Grosgrain ribbon is hot stuff right now. It's shown up a lot lately, but my most recent personal favorite was this lime green shade with navy ribbon in two widths.
This was easy to apply using double-sided adhesive tapes. I use my clear rulers from my patchwork days to keep the rows straight.
Doubling up ribbons is popular right now, too. I loved this combination of brown and purple for a Roman shade. Yes, that is an upholstery weight fabric. It turned out fantastically well.
A more difficult application was white grosgrain on ivory wool sateen. We hand-sewed the ribbon on 6 shades..... a big investment of time!
Adhesives of any type were inappropriate for the wool- whether tape or liquid. White glue just stiffened up- it felt like cardboard. Double-sided tape that did not need steaming showed a shadow, and also made the wool pucker. And for fear of shrinking the wool I did not want to use a tape that required steaming. And machine sewing distorted the wool.
So out came the John James needles and my favorite Coats & Clark Dual Duty Button and Carpet thread (also the favorite of Alabama Chanin for hand-sewing!), and a pleasant day with my friend Camille ensued as we hand-sewed ribbon in a U-shape around 6 shades. We each did 3, and there was a serious learning curve. My first shade took nearly 2 hours, the second one 1 1/2 hours, and the last one maybe an hour and a quarter. Yes, I got faster, but I bet if I measured the stitches, I'd find that they got a little longer with each shade........
Other recent grosgrain applications for shades: this was a linen blend fabric......
and this is wool- not quite a sateen, more like a suiting weight, and unlined.
And of course the Greek Key version.....
No comments:
Post a Comment