kateelle said:
I just bought the most gorgous fabric and my sewing machine refuses to sew it! I know the problem lies with the stretch in the fabric, (verrry stretchy) however I've tried for an hour to get it to sew, but I can't take it anymore, it just doesn't work. Does anyone know how to get my machine to sew the fabrics together, or what I need to do?
Dear Kateelle:
I know how frustrating this can be. Sometimes, you need to keep trying different needles, different tensions, different stitch lengths and widths till you hit on the right combo. When you do get it, I suggest you put a sample of the fabric in a baggy along with an index card with notes on the type of needle, thread, tenstion and stitch info and keep it for future reference so you don't have to keep reinventing the wheel.
Knits are tricky. Nylon Lycra is the shiny stuff. Cotton Lycra is matte.
If you know what type of fabric it is, I can look it up and advise from my "More fabric Savvy" book--my bible when it comes to handling fabrics. If your fabric is
Lycra Knit (with all-way stretch), according to the book, you need to:
1. Preshrink on gentle with Ivory liquid (Machine washing brings out the best in lycra. Machine dry on low.
2. Thread: good quality polyester is ideal bec. it has stretch.
3. Needle: for nylon/Lycra: 70/10 SUK ball point (I don't know what SUK means, but you can ask at the fabric store). For all other Lycra blends, use 75/11 HS Stretch.
4. Stitch Length: for exercise or dancewear, use a 2.5 mm length or triple stitch, short-length overlock stitch or small zigzag (.75 width/2.5 length)
5. Presser Foot: Standard
If your fabric is
Stretch Woven (does it stretch in width only, not length? Then it's a stretch woven
1. Preshrink. (I'll tell you more on this if you determine it's a stretch woven).
2. Thread: Good-quality poilyester. Don't wind the bobbin too fast or it will stretch the thread.
3. Needle: for Wool/Lycra: 80/12H. For Microfiber/Lycra: 70/10 HM. For silk/LycraL 70/10 H.
4. Stitch Length: Small zigzag (.75 width/2 length).
5. Presser Foot: Standard
There are always the basics, too. Have you tried adjusting all tensions? Are you using polyester in both the bobbin and the top thread? Have you tried different needles? You can also try putting some tissue paper or tearaway stabilizer underneath the fabric to give the machine a better surface to grip when stitching.
If this isn't your fabric, let me know, and I'll try to get the correct info and more advice for you--either from a reference book or from some of the sewing forums. Hope I helped solve the problem.
Amy