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From the pages of Threads Magazine Pattern Layouts Tips on layout and ideas on keeping your pattern pieces in place A well-sewn garment starts at the cutting table. Laying out your pattern on the fabric to prepare for cutting is an important step that must be done carefully and accurately for great-looking results. Here are some tips on layout and some ideas on pinning or using weights to anchor your pattern pieces in place. Pattern preliminaries Be sure you have all the necessary pattern pieces. Most instruction sheets list pieces by letter or number next to the layout diagrams. Make any changes or fitting alterations to the pattern. If you significantly alter a garment's length, you may need extra yardage to make sure you have a workable layout. Press the pattern pieces with a dry iron set to a low-temperature so that they're easier to work with. Preshrink your fabric if necessary, and make sure the grain is straight. Do this by tearing across the grain at the ends of your fabric piece (if it's firmly woven), pulling a thread across the width of the fabric at the ends, or cutting along a dominant line in the pattern or weave. Fold lengthwise, matching selvages, to see whether the ends now match. If they don't and the fabric needs to be straightened, gently pull on the fabric's length from opposite corners.
In preparation for cutting, fabric is usually folded. The instruction sheet gives alternatives for folding that are determined by the fabric's width, the garment's size, and the size of the pattern pieces. A crosswise layout is often needed for wide pieces, and sometimes a layout shows a double fold, in which both selvages are brought to the center (see Choose a cutting layout). In all cases, fold fabric right sides out to view designs that must be centered or matched and when cutting pile fabrics like velvet or corduroy, because there's less sliding. Choose a layout from the appropriate instruction sheet, or invent your own. When working with a plaid fabric, lay out your pattern pieces on a single thickness for easier matching, regardless of suggested layout. When laying out soft sheers and slippery fabrics, tightly cover your cutting surface with a muslin-like fabric to help prevent sliding, and use a single-thickness layout. Whether you fold or cut singly, always keep the entire length of fabric on top of the cutting surface while pinning and cutting to prevent distortion or stretching caused by the weight of the fabric hanging over the table's edge. For large fabric pieces, fold or roll up the end that's not being cut, and unroll as your layout progresses. Be sure that all of your pattern pieces fit on your fabric before you begin cutting. Grainline and layout
When your pattern pieces are properly aligned on the fabric, (see Anchor the pattern to the fabric) anchor them with pins, as most sewers do, or use weights, like Weight Mates (available from Clotilde; 800-772-2891; www.clotilde.com or Joanne's Notions; 800-811-6611; www.joannescreativenotions.com). Then get out your scissors. You're ready to cut.
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