I'd like to maintain the original seam -- just make the jeans a few inches shorter. I think I've read that this is possible. Anyone know?
Asked by ASalazar 30 months ago Similar questions: hem jeans retain original seam Arts > Sewing, Craft & Hobby.
Similar questions: hem jeans retain original seam.
Here's how to do it. And there was much rejoicing, for the answer to their burning question was provided by, of all sources, Z. Cavaricci!(Z.
, I haven't thought you were cool since 1991, but you've wound your way back into my good graces. I wonder what the Queer Eye guys from whom this question originated would think of you. )How to Hem Jeans the Cool WayThe process is intuitive - exactly what most of us thought and almost exactly how the brilliant Becca Jo theorized in her comment.Z.
Has schmooshed it into a helpful, step-by-step photo tutorial for the visual among us. Since originally posting about this in June, I have received a ton of e-mails asking whether we've figured this out yet, and I'm proud to say it a team bloggers' effort got to the bottom of this quandry with a little help from Z. :Strangely enough, I somehow missed Yvette's probably-long-ago comment right here on Fig and Plum (I still can't find it Yvette - I'm sorry!) directing me to the tutorial.
I finally found the link while perusing Not Martha, who referred back to Quidnunc, who referred back to the invisible comment. Hence, Link via Not Martha, via Quidnunc, via, mysteriously, a poster here.As they say in legal research, looks like we've come full circle. Anyhoo, thanks, all!
Can't wait to give it a try. *** Update *** (10.5.04)This works like a charm! I hemmed three pairs of jeans last night, ones I'd been rolling up or had improvised temporary hems for, and despite flaring, despite worn spots in the fabric, they have a new lease on life as petite jeans!
Nothing to add to the tutorial - it's fabu. *** Update *** (9.6.05)Z. Cavaricci has removed the tutorial from their website, but you, Dear Readers, can still download the tutorial here as an MS Word doc.
Sources: http://www.figandplum.com/archives/000215.html .
The "European Hem. " shortens your jeans while keeping your original hem. Petites are too short for me, but sometimes a regular inseam is too long, and a regular old grandma hem in your jeans makes it look like, well, your grandma did it.(No offense to granny seamstresses, but if you're gonna wear jeans, y'want 'em to look like jeans, no?)Well, God and Google have shown me the light.
The "European Hem. " It shortens your jeans while keeping your original hem -- with its jeans-y details -- intact. You can pay a tailor 20 bucks, or do it at home in the time it takes a Daily Show interviewee to realize this, in fact, won't help his cause and/or business.
Just wanted to share this with my fat sistahs. daciaray.com/?p=38It's not mentioned in the tutorial, but if you're hemming the Denim Lites, or any of the jeans with a bit of stretch, you'll want to adjust your thread and stitch accordingly. Edited to add: mmm... shortening... *Homer drool* Sources: http://www.dimensionsmagazine.com/forums/showthread.php?t=12136 .
You can find the steps below on hemming jeans shorter but keeping the original seam. How to Hem JeansOctober 30th, 2005I found this fabulously perfect way to hem jeans on the Cavaricci site, which has since been taken down, so here’s the lowdown. This method keeps the original hem in tact and is especially helpful now that all jeans are made to be 34 inches long for mammoth supermodels.
Plus, it took less than 30 minutes. A couple notes: It’s best to do one leg at a time, so as not to have too much undoing to do in case something goes awry. Also, it’s good to know the length that you want each leg to be.
Sometimes, one leg will be a bit shorter or longer than the other before you hem. Step 1: Decide how much length you would like to take off. Divide that number in half.(Hems should fall just below the bottom of your ankle.
Also, if you generally wear high heels, or a certain height of heel, you might want your hem a bit longer - it should fall an inch to a half inch above the floor at your heel. )Step 2: Cuff the jeans. I wanted to take two inches off my hem, so I measured one inch out from the original hem line and pinned.(Do not include the distance from the hem to the end of the jean in your calculations.)Step 3: Pin around the rest of the cuff, taking care to measure each time you pin.
Mind the seams while you’re pinning. Make sure that the stitching lines up at each seam. Step 4: It’s time to stitch.
You want to place your needle and continue sewing right next to the original hem. Stitch on the right side of the hem, or the side farthest from the bottom of the jean. Sew all the way around the cuff.
Be sure you don’t sew through both front and back sides of the jeans (making it so that the foot hole is sewn shut)! You can either cut the excess off, leaving about a half inch for fraying, or iron the extra material in. Turn the leg right side out and press the new seam flat, revealing the old hem.
Voila! No more slouchy, unflattering leg. Sources: http://www.daciaray.com/?p=38 .
This method keeps the original hem in tact and is especially helpful now that all jeans are long. A couple notes: It’s best to do one leg at a time, so as not to have too much undoing to do in case something goes awry. Also, it’s good to know the length that you want each leg to be.
Sometimes, one leg will be a bit shorter or longer than the other before you hem. Step 1: Decide how much length you would like to take off. Divide that number in half.(Hems should fall just below the bottom of your ankle.
Also, if you generally wear high heels, or a certain height of heel, you might want your hem a bit longer - it should fall an inch to a half inch above the floor at your heel. )Step 2: Cuff the jeans. I wanted to take two inches off my hem, so I measured one inch out from the original hem line and pinned.(Do not include the distance from the hem to the end of the jean in your calculations.)Remainder of directions at the site!
Sources: daciaray.com/?p=38 .
Just make the jeans a few inches shorter Basically, with jeans, you cut them off at 1.5 inches LONGER than you want them to be, then turn them in, and in again, until you have that roughly 5/8ths of an inch folded hem that hides the raw edge, pinned into place. Orange thread USED to be traditional, but you should use whatever the orignal hemline was sewn in. Denim's tough stuff, though, especially when you're going over the seams, and the machine should have a size 14 or 16 needle.
Sources: google.co.in/search?rlz=1C1GGLS_enIN327I... .
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