Thank You, Margaret! I was a bit nervous doing my first rolled hem on a very nice shirt. I watched and rewatched your video and I think it came out really well! Great explanations and demonstrations!
This seems to be such an easy way to do a rolled hem. Am gonna be using it on a "flowing" hi - low dress I'm altering for myself. TYSM for sharing this video with us. Love your channel.
I am so glad that I found this video! I can’t wait to get home and practice tonight! The rolled hem has been the bane of my existence as a beginning sewer. This will help tremendously 😊 **UPDATE I altered a prom dress using this method, and it turned out AWESOME! 26 feet of satin, and it looked like it came from a pro seamstress! Thank you again for posting this video. 👍🏽👍🏽👍🏽
So happy to find your help!! I had just been asked to hem a dress with a rolled hem and had no idea how. You explained it perfectly and the dress came out perfectly!
I've done a hem this way before, but it's been YEARS. Thank you for the video and step by step refresher course! And yay! I have presser foot #5 with my Bernina Virtuosa 160.
This was super helpful, thanks! I'm attempting to make a tent using silpoly fabric. It's incredibly lightweight (like 20 denier) and is silicone coated, so it's pretty slippery. Do you think the guide foot would still be the best method, or would you recommend something else? I've also noticed it's a bit dangerous to iron seams on low heat with this stuff. Any ideas how I could crease a light slippery fabric like this accurately?
Can you show how you would do a fully fled hem (a hem that is a large circle. Not sure what you call this in US). Because of the slight round it will pucker? Any suggestions?
Do you have any lessons for hemming knit slacks/pants? I have several pairs of new pants I need to shorten and don't know where to begin. They currently have 2 rows of top stitching and the edge is overlocked finished. On one set I have about 2-3" to shorten, but on the other only about 1-2". I also don't have anyone to help me so also looking for suggestions how to correctly determine where to cut. Any suggestions/help would be most appreciated. Thank you.
My issue is I am extremely tall. I have to either be really crafty about buying work pants - when pant cuffs were in style, I had no problems, I just took them down. I haven’t seen cuffed pants in decades. I have a few places that I can shop that aren’t so stingy with their hems, and they’re OK. But lately, with ‘ankle cropped’ pants I’m forced to wear skirts or pay quite a bit of money on tall women’s clothes (and they usually run big all over). Today I did it again; took a chance on a pair of pants with a decent seam, but I realized I didn’t really have an inch left to hem. I came here thinking there would be a hack for rolling the seam at the very end with that kind of stitch where it leaves a thin thread between the stitches by looping each stitch under before placing another. Box- stitch, maybe? But the fabric does run a little. What would you suggest?
Thank you - I’m just about to sew my first rolled hem and this has helped so much. But why fold so much fabric over on the first pressing and so waste quite a lot of fabric? Will it work with, say, just 1cm? I say this because I have already cut a skirt hem to just 2 cm below the hemline I need.
You can determine the amount to fold up with the first fold I like to have at least 1 inch. Especially in ready to wear you could have a lot more if you are short like I am.
Do you think this is easier and/or faster than using a rolled hem foot (I've never used one of these and am researching it, which is why I'm asking)? What about curves? Thank you
That seems to be using more fabric, thread and time than necessary. I either fold and press both turns and sew once or use a roller hem foot. Much more efficient.
This method works really well when you have a ready made garment you are hemming. Also many people aren't familiar with rolled hem feet, they do take some time to practice with and get used to. Use what ever you like for a garment from scratch.
This would be even more helpful if the camera would center in on what she is doing. For much of the video, what she is "showing" us is just off camera so we can't actually see what she is doing. "See, Look at that." No, sorry, I can't actually see what you are doing.
So wonderful to see an alternative to using a rolled hem foot.
I've been watching several video's on this subject and you made it so easy! can't wait to do my xmas napkins...
Thank You, Margaret! I was a bit nervous doing my first rolled hem on a very nice shirt. I watched and rewatched your video and I think it came out really well! Great explanations and demonstrations!
You made this wonderfully easy for a beginner; thank you so much!
This seems to be such an easy way to do a rolled hem. Am gonna be using it on a "flowing" hi - low dress I'm altering for myself. TYSM for sharing this video with us. Love your channel.
I am so glad that I found this video! I can’t wait to get home and practice tonight! The rolled hem has been the bane of my existence as a beginning sewer. This will help tremendously 😊
**UPDATE
I altered a prom dress using this method, and it turned out AWESOME! 26 feet of satin, and it looked like it came from a pro seamstress! Thank you again for posting this video. 👍🏽👍🏽👍🏽
Hooray! I'm so happy it helped you!
