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| Long zips and plain zip |
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| Haberdashery section |
You
need, not the usual zip of a given length that we all know and love, but the
zips that are sold by the metre (yard). I buy mine from a large fabric store which has
a wide selection of trimmings and haberdashery.
The zips come in a variety of colours and widths. The shop also sells suitable sliders to
match.
You need from 3 to 8 metres of a
single length of zip, depending on the size of the bag you are aiming for. Buy a slider for it. If you are unsure that you will be able to
insert the slider, you can ask the shop assistant to do it for you – but watch
it, it will easily slide off again as, unlike an ordinary zip, the ends are not
finished.
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| Slider put on |
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| Slider on two colours |
I
made this project very fast as a basic illustration of the principle, and not
as the tidiest I’ve ever done. If you
are good at hand-sewing, you might find that the corners are easier and neater
than by machine.
Instead
of using a single colour I am using two zips which I am “marrying” to show the
construction better. Unzip the whole
length of zip except for two or three inches (Five to eight cm). It will be wise to sew across and finish off
the end of the zip here so that it stays tidy, and the slider stays
on!
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| Secured end |
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| Another corner turned |
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| First corner done |
Decide how long the base of the
bag will be, and at that point turn the one part of the zip on itself, making a
very neat corner and sewing the two flat edges together until you come to the
end of the zip when you keep sewing around that corner, making beatiful corners
again.
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| Sew with care |
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| Zipping round corner |
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| Zipping round another corner |
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| Wrong side |
By now you will be
sewing the edges on opposite side of the zip (see the colours in the photo).
You now keep sewing for almost all the metres
you need to. If you aren’t a naturally
accurate seamstress it be worth your while to do a lot of pinning or, even
better, some tacking (basting).
You
can incorporate something decorative during this process, using, for example,
some corded braid. Finish
the wrong side off neatly to make it sturdy.
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| Braid |
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| Braid |
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| Braid |
You
need to stop and fasten off your work when you are on the one side of the bag,
with a reasonable length of zip left to make the handle you chose.
Leave half of the zip to the length of the
handle and anchor it on the opposite side of the bag.
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| Stop sewing here |
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| Choose handle length |
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| Inside view |
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| Standard handles |
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| Inside view |
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| Marking last connection |
Then you leave another handle’s worth before
zipping up the whole lot to decide the final anchor for the last handle. You
can see where I pinned it to
mark the spot.
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| Nearly there |
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| Inside view |
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| Outside view |
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| Loop handle |
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| Diagonal handle |
Take great care, after you cut the end to
size, not to let the slider slip off.
Immediately tack (baste) the end to keep the slider on, else you will
cry salty tears.
Try
to figure out how the handle for the red bag is constructed - a very useful pattern for a pencil bag. A
single diagonal handle on the beige bag.
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| Variety |
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| Decoration |
If
you can make one of these successfully (and don’t take it for granted that your
first one will be a prize-winner) you’ll be able to innovate and experiment
with different weights of zip, different colours and different sizes. If you want to mix two colours, it is
essential that the zips are identical apart from colour, otherwise they will
not zip together, or, if they do, they might curl onto each other, making a
very unattractive bag. Remedy: go back
and buy exacty the same materials again and make two single-colour bags.
These
make nice gifts – especially for children as they can zipped up and put in the
washer! Using a smallish gauge of zip
and make a long skinny pencil case, for a project. Fastening a pretty bead to the slider makes
it a little more special.
Go
ahead! Make one! They are great fun! Give one, all unzipped, to a man and tell him
to keep on zipping up. He won’t believe
it.