tips from your video today. These tips will make sewing prom dresses so much easier to deal with.
I'm so glad you found our tutorial helpful :)
Me too.
Thank you so much for this lesson. I really appreciate it. I have lots of silk and satin from wedding gown and prom dresses that I purchased from Salvation Army at 75% off. I bought them all. Now I need to learn how to quilt with them.
With knits, I definitely use a rotary cutter to cut out my pieces, to prevent any unwanted stretching. If your pattern has a lot of curves to it, I would invest in a smaller rotary blade. The big blades work great though if you're just doing straight lines. Be sure to do it on a self-healing mat so you don't damage any surfaces. And if you don't want to invest in fabric weights, you can just use canned goods to hold everything in place. good luck!
I have the worst luck with rotary cutters
In practice, holding tight doesn't work most of the time because the seams are not always on straight grain. I usually back with paper and tear away after stitching.
How? ;(
@@sassyk.5173 Same as sandwiching except omitting the top layer of paper. If you have an even-feed foot attachment, even better.
Thank you for fast replay!
I do have small rotary cutter. Just didn't think of using it! Thank you.
For the weights I use a few simple round rocks. I crocheted over them and they look pretty cool.
Thank you! I'm relatively new to sewing, but need to make three pieces out of silk-like fabric. You just saved my life!
Thanks! Glad you found our tips handy. Have a nice day.
This is right on time!!😁😊........ where were you when I started two years ago😯😌
Thanks so much. I am making a really great dress out of slinky fabric and honestly have not worked with this type of fabric before. This will be fun and I'm sure I'll have fewer issues. Great video, well done.
This is a life saving video! I was in desperate need for these tips. Thanks so much!
I use these techniques with all fabric that's slippery and hard to work with. If you're making something for the first time, make a muslin. This means use a cheap fabric like muslin so you can work through the process and test the fit before using your nicer fabric.
this is exactly what I needed to know for a project a friend of mine has me doing--brilliant and thank you.
Your video contains great tips and valuable information. I really like how you demonstrate attaching tissue paper to silk fabric! What a fantastic idea!
Thank You! I really like that you made short and simple. I've been forgetting the easy steps and reminders. ;)
Great tips. Most people don't mention these things. Thank you.
Thanks for sharing this. I'm going to be making a dress for my daughter out of crepe backed satin and will be adding some tissue paper to my list of supplies!
It really does make a difference :)
Thanks alot.....your video is very detailed and very good tips to stitch with silk fabrics, as i am already working with the silk fabric......was very helpfull for me.Great...
Thank you for these great tips.❤
This is a GREAT channel - I love how you are able to magnify the image of the needle/machine. It even looks high definition. Thank you so much for offering this help! I will check in often! Suzy
We try our best to make our tutorials in high quality. Thanks for your kind words. :)
Using the tape is a new one for me. Very helpful.
@Virgina bliss i wouldn't because newspaper is pretty dirty and the ink could stain your fabric. I can usually pick up a pack of tissue paper from the 99cent store.
Thank you for your kind words. :)
of course. :) Our tip is just to help out in those cases where you still a little.
I would definitely use the tissue paper trick when sewing the seams. It'll keep it from stretching as you sew and should help with the puckering. Just rip it off when your seam is done. If your fabric can handle the heat, it might be better to use steam to iron it out.
What tension you used?
Your tutorials are just brilliant thank you
Oh these are great tips. I'm making an 1870's formal ball gown for a musical I'm in, and the bustled part in the back is black silk. This should make it much easier to work with. Thanks so much.
Your videos are always so good - very detailed and with perfect camera angles where we can see everything going on. So helpful for beginners! If you're not already, you should be an instructor at a design school.
Susan El Otmani thanks so much for the kind words :)
Thank you! That was really helpful! I was also wondering about any tension adjustment needed but will set it to mid-range (around 3).
Thank you Mme , i'm impressed by the amount of information and detailing I had from this video , thank you
You're very welcome!
Really great videos! So clear & precise. I have no trouble understanding this & I am a very new beginner to sewing!
Rachel Clo I'm so glad you found our tutorials helpful! You can do it :)
This video was so helpful. Thanks for all of the great tips.
