But before that .... Rachel progress.
I used to sew my own clothing back in high school, even my prom gowns, there was no option for tall skinny girls over fifty years ago. And I hated it. Still have the same machine.
When caring for mom, I started altering her clothing to cover coffee and food stains. This led to other family and friends bringing tops for me to play with and do the same. It was fun! Also hides holes from cat claws. The easiest was a wide print center band from top to bottom with buttons. Recently purchased tall tops from Old Navy that are LONG to wear with leggings and I'm considering adding decoration.
Using a fusible for applique, these were so easy, I just outline the edges with a machine zig zag after fusing. But learned that the cotton fabric MUST be washed and dried first! On some, the edges were left to fray with just a straight stitch outline. The top center back always had a smaller coordinating element.
I've tried sewing stretchy jersey before and it was a mess, never flat and neat. Adding hem or other lightweight fusible offered flat hems that were stiff and obvious. This product is not fused. A thin strip of tacky hold that will be
removed when washed, no residual stiffness. No hot iron, no heat at all required. You just press it on the edge (hem, zipper, applique), remove paper strip, fold over or secure the second fabric, finger press. It held the jersey secure enough to stitch without stretching and IF my machine was working, it would be even better. It won't pick up bobbin thread for any stitch other than straight.
But it's a nightshirt that went from floor length to knee length and was so much easier, and the hem is neat!
About the kids' gifts. I used to love spending hours in stores looking for top and bottoms that coordinated, but Miss Sophia has become so fussy that is a waste of time and money. Autistic Matt rarely will accept all items so their mom is better at knowing what they will wear. Last year we went with new blankets, comforters, pillows, underwear. So more underwear this year and I'm thinking sleeping bags. They use them for watching TV and unzip to add to their bed when really cold. Been a few years, I'll bet they are tattered by now. Cash? Visa cards one year were not spent on them, another story, absolutely not an option for such young kids.
Monday monday melting snow.
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