Good habits pay off in more professional looking garments. Backstitching (or back tacking, for those with a different Anglo accent) keeps your seams from unravelling.
Here’s a quick video about backstitching. Make it a habit.
p.s. I’ve been away from the camera, because I got interviewed and helped work on an ebook about video marketing! You can check it out at Video Marketing Success Book.
…perfect, I’m gonna hold on to this blog in my bookmarks, im sure i canuse it sometime, do you prefer singer?
I do prefer Singer, probably because that’s what was always in my parent’s homes! When it came time to buy my own machine, I just naturally bought a Singer.
From what I’ve read, the cheap plastic Singers don’t stand up to hard work, and the computerized ones aren’t as good as competitors. However, the workhorse “old reliable” mechanical Singers always get great ratings by those of us who just need to sew.
Thank you for posting this simple yet helpful video.
Thank you so much for posting this video tutorial. I just bought a sewing machine and want to learn how to sew. I live in the country and don’t know anyone around here. Videos like this are so awesome for someone like me. I learn from watching someone do it rather than reading about it. I wish I could find more tutorials like this.
[...] at the seams, quite literally of course. I use 3 different tools for this task, seam rippers for back stitching, scissors to remove any serging, and an x-acto knife for the chain stitching. Plain seams can be [...]