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Advice: how do you do dropped hems?



 
 
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  #1  
Old October 15th 07, 10:28 PM posted to rec.crafts.textiles.sewing
Rob
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Posts: 3
Default Advice: how do you do dropped hems?

Trousers (pants) are worn quite wide at the moment and also long,
giving a large "break".
Can anyone tell me how to do a hem (at the end of the leg!) which is
"dropped"; that is, longer at the back than at the front.
Due to the angle, the turned-in material no longer distributes itself
evenly inside the leg.
Any hints on how to cope with this?
Thanks.

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  #2  
Old October 15th 07, 11:18 PM posted to rec.crafts.textiles.sewing
Trish Brown
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Posts: 464
Default Advice: how do you do dropped hems?

Rob wrote:
Trousers (pants) are worn quite wide at the moment and also long,
giving a large "break".
Can anyone tell me how to do a hem (at the end of the leg!) which is
"dropped"; that is, longer at the back than at the front.
Due to the angle, the turned-in material no longer distributes itself
evenly inside the leg.
Any hints on how to cope with this?
Thanks.


I HATE HEMMING!!!! So I do it as quick and dirty as I can.

Once, my DFIL presented me with *nine* pairs of trousers to hem exactly
as you describe. I used two methods. One was to put a tiny tuck in the
fabric at each seam and stitch each tuck down carefully by hand. The
other was to run a gathering stitch along the bulky hem edge, press it
dead flat and then stitch it with the machine.

The second method works much better than you might imagine, especially
if you're doing flares.

HTH,

--
Trish {|:-} Newcastle, NSW, Australia
  #3  
Old October 16th 07, 01:19 AM posted to rec.crafts.textiles.sewing
Joy Beeson
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Posts: 134
Default Advice: how do you do dropped hems?

On Mon, 15 Oct 2007 14:28:56 -0700, Rob wrote:

Can anyone tell me how to do a hem (at the end of the leg!) which is
"dropped"; that is, longer at the back than at the front.
Due to the angle, the turned-in material no longer distributes itself
evenly inside the leg.


One approach is to make the hem as narrow as possible.

Another is to face the edge instead of hemming it.


Joy Beeson
--
joy beeson at comcast dot net
http://roughsewing.home.comcast.net/ -- sewing
http://n3f.home.comcast.net/ -- Writers' Exchange
The above message is a Usenet post.
I don't recall having given anyone permission to use it on a Web site.
  #4  
Old October 16th 07, 04:14 AM posted to rec.crafts.textiles.sewing
Doreen
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Posts: 23
Default Advice: how do you do dropped hems?

Rob wrote:
Trousers (pants) are worn quite wide at the moment and also long,
giving a large "break".
Can anyone tell me how to do a hem (at the end of the leg!) which is
"dropped"; that is, longer at the back than at the front.
Due to the angle, the turned-in material no longer distributes itself
evenly inside the leg.
Any hints on how to cope with this?
Thanks.


To give the front hem edge a little extra ease so that it can be
stitched without puckering the trousers, I sometimes undo part, perhaps
half, of the turned-up portion of the side seam and inseam seams and
spread them open just a little. If you do this it's a good idea to
secure the partially opened seams with a few whip stitches.

Doreen in Alabama
  #5  
Old October 17th 07, 11:01 AM posted to rec.crafts.textiles.sewing
Rob
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Posts: 3
Default Advice: how do you do dropped hems?

On 16 okt, 05:14, Doreen wrote:
Rob wrote:
Trousers (pants) are worn quite wide at the moment and also long,
giving a large "break".
Can anyone tell me how to do a hem (at the end of the leg!) which is
"dropped"; that is, longer at the back than at the front.
Due to the angle, the turned-in material no longer distributes itself
evenly inside the leg.
Any hints on how to cope with this?
Thanks.


