Sewing Basics: All You Need to Know About Machine and Hand Sewing (BOOK)
|
Sewing Basics: All You Need to Know About Machine and Hand Sewing (BOOK)
Sewing Basics is the ultimate encyclopedia for sewing at home. This thorough guide covers everything from choosing fabrics to operating a sewing machine to hand sewing, fitting, fine-finishing, trouble-shooting, and more. Whether the sewer is trying to decipher the symbols on a printed pattern, line a pocket, work French seams, or fit a muslin, she'll find what she's looking for here, all precisely explained and illustrated with hundreds of step-by-step photos. Both for beginners learning how to hem and for more experienced sewers who need help mastering advanced techniques, Sewing Basics is an invaluable reference tool sewers will want to keep within easy reach for many years to come. Format: Paperback
Author: Sandra Bardwell
Publisher: STC Craft/A Melanie Falick Book
This book ships from a different location than fabric and patterns.
|
|
Reviews and Ratings
Submit a Review: Write a Review
There are currently no reviews for this item. Be the first to write a review!
Related Items
|
Nancy Zieman's Sewing A to Z: Your Source for Sewing and Quilting Tips and Techniques (BOOK)
Inside Nancy Zieman's Sewing A to Z, you'll learn valuable tips, techniques, and how-to's from one of the most trusted names in the industry: Nancy Zieman! With her trademark thorough explanations and friendly tone, Nancy shares a wealth of information essential to making the most of your quilting and sewing. From anchor cloth to pintucks and zigzagging, over 80 topics are covered, each explained in the best possible way, with illustrations, explanations and/or charts. The wire-o binding allows you to follow along easily right at your machine or worktable.
|
|
|
1, 2, 3 Sew: Build Your Skills with 33 Simple Sewing Projects [With Pattern(s)] (BOOKS)
Sewing is as easy as 1-2-3! In this creative teaching book, craft blogger Ellen Luckett Baker offers a wholly unique approach to sewing: she presents projects in groups of three, each building on the techniques used in the project before. Baker shows, for example, how to sew a glasses case, then build on those skills to create a zippered pouch, and from there, make a more advanced cosmetics bag. There are 33 delightful projects in all, ranging from clothing to d cor and accessories. With easy-to-follow instructions, how-to illustrations, and 12 patterns tucked into an enclosed envelope, 1, 2, 3 Sew is an essential resource for beginning and intermediate sewers alike.
|
|