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| Preparation of the final tier. |
Laid out across the floor, the flattened
circle tier ran from the bedroom, through the living room, and ended in a heap
outside the living room door. It looked like a fancy runway for a cat fashion show. Kiki was doing her day shift in the bedroom and had no interest in the
metallic splendor laid out on the floor.
The plan for the tier was to mark the center front and back,
sides, and halfway between the centers and sides to help with setting the tier equally
around the bottom of the skirt. During the marking, I realized the bottom edge
wasn’t hemmed yet, which is easier when done as a detached flat panel instead
of a gathered ruffle with the weight of the entire skirt to manage at the
machine.
It took several hours to hem the 25 yards of fabric in the tier,
and some if it was due to my planning. At first, I pressed the edge with the
iron and then pinned the hem, which was time consuming. When my back hurt from hovering
over the iron and hem edge, I decided to start the sewing. Several yards had
been pinned and then stitched with complications. The thread tension dial on
the machine kept changing from 4 to 0, resulting in the stitching on the
underside being loose. Much thread was ripped out. I sew, therefore I rip. Then
I resew. There was a lot of “for fox sake” being uttered.
I finally realized I was bumping the dial as I removed pins with
my left hand and set them in the pin box to my right because there was no room
to the left and the skirt would knock them all to the floor. That’s when I
skipped pinning the rest of the tier and hand formed it as I sewed. It was
slower sewing, but faster overall without the separate pinning step.
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| Pinned about 3/4 around. |
A decent night of sleep, some morning coffee, and with luck,
the rest of the tier will be pinned and the whole thing stitched by lunchtime
Friday. Hopefully. Fingers are crossed.