To give the front hem edge a little extra ease so that it can be
stitched without puckering the trousers, I sometimes undo part, perhaps
half, of the turned-up portion of the side seam and inseam seams and
spread them open just a little. If you do this it's a good idea to
secure the partially opened seams with a few whip stitches.

Doreen in Alabama


Thank you all for your helpful replies. I will first try Doreen's
method on an old pair!
Joy, what does "facing the edge" mean in this context?
TIA

  #6  
Old October 17th 07, 11:39 AM posted to rec.crafts.textiles.sewing
Trish Brown
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Posts: 464
Default Advice: how do you do dropped hems?

Rob wrote:
On 16 okt, 05:14, Doreen wrote:
Rob wrote:
Trousers (pants) are worn quite wide at the moment and also long,
giving a large "break".
Can anyone tell me how to do a hem (at the end of the leg!) which is
"dropped"; that is, longer at the back than at the front.
Due to the angle, the turned-in material no longer distributes itself
evenly inside the leg.
Any hints on how to cope with this?
Thanks.

To give the front hem edge a little extra ease so that it can be
stitched without puckering the trousers, I sometimes undo part, perhaps
half, of the turned-up portion of the side seam and inseam seams and
spread them open just a little. If you do this it's a good idea to
secure the partially opened seams with a few whip stitches.

Doreen in Alabama


Thank you all for your helpful replies. I will first try Doreen's
method on an old pair!
Joy, what does "facing the edge" mean in this context?
TIA


Hee! I'm jumping in here because I faced a hem myself this morning! LOLOLOL!

Facing a hem is what you do when you've stupidly neglected to leave
enough excess fabric to turn up much of a hem (say you've only got 1/4"
to turn up, for example). In my case, I made two little nightdresses for
my great-nieces and *forgot to leave anything for hems!!!!* (I can't
believe I did that!)

Since I was running very low on the nightdress fabric (a 'Dora' satin
print), I just cut some strips of nice cotton voile and used that for my
'hems'. I sewed it onto the bottoms of the nighties, overlocked the raw
edge, pressed the stitched-on bit upward and then caught up the hem by
hand just as if it were a real hem.

Just cut a bit of fabric the length of the required hem and as deep as
you want your new hem to be. You place it, right sides facing, on the
outside of the hem and sew along where the extreme end of the garment
will be. Then, you turn it inside out, press the 'seam' you've made and
hem as usual.

I've used extra-wide bias tape for this purpose and it works very well,
especially for a slightly shaped garment, such as an A-line dress or
flared trouser legs. Careful pressing makes the difference, I find.

HTH

--
Trish {|:-} Newcastle, NSW, Australia
  #7  
Old October 18th 07, 03:21 AM posted to rec.crafts.textiles.sewing
Joy Beeson
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Posts: 134
Default Advice: how do you do dropped hems?


When using facing to deal with a curved hem, you need to cut a facing
the same shape as the bottom of the trouser leg. (This is easy when
making from scratch, because you just copy the pattern used for
cutting the leg. When altering, you'll have to lay the leg on paper
and poke pins through the pants to make your facing pattern.)

When applying a bias-tape facing, as mentioned in the previous post,
you can get away with sewing a straight facing to a curved hem because
the tape is very narrow, and it stretches. (Try to ease it on when
the curve is concave, and stretch it a bit when the curve is convex.)

Another plan is to leave just a seam allowance at the hem, turn it to
the inside, then applique' something over the raw edge: bias tape,
narrow all-cotton twill tape (polyester tape doesn't have enough
give), rick-rack, seam binding, hemming lace, ribbon -- anything you
can find and like the looks of that will bend around the curve.

And that will stand up to being cleaned the same way as the pants.
Don't forget to wash it first, if the hem will ever get wet.

Joy Beeson
--
joy beeson at comcast dot net
http://roughsewing.home.comcast.net/ -- sewing
http://n3f.home.comcast.net/ -- Writers' Exchange
The above message is a Usenet post.
I don't recall having given anyone permission to use it on a Web site.
 




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