Cotton Steeking Adventures

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A few of you have mentioned that you were interested in how I steeked my cotton Mission Falls tank so here ya go...

I started out by pin fitting the tank on my body:

Once I got a good fit all around (it took a bit of tweeking), I carefully took it off to make sure the pins didn't fall out.

Then, I laid the garment flat, folded along the center front and center back so the side seams were in the middle (hopefully that makes sense). I then pin marked the excess fabric that needed to be taken in on both sides of the side seams. Note: Since I knit it in the round there really aren't side seams. In my case I marked along the line where the side seam would be, which is also where yarns were joined.

pinMarkMaude

See all those ends I was able to get rid of? Woohoo!

Then, I took out my trusty Viking sewing machine, and stitched along the lines marked with the pins. The hardest part about the stitching was the fact that the shaping was at the sides, so I couldn't just sew between 2 stitches. I had to sew across them at times. I fiddled with the presser foot tension, the stitch length, and even dried dropping the feed dogs. I finally determined I should use a very weak presser foot tension, and a stitch length of 3.5. I liked it better with the feed dog up - it helped push the fabric through and didn't catch it like I had been concerned about.

Once I stitched along both pin lines, I cut up the center.

maudeAfterFirstRow

Here's a closeup in case you can't see the stitches. Sorry it's a bit blurry.

maudeCloseupStitches

And then, I sewed a second row of stitches about a quarter of an inch away from the first row. This second row is further out than the first row and is hidden in the seam.

maudeDoubleStitch

I then clipped very close to the second row of sewing and seamed up the tank using the mattress stitch.

maudeSteekDone

Voila! A tank that actually fits!

In case you're wondering why I had to go through this exercise at all, here's what happened. This is the first tank that I've made for myself. I pulled out some knitted tanks that I own to use as a comparison for sizing, but they all had some kind of rib in them. So they were definitely smaller than I'd like for a st st tank. So, I made the tank just a bit narrower than I would a sweater and it was just way too much ease. In all honesty though, I'm glad I went through the exercise. I taught myself that steeking isn't so bad, and I saved my time weaving in all those ENDS. Hell, it was worth it just to get rid of the ends!

7 Comments

rock chick said:

Pretty crafty way to get out of weaving in ends. ;-) Beautiful color combo - love it!

evelyn said:

Looks GREAT! Thanks for the tutorial, I might not be as scared to try that some time. I can't wait to see it on you. E.

Cyndilou said:

Thanks for posting this! I was concerned that I was knitting too large of a size in a similar project, but now I have a reference in case I need to take it in! :D

Kathleen said:

Great job Jody. And thanks for sharing all the pics and details. It looks great. Where is the action shot??

Stella said:

damn. you're my hero.

alison said:

Wow, you rock for doing the steeking on your tank! Great solution and you got rid of all those ends - brilliant!

Abi said:

Thanks for the photos. I made a wrap/poncho that is wwwwaaaaayyyy too long. Now I have an image of how to wrestle this thing into better proportions.

About this Entry

This page contains a single entry by published on May 12, 2004 9:17 AM.

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bought at Rhinebeck '09

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bought at MDSW '06

  • 2 hanks Jamie Harmon Angora in pinks sold!
  • Tess Sock Yarn in pink
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