Making patches - A graphic guide
Posted: Tue Oct 13, 2009 5:00 am
Hi all.
I posted some cross-stiched 'Day of the Tentacle'-patches that I sewn onto t-shirts a couple of weeks ago and got asked to post a guide. So here it is - a graphic guide to your own personal patches. Starring the mushroom gang.
First you stitch the pattern of your choice. You can never go wrong with a 1-up mushroom.
Then you cut off excess fabric. I usually leave about 3-4 squares. I saved 3 here but while i sew it I felt it was not quiet enough.
The next step is to start sewing. I used a ordinary white sewing thread, matching the fabric. Fold the fabric so it doubles up on the back. Try to sew through both holes on the folded fabric. I go across one square on the front and two on the back. If I do larger stuff I might do three on the back to save on time. also it depends a bit on what you're going to use it for. If you're going to sew it to a t-shirt or other fabric later you won't need too many stiches as you're going fill it with more later on. Also depending on what your going to use it for, you're going to want to leave a bit of margin on the edge. I find that one square is just right.
Then you're done! Place it one a nice piece of clothing or whatever. If you use a t-shirt be careful with the sewing as they are thin and stretchy. Also when you wash it the patch will wrinkle up like crazy. But just pull out your good ol' ironing board and you'll be fine. Oh, you might also want to bring out aforementioned board in between steps.
Don't be afraid to ask question or give usefull suggestions on how to improve the guide or the techniques.
Thanks for watching!
I posted some cross-stiched 'Day of the Tentacle'-patches that I sewn onto t-shirts a couple of weeks ago and got asked to post a guide. So here it is - a graphic guide to your own personal patches. Starring the mushroom gang.
First you stitch the pattern of your choice. You can never go wrong with a 1-up mushroom.
Then you cut off excess fabric. I usually leave about 3-4 squares. I saved 3 here but while i sew it I felt it was not quiet enough.
The next step is to start sewing. I used a ordinary white sewing thread, matching the fabric. Fold the fabric so it doubles up on the back. Try to sew through both holes on the folded fabric. I go across one square on the front and two on the back. If I do larger stuff I might do three on the back to save on time. also it depends a bit on what you're going to use it for. If you're going to sew it to a t-shirt or other fabric later you won't need too many stiches as you're going fill it with more later on. Also depending on what your going to use it for, you're going to want to leave a bit of margin on the edge. I find that one square is just right.
Then you're done! Place it one a nice piece of clothing or whatever. If you use a t-shirt be careful with the sewing as they are thin and stretchy. Also when you wash it the patch will wrinkle up like crazy. But just pull out your good ol' ironing board and you'll be fine. Oh, you might also want to bring out aforementioned board in between steps.
Don't be afraid to ask question or give usefull suggestions on how to improve the guide or the techniques.
Thanks for watching!