I have a few antique tucker attachments, I suppose from the Edwardian era when they pintucked the bejesus out of blouses! It came with an extension that caused a crease to be made at a particular width for the next pintuck. Our ancestors were smart!
Hi! Great tutorial as usual! Just a curiosity: if I want to sew some pintucks on a indie pattern, should I add more width to the pattern piece chosen? I hope it make sense 😅 Thanks a lot in advance!😢
@@ReisigSeeds It depends on how wide the pintucks are but you slash & spread the pattern then fold up the pleat & redraw the edge to get the correct underlay.
I have a few antique tucker attachments, I suppose from the Edwardian era when they pintucked the bejesus out of blouses! It came with an extension that caused a crease to be made at a particular width for the next pintuck. Our ancestors were smart!
@@daxxydog5777 How cool!!! Send pictures!!
Howdy from western Colorado!
@@timdybala7127 Howdy 🤠
I'm planning to make the frux studio garden dress and it has a serious number of pintucks - this video came at a great time!
@@blippity. excellent 🤗
Thank you
@@windlessoriginals1150 Of course 🎀
Thank you, thank you, thank you.
@@jimkoss3318 You are welcome 🤗
Thank you for the great demonstration!
@@lauralazar659 Welcome 🤗
Very cool. Thanks Anastasia!
@@artillerybuff2000 Thanks for watching.
Hi! Great tutorial as usual! Just a curiosity: if I want to sew some pintucks on a indie pattern, should I add more width to the pattern piece chosen? I hope it make sense 😅 Thanks a lot in advance!😢
Hi, Yes you will want to slash and spread it for each spot you want a pintuck.
How do I make my sloper have enough fabric to sew in pin tucks?
You will need to slash and spread the pattern where you want pintucks.
How do you make a pattern with pintucks in it and get the math correct?
@@ReisigSeeds It depends on how wide the pintucks are but you slash & spread the pattern then fold up the pleat & redraw the edge to get the correct underlay.