I have been poking at this post since November 2025; work and life have been in waves of upheaval.
And the illustration disappeared and I had to redo it.
Sandra Betzina is a guiding light in construction techniques, in addition to the other talents she possesses.
https://youtu.be/Zzu6uW8RkYw?si=zdPuOveVkToSOv0-
The subscription website no longer exists,
There is a DVD with this technique out there in some library systems, but it is out of print.
The preview is:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T-QDfg6J9AU&t=135s
I have watched it, and this tutorial is based on that video. I would link you to the video if I could. I am being a little vague here on purpose.
The key is making a cardboard template. To trace around, to iron the edges over onto. Cardstock, cereal boxes, corrugated is too thick.
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| Click on this image to make it too damn big and legible. |
I am tracing the sewing lines onto the lining fabric.









Genius indeed.
ReplyDeleteWould you consider top-stitching the fashion fabric to the garment instead of slip-stitching? https://finishedthread.blogspot.com/
Hey, thanks for reading! You could do that, it would give two rows of machine stitching for reinforcement (and any pocket that gets used needs that). This method works better for fabrics that don't want topstitching (thick and plushy stuff like wool tweed).
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