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  1. #1
    BEEDEE's Avatar
    BEEDEE is offline
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    Flashes - an alternative style

    The post from the F-H.C.A.G. was a great post on flash construction. Here is an alternate finish that I did on a pair for the kilt I am making from Fraser and Kirkbright's gray/green tartan. I prefer a fringed end to a traditional tartan flash and you don't have to worry about the material unraveling. I ironed a simple tube and hand stitched at the back. The left hand pair is a front view, the right hand pair a back view.



    Brian
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  2. #2
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    I like this style as well. I had Rocky make my St. David's flashes this way. Good stuff.
    “A proud man is always looking down on things and people; and, of course, as long as you're looking down, you can't see something that's above you.” -C.S. Lewis

  3. #3
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    Those are cool! I love the fringe. How do you keep the fringe from unraveling? I keep meaning to ask way2fractious every time he talks about fringing, and I keep forgetting.

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    The Flame-Haired Celtic Amazon Goddess

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  4. #4
    BEEDEE's Avatar
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    The design is not original - the flashes I got with my tank (Weathered Hunting MacRae) were done like this. I unravel about 3/4 inch and just leave it at that. There seems to be enough tension in the remaining weave to keep the threads in place.

    Brian
    Commissioner - Clan MacRae Society of North America http://www.macrae.org/
    Scottish Heritage Society of Eastern North Carolina http://shsenc.org
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  5. #5
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    Quote Originally Posted by The F-H.C.A.G. View Post
    Those are cool! I love the fringe. How do you keep the fringe from unraveling? I keep meaning to ask way2fractious every time he talks about fringing, and I keep forgetting.

    Be well,
    You can just sew a line at the point you want the fringe to stop. That will keep it from unraveling any further.

    Scott
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  6. #6
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    Couldn't you also use Fray Check on the reverse side at the point you want them to stop unraveling?
    John
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  7. #7
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    You can use fray check, but I personally can't stand the stuff. A real tight machine straight stitch will take care of fraying. In reality, once you get past about an inch in, the horizontal threads get pretty hard to get out of there.
    Charles Walker Jr.
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