Materials: 7" zipper; small pieces of fabric
Fabric source: Stash
Size: N/A
Cost: ~ $2-3
Time: ~1.5h for first time, including fussy cutting
Pattern: http://www.twelve22.org/blog/2006/07/23/zipper_tutorial/
Take one piece of your outer fabric and lay it down on top,
right-side-down, creating a delicious zipper sandwich. Baste or pin
everything together if you like, but I live on the edge and just go for
it! Don’t be afraid — what’s the worst that can happen? You’ll
repeatedly mess up and tear out the stitches until you’re left with a
threadbare pile of scraps that you have to throw away? Pshaw! . .
.Okay, maybe you should pin it.
Anyway, now that your pieces are laid out like the photo below, sew them
all together. Go down the left edge (to the left of the zipper teeth)
using a zipper foot. You really do need a zipper foot. Find one, use
one, and then you’ll say, ‘No
wonder I had so much trouble before!’
With your sewn zipper sandwich, fold back the two pieces of fabric so the wrong sides are together, like so:
Again, you can pin your pieces together or iron it flat, but I just
can’t be bothered. Flatten everything out and topstitch about 1/8″ from
the edge, where the fabric meets the zipper. You should catch all
three layers (outside, ziper, lining) and squash everything right down.
It will look like this (you may need to click to see the detail):
Repeat for the other side of the zipper, and you’ll wind up with
something like the photo below. At this point, I took a moment to
square everything up again — not pinning can take its toll! I’m not
afraid.
Flip some fabric around until you’ve got both pieces of outer fabric on
one side of the zipper and both pieces of lining fabric on the other.
It’ll look like this:
Carefully line up the top edges of the outer fabric as in the photo
below. Note how the zipper goes toward the lining. Now’s a good time
for pinning.
Starting at the seam where everything meets (see below), sew straight
down to the bottom. Flip the pouch over and repeat for the other side
of outer fabric. With both sides sewn up, reach in through the bottom
and unzip the zipper. Oooh, you’ll be so mad if you forget that part!
Line up the edges of the lining and sew down the sides, as you did with
the outer fabric. Now you should be catching the ends of the zipper in
the first few stitches.
Once you’ve finished both sides, you’ll have something resembling the
photo below. I left the bottom of the lining completely open, because
my outer fabric has interfacing on it (it makes it stiffer and more
difficult to turn). If you’re using a lighter, friendlier fabric, you
can sew up part of the bottom, leaving a smaller hole to turn the piece
through.
Snip the excess fabric from the corners of the outer fabric. Then go
ahead and turn the whole thing right-side-out. Turn under about 1/2″ of
the bottom of the lining, press it flat, and sew it closed. No more
raw edges!
Tuck the lining into the pouch, and it’s practically finished!
All you have to do is iron out any wrinkles and then admire your lovely new pouch with its perfect zip. Hooray!
Notes for next time:
Cut pieces .5" larger than desired finished size.
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