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9th October 08, 06:59 AM
#31
As a garment sewer, I had a slight advantage going into making a kilt. I know how to hand sew, measure (twice ) and most importantly, how to curse when I have to un-sew 15 pleats when I make a mistake!
My first kilt was also a Dress Black Erskine, to mark pleats I didn't use chalk. I used those teeny tiny brass safety pins. You can get the pin exactly on the thread you need. I found chalk left too wide of a line. I too made a pattern for the apron, but I used my drafting paper (a roll of exam table paper), placed the pattern on the tartan, traced it off, then traced it again with thread. I also have a dressmakers curve which made making the curve from waist to hip easier. And since I have 13" difference between waist to hip, that curve was rather sharp.
When sewing pleats, I use betweens. These are generally quilting needles. While I can't claim to have seen Barb sew, I know you'd be in awe of a real quilter when they get going. A shorter needle helps when you want to sew faster. Unfortunately, the thicker the fabric, the longer and thicker the needle has to be. I've been working with 10oz - 12oz tartan which is generally used for dance kilts and I can get away with the shorter needle.
Lighting and experience is the key for seeing while sewing. My Ott is great, but can't beat sitting at a window in full sun. The experience helps in knowing where I'm sewing when using black on black. The more you sew, the better you'll get at 'seeing'.
Last edited by Dixiecat; 9th October 08 at 07:00 AM.
Reason: formatting
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11th October 08, 07:50 AM
#32
I find betweens to be just a little too short for stitching pleats, but this is just a preference. I do use a very fine needle - something like a between but a little longer. I find that, if I use a fatter needle, it kind of pushes the threads around, rather than piercing them, and you can't pleat as accurately. You think the needle is coming up and going down in a particular spot, but it isn't really, and things don't line up perfectly. I haven't had that trouble if I use a finer needle.
I do find that I put a lot of stress on a needle when I'm sewing pleats. After a kilt or two, my needle typically has a bend in it, and after several more, it will just snap in half at some point (metal fatigue, I assume).
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11th October 08, 08:23 AM
#33
 Originally Posted by Barb T.
I find betweens to be just a little too short for stitching pleats, but this is just a preference. I do use a very fine needle - something like a between but a little longer. I find that, if I use a fatter needle, it kind of pushes the threads around, rather than piercing them, and you can't pleat as accurately. You think the needle is coming up and going down in a particular spot, but it isn't really, and things don't line up perfectly. I haven't had that trouble if I use a finer needle.
I do find that I put a lot of stress on a needle when I'm sewing pleats. After a kilt or two, my needle typically has a bend in it, and after several more, it will just snap in half at some point (metal fatigue, I assume).
I thought that bending the needle was just me. I'm glad to hear that it isn't. The first fine needle I tried bent after the first pleat and in the end I had to just a thicker one. I had put it down to too much brawn and not enough brains.
Mark
Tetley
The Traveller
What a wonderful world it is that has girls in it. - Lazarus Long
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12th October 08, 07:03 AM
#34
So it isn't just the poor quality of the needles. As I sew left handed most of the time - I can use my right hand but not so accuratly, I assumed that a combination of my guitar playing, death grip on the neck, left hand strength and the supermarket bought needles was the cause of the bending and breakages.
I am awaiting new reading glasses, which the optician took great pains over finding the exact corrections that would give my brain the same view through both eyes. I then plan to do some machine sewing of pleats, as so far it has not been all that sucessful - mostly due to not being able to see what I am doing.
My own problem is not enough time, and I have cut down on the housekeeping far too much already...
Anne the Pleater
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12th October 08, 08:11 AM
#35
 Originally Posted by Pleater
My own problem is not enough time, and I have cut down on the housekeeping far too much already...
Anne the Pleater
Housekeeping? What's that?
Tetley
The Traveller
What a wonderful world it is that has girls in it. - Lazarus Long
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