Great tips! Slippery and flimsy fabrics can be a nightmare!
Thank you. This is just the information I've been looking for.
Someone Somewhere I'm so glad you found our tutorial helpful :)
Thanks for the helpful tips as I can't stop myself from sewing a silk duvet!
Thank you for taking the time to teach me!
I'm glad you enjoyed our tutorial :)
this is an awesome vid with great tips! Thank you. It covers everything I was looking for
Help! My seams pucker like you show at the end of the video - holding it tight is a great tip, but what if the fabric was cut on the bias? I have so much trouble making my seams look neat when I sew slippery fabrics on the bias, and I can't find any resources online that help with this!
Shorten stitch length, reduce the thread tension (top and bottom), and use a sacrificial tissue layer. Or a walking foot.
Much Love, Appreciation AND&AND Admiration!!
💃🏼💨
Clear , succinct and informative. I love it when you show the differences. Great tip. Subscribe!!!!!.
+Karen Yau thanks so much for subscribing! :)
Thank you! I'm sewing an "Elsa" costume for my daughter, and will try the tissue trick when sewing the areas with Chiffon.
Thank You so much!!!
yay! glad we were able to help :)
thank you for sharing your tips and techniques, i've learned a lot
so helpful. thank you.
Thanks for sharing, very useful tips here. Hope you will share more on sewing jersey knits :)
***** Thanks for the suggestion. I'll add it to the list
Very helpful video.. Thanks a million for this..
Thanks for really useful tips.
Rukhsana Shabir You're welcome. So glad you found it helpful :)
Thanks for the video!
before I start working with silk
what material do you recommend me to start with. to practice
and which exercises with a stitch sewing machine?
Thank you
Very helpful thank you soo much i should have watched it because i sewed my satin jacket!
Hi! I would like to ask that how do I know how "heavy" my fabric is? I'm going to work with a 100% polyester silk like fabric. Thank you so much for the anwer!
Excellent guidance, thank you!
Great advice! Just what I needed! Thank you!
Thank you, the tape idea over the hole helped a lot!!! 8D
what presser foot do u use? great tips for silk
Thank you for sharing your knowledge 😎👍
When uding the paper lsyers what Scissors would you use?? 😮
Thanks! Very good tips
Very helpful !!! Thank you soooo much !
Thank you
I’m always wondering how come store clothing has no pucker at all ?:(( how do they do that ??
great video - love the tape tip!
patricia ray I'm glad you found it helpful :)
I like the tissue paper the best, ty
What about the best tension degree, and the bottom teeth, is better they are high or going down?
Thank you for this video, it is so informative and helpful :) ! I do have a question, with regards to fabric puckering. Could adjusting tension also help fix that?
Once again thank you for your videos! I get so fraustrated when my fabrics get jammed in the machine.
Thanks for the wonderful tips and instruction! Should I use tissue paper alterations? I want to make some tucks in a Off the Rack blouse that is made of a poly crepe.
yup, I use tissue paper a lot when I sew.
Thank you ma
Thanks this helps alot
Thank you so much for your information!!! It will be very helpful. Also, one thing I wondered, do you adjust you tension at all?
Linda Johnson it varies according the fabric so you just want to practice on scraps. Usually I loosen the thread tension a bit and put my foot pressure at a higher number.
Excellent video, thanks!
Thanks a lot :D In mexico fabric stores don't have tags on their fabrics, just the ones with prices (at least the ones I know). I'm just starting to learn how to sew. Are there specific situation where knowing this characteristics are necessary?
Hi! I have seen people tearing satin before stitching why do they do this? Can you explain it?
Thank you 💖
I'm trying to sew a chiffon onto a silk charmeuse at the hemline. I washed the chiffon and now i'm wondering if I should iron the material before i cut out the pattern. The finished chiffon will be ironed but it stretches a lot when I do that. I don't want the seems to pucker when the customer washes the dress.
I love your videos; Can I use organza on all very light polyester and or silk fabric?
Jean Dudley yes, that should be fine :)
Thanks and Ilove your videos, makes a bunch of sense....
It was just my regular presser foot, nothing fancy.
amazing video, thanks!!
