The Bibi Skirt, Popped Stitches, and the Knit Stitch

Right now, it’s resting in a pile somewhere around my ironing board sporting a bunch of popped stitches around the waist.

What went wrong?

I suspected from the beginning that a 1.5mm wide x 2.5mm long zigzag stitch was not going to give enough stretch, but that’s what the book said to use, so that’s what I did. I should not have.

Listen to your gut.
Sometimes you do know better than the book.

Remember that knit stitch I mentioned in my last entry that I was trying to learn more about?

knit-stitch

Well, I learned that it is exactly what I want to use for this skirt. First, I ran a test seam using a lightning stitch, stretched it, and popped a whole mess of stitches. Then I ran a test seam with this knit stitch, stretched the living daylights out of it, trying to pop some stitches, and I couldn’t. The only thing it did was make my seam all wavy.

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Which is easily fixed. Hold your iron over the seam with steam for a second or 2, and kiss the waves goodbye.

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Stretch it again, and the waves stay away.

20190310_162117

So I’m in the middle of debating what to do about those popped stitches on the skirt. Do I try to salvage, or start over from scratch? The whole thing was too loose and I had to bump some of the seam allowances up to like a whole inch. I might start over with the next size down (assuming I have enough fabric left.) I don’t know. I’m a bit discouraged at the moment so I’ll probably let it be for a day or two.

But hey, I had absolutely no skipped stitches the whole day. Huzzah!

 

 

 

Posted in Sewing, Troubleshooting, Whatever • March 10, 2019 | No Comments»

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