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Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Ruffle love.

Last night after waiting for a basement company to show up {they never did} for a free estimate, we headed over to Eugene’s parents’ place to celebrate his dad’s birthday.  Yeah for family birthdays & yeah for turtle ice cream cake!

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This weekend, I bonded with my sewing machine again. Since I had a pretty decent time making kitchen curtains, I set out to make some sheer white ruffle curtains for our bathroom window, and I’m excited to share my final product.

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I LOVE how they turned out! How about a bit more details on the process? Well, here’s  the original window. Yucky old blinds included.

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I removed the blinds, hung the simple curtain rod {$3 or so at Walmart} a few inches higher and a few inches wider than my window. Then I measured the amount of fabric I would need and added roughly 3 inches to the top, 1 inch to each side, and 2 inches to the bottom for my seams. I sewed a pocket for the rod and left 1 1/2 of fabric above for a ruffle at the top. Oh, and I love to use pinking shears to cut the edges so that I don’t have to worry about turning them under twice and I don’t use as much fabric.

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Once I got the basic curtains completed, I tested them out on the window to make sure I measured correctly.

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Once I knew the basic curtains were all set, I cut long strips {again, using pinking shears so that they won’t unravel} about 1 inch to 1 1/2 inches wide {I didn’t really measure, because I didn’t want them to look perfectly precise.}

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From there, I adjusted my sewing machine stitch length to the highest it would go {4} and sewed straight down the middle of the strips without backstitching {that’s important…don’t backstitch!}.

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You also want to leave a few inches of thread attached from where you started and ended sewing down the middle.

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Using that extra thread, you want to pull just one of the threads gently & bunch your fabric down. As you do this, your ruffle will begin to form.

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Continue gently pulling on the thread & bunching the fabric until your whole strip becomes ruffled.

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After I made a whole bunch of ruffled strips, I pinned them to the bottom of my curtains. This part I did measure just to make sure the horizontal lines were straight and matched on both panels.

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When I had to combine two strips of ruffles, I simply pinned one overtop of the other. Because I used the pinking shears on all the edges, it wasn’t obvious at all where the strips of ruffles joined.

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Once I had all three ruffled lines pined, I switched my machine stitch length back to normal {2} and carefully sewed straight down the middle of each ruffle. This is necessary even if you don’t want to attach your ruffle to a curtain because the first time you sewed the ruffles it was just a basting stitch, it won’t actually hold the ruffle together.

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I also lessened the pressure foot tension, which probably helped some too. I made sure to stitch slowly, using my fingers to push the fabric through steadily.

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Once each ruffle was securely attached to the curtain, I was good to go!

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Pretty pretty ruffles!

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I bout the fabric, 4 yards, for $16 with a coupon & sale price. I only used half for this project, and the curtain rod was only about 3 bucks, so for $11 I have a sweet new curtain. I used the remaining 2 yards of fabric to add ruffles to something else in the bathroom, but I’ll save that for another post.

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Oh, and for more on our bathroom updates, including the painted tile & removed coyote stamped border, click here. Hope ya’ll like the simple ruffled curtains – I certainly do! :)

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Linked to:

Remodelaholic The Shabby Nest   Dittle Dattle The DIY Show Off  IhookedupwithHoHlamespice

5 comments:

  1. Hi! Popping over from Remodelaholic.
    I think these are adorable! And your instructions actually look easy enough for a beginner like me!

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  2. ruffles are lovely and add a touch of class to me come visit me at http://shopannies.blogspot.com

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  3. So cute! Thanks so much for the how-to, I want to make some!

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  4. That's really pretty! If I could sew, I'd make those for my daughter!:)

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  5. So lovely. I also love the texture of the fabric.
    The simplicity and cuteness of it...adorable!

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