Sewing Chiffon!!! Help!!

Corryn

DIS Veteran
Joined
Jul 24, 2003
Messages
2,682
Calling all sewers!
I'm making costumes for MNSSHP and my girls and their friends want to be fairies. We took a ride over to JoAnn's and the girls chose this beautiful blinged out chiffon.
However, I was looking at the raw edges and I'm not sure I can do the scalloped design with the chiffon. I have a regular machine and a nice serger.... Any tips? Thank you :)
 
I've never sewn Chiffon so I don't know for sure. You could always take a scrap of the chiffon and use a stabilizer while using the serger to overlock the edges while making the scallop, and see if that would work.
 
I realize that this suggestion will mean needing to purchase more fabric ---

But the chiffon will be easier to manage, particularly with curved shapes, if you line the pieces with another piece of chiffon. Ideally, you would do this with a matching piece of NOT blinged-out chiffon. You end up with a double layer of chiffon. Even if there isn't available a matching chiffon, you might be able to find a plain color that would still give a pleasing effect. Just hold up the 2 pieces together to see if they look acceptable.

So you would cut identical pieces from the face fabric (with the bling) and from the lining fabric (without the bling). Stitch them together, right sides together. Turn right sides out. Then you have the raw edges encased between the 2 pieces of fabric. You might want to top-stitch close to the edge to help the edge to be flat.

Serging with a stabilizer might work --- but a stabilizer might stiffen the edge and change how the fabric hangs. Certainly test it out.

Let us know what works for you.
 

One more thought ---- since you have a serger.

If you line the pieces with another chiffon, then after sewing the seams, you can serge the edge simply to make them appear as neat as possible ---- because you might still be able to see the seam allowances through the face fabric.

OR if your serger is a 4-thread, then you can use your serger to seam and serge all in one pass. If it's a 3-thread, I suggest that you seam with a regular sewing machine stitch, and then finish the edges with a serger.
 
LOL!! That makes sense!!! I didn't purchase the fabric yet, it's 9.99 a yard, and I'm gonna need three colors for each girl, four girls! They're still on the fence, and I told them it was too expensive to not be totally sure... I just wanted to see how I could finagle it Before I laid out the cash.
But absolutely, sewing the right sides together makes absolute sense. I used to be a big sewer, but as my girls got older, I sewed less and less. How could I have forgotton something as simple as that..
Thank you for your wonderful suggestion!:cutie:
 
My advice- step away from the chiffon! I've sewed for years, made my own wedding dress, alot of my kids clothes, doll clothes, quilts... My SIL asked me to make her wedding dress, and it had a chiffon overlay. NEVER again. That stuff is evil. Slips all over the place. If you mess up, you can't rip it out and restart. I refuse to deal with that stuff again.

Can you convince them to do anything else? Any blinged up tulle or something easier to fashion? (and easier on the pocket book?!) Chiffon also isn't the sturdiest fabric if they'll be moving about all night, etc.
 
My advice- step away from the chiffon! I've sewed for years, made my own wedding dress, alot of my kids clothes, doll clothes, quilts... My SIL asked me to make her wedding dress, and it had a chiffon overlay. NEVER again. That stuff is evil. Slips all over the place. If you mess up, you can't rip it out and restart. I refuse to deal with that stuff again.

Can you convince them to do anything else? Any blinged up tulle or something easier to fashion? (and easier on the pocket book?!) Chiffon also isn't the sturdiest fabric if they'll be moving about all night, etc.

This is exactly with I was thinking! Chiffon is so hard to work with, and tulle is so much easier. For a costume, I'd go with easy and less expensive. I used to get yards and yards of tulle to cover gift baskets. The finer ones have a nice drape, but still have body.
Anyway, it's an alternative...please post pics when you are done!!

:teeth: Good Luck
 
Ladies, I am LMBO over here!!:rotfl: I just remembered one time when I used gold lame and I swore I would never use it again!!!

Yes, tulle is a good alternative... especially now when Joanne's has a nice wide selection... just worried about the itch factor... I chose a pattern that is something like a spaghetti strap dress and I would start the tulle up at the top, so if their arms are swinging, they will get irritated up on the inner arm.

Any suggestions on that? I need this to be as easy as possible because I'm working and attending my last semester of nursing school, so the pressure is on!:scared1:
I really appreciate all your suggestions, thank you!!:goodvibes
 
Agreed, chiffon can be a real headache --- particularly when you need relatively quick and easy.

Maybe you can talk them into something else. However, iIf they have fallen in love with the blinged-out chiffon, one simple way to use it is as an overskirt with a straight bottom. Make the underskirt with the scalloped edges, using a less expensive and easier-to-work-with coordinating fabric. You could even do the overskirt as a separate garment --- like an apron.

For the overskirt, cut a rectangle of the chiffon fabric. The width should be enough to gather with a nice amount of fullness. You probaby can just use the full width of your fabric as the width of your cut piece --- depends on the width of the fabric, and depends on the girls' waist measurements. For chiffon, you probably want at least 2 times fullness. Cut the length to be DOUBLE the skirt length (plus seam allowances, if you want to be precise) --- it can be thigh-length --- knee-length --- it doesn't have to be as long as the underskirt. Fold the piece in half --- right sides together ---- aligning one long edge with the other long edge. Sew/serge the SHORT sides. Turn right side out. Don't even try to press the seams or the bottom edge. The unpressed bottom edge will add to the flowiness of the skirt. Again, align the long edges together, this time with the wrong sides together. Gather the top edge in whatever way you prefer. At this point, you can put this skirt with the underskirt to attach it into the garment. OR you can attach some sort of waistband (ribbon, fabric, whatever), and you can either tie or velcro in the back.

So, if you're making each skirt to be 18" long, then you'll likely need 1 yard for each skirt. To keep your cutting simple and your yardage minimal, I would just try to use the full width of the fabric for the width of the skirt.

You can do this same style of overskirt using tulle. Of course, it will hang differently than chiffon, but it will be pretty.

If you use the special piece of fabric as an accent, the eye will be drawn there, and you can use any sort of coordinating fabric for the body of the dress. If you want something shiny, you could use a polyester satin. It's sorta slippery, too, and will ravel --- but it's not as difficult as chiffon. Look at some of the fabrics that are sold as garment lining fabrics. They usually come in nice colors and might have a sheen to them. Just take care that it's not too see-through -- or have the girls wear leotards underneath.
 
Another thought ----- to simplify your sewing ---

You could choose NOT to make an entire dress. Let them wear a coordinating color leotard, and make skirts to wear with it. On a fall evening, they might like having their arms covered anyway. This would greatly simplify your sewing.
 
There is such a thing as wash away stabilizer. I really have never sewn chiffon, but if the other posters suggest stiffening it while sewing, maybe the wash away stabilzer would work. Then you wash it out before wearing so the stiffness goes away.

There is also sewing machine needles and maybe a foot for sewing silk, which is very slippery. there is a sewing machine foot called a rolled hem foot. It automatically rolls the hem over while sewing. It's supposed to be great for silks beacuse it is so slippery to turn over.

I've also read, wear some type of grippy gloves while sewing silks & chiffon, so you can grip the chiffon and move it as it's being sewn.
 
That's odd. I posted last nite but the main board isn't updating that I posted. :confused3
 
Polyester chiffon ravels something terrible...Nylon Chiffon doesn't. Nylon chiffon is the stuff used to make petti skirts... Nylon chiffon is very inexpensive...youcould use the nylon chiffon to line your dress...then use the tulle for the 'effect'...
 












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