So much better than using a rolled hem foot, wonderful.
This was very slick. I am sure I will use it often.
So happy to find your help!! I had just been asked to hem a dress with a rolled hem and had no idea how. You explained it perfectly and the dress came out perfectly!
Glad I could help!
Very clear explanation. Thx.
Thank you for sharing this! Made understanding this hem so much easier!
Glad it was helpful!
Great ~ Thank you so much, very easy to understand. You make it look so easy, but I know it isn't!
Excellent, thank you.
Thank you!
I've done a hem this way before, but it's been YEARS. Thank you for the video and step by step refresher course! And yay! I have presser foot #5 with my Bernina Virtuosa 160.
You are welcome!
Thanks so much.
This was super helpful, thanks! I'm attempting to make a tent using silpoly fabric. It's incredibly lightweight (like 20 denier) and is silicone coated, so it's pretty slippery. Do you think the guide foot would still be the best method, or would you recommend something else? I've also noticed it's a bit dangerous to iron seams on low heat with this stuff. Any ideas how I could crease a light slippery fabric like this accurately?
Can you show how you would do a fully fled hem (a hem that is a large circle. Not sure what you call this in US). Because of the slight round it will pucker? Any suggestions?
Thank you 💖
Do you have any lessons for hemming knit slacks/pants? I have several pairs of new pants I need to shorten and don't know where to begin. They currently have 2 rows of top stitching and the edge is overlocked finished. On one set I have about 2-3" to shorten, but on the other only about 1-2". I also don't have anyone to help me so also looking for suggestions how to correctly determine where to cut. Any suggestions/help would be most appreciated. Thank you.
great Instructions...:) ...how do you go around the corners?
Hi there, my name is Jim. I bought the Singer Heavy Duty machine. I bought Yeqin 7 pcs adjustable Rolled Hem Foot
I just use a rolled hem foot. Makes it a breeze.
My issue is I am extremely tall. I have to either be really crafty about buying work pants - when pant cuffs were in style, I had no problems, I just took them down. I haven’t seen cuffed pants in decades. I have a few places that I can shop that aren’t so stingy with their hems, and they’re OK. But lately, with ‘ankle cropped’ pants I’m forced to wear skirts or pay quite a bit of money on tall women’s clothes (and they usually run big all over). Today I did it again; took a chance on a pair of pants with a decent seam, but I realized I didn’t really have an inch left to hem. I came here thinking there would be a hack for rolling the seam at the very end with that kind of stitch where it leaves a thin thread between the stitches by looping each stitch under before placing another. Box- stitch, maybe? But the fabric does run a little. What would you suggest?
You could use a different fabric and face the hem.
Thank you - I’m just about to sew my first rolled hem and this has helped so much. But why fold so much fabric over on the first pressing and so waste quite a lot of fabric? Will it work with, say, just 1cm? I say this because I have already cut a skirt hem to just 2 cm below the hemline I need.
You can determine the amount to fold up with the first fold I like to have at least 1 inch. Especially in ready to wear you could have a lot more if you are short like I am.
Do you think this is easier and/or faster than using a rolled hem foot (I've never used one of these and am researching it, which is why I'm asking)?
What about curves?
Thank you
Hi, Does this work well with a sheer fabric with a curved hem?Thanks. What is the best length of stitch length for shear fabric rolled hem?
Oooooh!. if looks could kill LOL
How do I attach them to the machine?
The fabric I have can’t be pressed. Even if I use a warm iron, it’s such soft fabric, it won’t hold a crease. Any suggestions?
When this happens to me I use a bit of spray starch.
I will stitch a basting stitch along the first fold line. It usually is stable enough to hang on and fold. Good luck.
That seems to be using more fabric, thread and time than necessary. I either fold and press both turns and sew once or use a roller hem foot. Much more efficient.
This method works really well when you have a ready made garment you are hemming. Also many people aren't familiar with rolled hem feet, they do take some time to practice with and get used to. Use what ever you like for a garment from scratch.
What type foot is your number 5 foot? The generic name.
Open toad foot? Lol
This would be even more helpful if the camera would center in on what she is doing. For much of the video, what she is "showing" us is just off camera so we can't actually see what she is doing. "See, Look at that." No, sorry, I can't actually see what you are doing.