Thank you sincerely for the lesson. I'm sewing a coat with the sleeves down for a friend, but the coat is fitted and snug, so there's not much movement in the sleeve. I have constructed a double seamed sleeve. I will try to construct an additional gusset
You’re very welcome, for pants it would be totally different. Sewn the same way by sewing the gusset in the inseam parts, but the gusset would be different length and much narrower width. I used 4 inches lines in o mine because I just guessed that’s what would give me results similar to what I’ve often seen when it comes to gusset. As for the 4x4 “ that others suggest, I am not sure, but I did see it in more than one blog post, So I mentioned it. I would say that’s the standard for adults but to me that seemed too big. So I went with my own option.
Thank you sincerely for the lesson. I'm sewing a coat with the sleeves down for a friend, but the coat is fitted and snug, so there's not much movement in the sleeve. I have constructed a double seamed sleeve. I will try to construct an additional gusset
@@rasablarasabla6291 you’re welcome, adding a gusset will help a lot with the movement!
thank you for this tutorial. is that how to make gusset for pants as well?
and why 4 inches? is it the stander?
You’re very welcome, for pants it would be totally different. Sewn the same way by sewing the gusset in the inseam parts, but the gusset would be different length and much narrower width. I used 4 inches lines in o mine because I just guessed that’s what would give me results similar to what I’ve often seen when it comes to gusset. As for the 4x4 “ that others suggest, I am not sure, but I did see it in more than one blog post, So I mentioned it. I would say that’s the standard for adults but to me that seemed too big. So I went with my own option.