Tension also makes the stitches lay flat. Sew samples with different tension and stitch length
What is the thinnest silk with a dull side along with a silk side? 100% silk preferably stretchy maybe even a mixture of silk and elastic
Brilliant!
Thanks for the kind words :)
Thnx
Beautiful, thank you so much!
Does your machine just seem to get stuck in position? I hate when that happens! I find that the tissue paper trick seems to work well. So on the wrong side of your fabric you should have interfacing covering the buttonhole are. On the right side, lay a strip of tissue paper over the area you're going to do a buttonhole. Transfer your buttonhole mark to the tissue paper. You may want to pin your tissue paper to the fabric to hold it. Stitch buttonholes, tear off tissue paper. voila!
Learned a lot with this tutorial THANK YOU VERY much :) Is sewing charmeuse done the same way?
I would say it would be similar, yes
I would say size 11 sharp should be ok
Thanks so much! Where do you get the tissue paper? Is it like a special paper to use for fabrics?
hellokittykatt5 I just used regular gift tissue paper that I picked up at the dollar store
Thank you for this. I just bought some material for a costume and it's a silk-like material. I'm terrified I'm going to mess up. This video makes me a little less nervous about tackling this project. :D
+Jennifer Powers practice on some scraps to gain some confidence. :) I think the sewing isn't so bad, it's the cutting that can be the trickiest with slippy fabric. You can do it!
Jennifer Powers yea, I just bought LOADS of poly satin for a costume and I've only ever sewn cotton and canvas. I'm freaking terrified, but I figured I've gotta start sometimes so better sooner than later.
Thank you so much for your satin videos! Do you have any suggestion on the tension setting for bridal satin? It feels a lot heavier to me than the usual silky satin stuff I've seen. I bought 80/20 needles. Do you think that will do the trick? I also bought Coats & Clark Dual Duty XP extra fine thread, but now I am wondering if it's going to be too thin for the material I have. I'm so nervous! I am making my own wedding dress for the reception.
A Schwengler omg, that reminds me when my mom made my bridesmaid dress, years and years ago. The bride choose satin and all the seams in my dress were rippling. It had that "homemade" touch. haha. I think you'll be fine with 80/20 needles and I'd use just regular all purpose thread (or if the satin is actually silk satin, you can use a silk thread). If you have a walking foot, it would probably help, but definitely use the tissue paper trick. And practice on scraps until you have nice looking seams. You can do it! :)
oh no! That's exactly what I am afraid of! I want to make sure I do it right, and I won't wear it if it looks terribly homemade! :/ Haha. Yes, I have many presser feet and a walking foot is one of my favorites! I will make note and do that! Thank you! I read somewhere that Coats and Clark Dual Duty XP Extra fine was good for satin, but my satin is heavier weight. I suppose I may just need to try it on a swatch of fabric! Thank you for your input!
Like the tissue paper idea 💡 good job🥸
glad to help out. :)
Thank you very much, this was helpful.
cool, nice video
How do I do this with double sided silky fabrics? And this is a huge fabric piece, and I am almost hesitant to cut it up in case I need the extra space
I love your videos so much. :) I was wondering if it's safe to cut silk fabrics on the fold?
+Vai Mardti I would say it depends on how slippery the fabric is. If it doesn't slip around much, then I would say you're probably fine but maybe use a rotary cutter to get a more accurate piece. If it's really slippery, I would take the time to cut on a single layer. This means for pieces on a fold, you need to place it on the fabric, use chalk to trace it, then flip the piece, lining up the center front and draw the other side, and then cut it all out.
Thank you for: 1. talking slowly and focusing the camera :) 2. breaking everything down to step-by-step slowly 3. the scotch tape trick 4. showing me how to thread the machine.
I had actually figured out the holding the cloth part but the tension was off (your other video shows how to adjust that, i put it on 3.5). The fabrics I am using are all very thin and all very shiny, like silk, they are all from lessemf.
can you help me figure out how to design & sew a cloth cpap mask?
THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR THESE! I LEARNED SO MUCH! You saved my life! LOL and it answered a LOT of my questions~! ~u have a new subscriber
thank you for subscribing!
hello there, your videos are all great and helpful. May I know how could I possibly reach you further for some inquiries? Thank you!
you can send a message through the professor pincushion fb page