Iron the shiny side of the freezer paper to
the wrong side of the fabric.
Iron on the adhesive or apply fabric glue to
the wrong side of fabric, then fold and press to create finished edges.
Iron the shiny side of the freezer paper to
the wrong side of the fabric.
Like above, make sure you don't trace both parts so you have the toe and heel parts made both of
the wrong side of the fabric.
The other piece of Velcro goes on the back or
wrong side of the fabric.
The lapels are unlined -LCB-
the wrong side of fabric shows -RCB- and so I chose to continue the gingham bias tape -LCB- self made -RCB- along the exposed front edges.
I actually used
the wrong side of the fabric to complement the lapel... but... the difference is barely discernible.
On
the wrong side of the fabric, which I've marked with an «X», mark in the zipper gap (i.e. the length of seam we will leave open for the invisible zipper will be inserted).
Making sure you have
wrong side of fabric and tee shirt facing you, sew together.
(If
the wrong sides of the fabric are inside, slide the transfer paper inside the fabric.
If
the wrong sides of the fabric are outside, place the fabric inside the transfer paper.)
Depending on your fabric strength, you may want to use interfacing to line
the wrong side of your fabrics.
Place
wrong sides of the fabric together.
Not exact matches
The pattern is only printed on one
side of the
fabric, so it's possible to wrap it the
wrong way and this may complicate your wrapping.
Making your own bias tape, knowing right
side from
wrong side of ribbing
fabric and so much more... and you end up with a great towel bib that doesn't need to go over the baby's head.
Fold the yoke closed so that the
wrong sides of the two pieces
of the
fabric are together.
Flip the pattern over and pin it,
wrong side up, to a single thickness
of the right
side of your backing
fabric.
Use another backing
fabric to finish the
wrong side of the stuffed quilting.
Place the backing
fabric, such as batiste, on the
wrong side of the wool
fabric, and the paper pattern on the right
side.
Pin the two pieces
of fabric together,
wrong sides facing each other and sew with a 1.2 cm (1/2 ″) seam allowance.
Insert the cuff into the stocking with the
wrong side of the cuff
fabric facing out and into the
fabric, so it's next to the
wrong side of the stocking, and inside it.
Fuse the fleece to the
wrong side of the outside
fabric.
Iron a piece
of fusible webbing a little larger than your deer onto the
wrong side of your deer
fabric.
Then you'll find the matching center point for the other
side of the
fabric, and wrestle all that
fabric around to pin the other
side of the zipper to the other
fabrics wrong side as well.
Note: For the double layer, cut out a strip
of fabric doubled in width and fold
wrong sides together.
I've found that the «
wrong»
side of the
fabric is often my favorite.
Thread unlooped ends through needle; at grid mark on right
side of fabric, push needle through to
wrong side.
But that's only my opinion:) You might want to try pinning the
fabric on your chairs with the
wrong side out and that way you can follow the lines
of the chair.
Then you'll fold your
fabric in half with the right
sides of the
fabric touching, and the
wrong side on top.
After both pieces are pressed individually, center the batting on the
wrong side of the backing
fabric.
Step 2) Place one strip
of floral
fabric wrong side up, fold in the two short ends by 1 cm and press.
Start with the
fabric wrong side up and gather one end
of the
fabric about 2 ″ from the end then wrap with an elastic band.
Step 3) With
wrong side facing, pin the
fabric trim along the width
of the curtain along the non-frayed edge, frayed edge facing towards the top
of the curtain.
Step 4) Lay the
fabric down
wrong side facing and fold at the point at which the pole for the head end
of the bed will thread through.
Step 5:
Wrong sides facing, stitch the first pair
of fabric pieces all round bar the central edge taking a 2.5 cm seam.