When sewing shrug that is ruffled and sleeveles how do you turn it rightside out?

Posted On: Saturday, May 1st, 2010 at 12:40 pm

I am making shrug that has a ruffle all the way around the edge and a little ruffle for a cap sleeve. I sewed the ruffle on first and now I need to sew the lining to the fabric and leave a place to turn it. Where would be the best place where I would have the lest amount of hand sewing?

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2 Responses to “When sewing shrug that is ruffled and sleeveles how do you turn it rightside out?”

  1. abacaxitoo says:

    The easiest place to turn it would be at the bottom of the back. leave about 6 inches open.

  2. kay says:

    lower center back or inside jacket lining. You actually need only a few inches to turn through.

    Here’s the order of stitching I learned from Connie Amaden Crawford’s
    book, “Guide to Fashion Sewing”, (Fairchild) which uses many of the RTW
    methods for quick but professional construction. That book has some very
    good simple drawings that may make much more sense to you than my attempts
    to explain the drawings in words.

    1. Cut vest and lining pieces out of fabric. Lining should be 1/8″
    smaller all around than fashion fabric.

    2. Interface vest. (at least a 2″ band around the back neck, front from
    neck edge to front edges, around the bottom, and armholes — it’s
    usually easiest to just block-fuse the front.)

    3. Apply pockets, construct darts, sew shoulder seams on vest and vest
    lining. Press.

    4. Match right sides of vest and vest lining together at front opening,
    lower front edges, and neckline. Start sewing about an inch from the side
    seam on one front lower edge, and sew along the front lower edge, up the
    front, around the neckline, back down the other side of the front opening,
    and to within an inch or so of the other side seam. [You'll want this inch
    or so of unsewn seam when you hit step 8]

    –>IMPORTANT: Leave side seams and lower back edge of vest unsewn.< --
    Trim stitched seam allowances to 1/4" (if you're not using a serger).

    5. Match armhole to armhole on fashion fabric and lining, and sew
    from sideseam to sideseam (all the way to the edges)

    6. Reach into the lower back edge of the vest (you've left it
    unstitched, and through the shoulder area. Grab the vest front and pull
    it through the lower back. Repeat, pulling the other side of the vest
    front through the other shoulder.

    7. Press all sewn seams flat, rolling the fashion fabric slightly to
    the lining side.
    8. Reaching through the unsewn lower back section, match side seam of
    fashion fabric from armhole to hem. Sew. Repeat, this time matching
    lining side seam to lining side seam. Press the side seams flat. At this
    point the vest should look like it's nicely constructed except the lower
    back seam and part of the lower front seam is unsewn and unhemmed.

    9. Turn the vest back inside out -- this is not really a complete
    "inside out, as all you really need is the unstitched section at the
    lower edge of the vest to be available to sew. Pin the lower lining and
    fashion fabric edges together, and stitch BUT LEAVE A GAP OF A COUPLE OF
    INCHES UNSTITCHED AT CENTER BACK. (How wide this gap is depends on how
    heavy the fabric is. I leave 2-3 inches with a tapestry fabric vest,
    but only an inch or so on something lightweight.)

    10. Turn the vest right side out again through that little bitty
    opening. (Yes, it does work ). Match the unsewn sections at lower
    center back, and blind stitch, top stitch, edge stitch, or hand stitch
    the last inch or so closed. Press.

    11. Construct buttonholes or other closures, do any finishing stitching
    desired.

    In step 10, some commercial sewing leaves the opening just pressed,
    not sewn — especially in a well-behaved fabric with a small opening
    needed. If you want to do that, I like to serge-finish the lining
    and fashion fabric in that area between steps 3 and 4.

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