Machines
Stitches
More stitches
Seams
Shaping
100

Used for making buttonholes 

Buttonhole Machine

100

Measured by counting the number of lengths of thread found within one inch


Stitcher Per Inch (SPI)

100

It prevents edges from rolling and curling.

Edge Stitch 

100

Classifying the seams helps create a standardized system to help communication between companies.

Classes of seams 

100

A section of a shirt or a dress where your arms fit. Can provide interest and construction details to any garment


Sleeves

200

Used for hemming. Almost invisible and looks like small little “bites” of thread on the outside of a hem. Can only do a blind hemstitch. 


Blind Hem Machine

200

This stitch prevents the fabric from stretching along with bias and curved edges.


Staystitching 

200

Helps prevent a seam from changing or stretching while stitching. It’s made by sewing with the grain of the fabric.

Directional Stitching 

200

Created by overlapping two or more pieces of fabric. Common with suede and leather


Lapped Seams 

200

A band of material around the neck of a shirt, dress, coat, or jacket, either upright or turned over, and generally an integral part of the garment. Examples: Flat, rolled, standing 


Collars 

300

Used to perform specialized stitches to create unique decorations on various fabrics


Embroidery Machine

300

The most common stitch used by industrial machines, formed by interlocking needle threads with a bobbin thread.

Lockstitch

300

Stitching visible from the outside of the garment 

Topstitching 

300

Used to prevent edges from rolling or curling. Great for knit fabrics

Edge Finished Seams 

300

The end part of a sleeve, where the material of the sleeve is turned back or a separate band is sewn on.


Cuffs

400

Also called a serger. Machine-great for knit fabric construction. Similar to the serging machines found in our classroom.

Overlock Machine

400

Stitch that inner loops the needle thread with a bottom looper thread on the underside of the seam. This stitch is used on most seams in woven apparel. can easily be pulled out or unraveled.

Chainstitch 

400

A narrow stitch close to the edge. It prevents the facing from rolling to the outside.


Understitching

400

Most common seam construction. Created by sewing two or more layers of fabric together 


Superimposed Seams 

400

Constructed by folding fabric typically at the waist to control fullness and create design ease


Pleats 

500

Commonly used for simple construction and produces a lockstitch. Can be single or multi-needle. Also used for seaming, top-stitching, cover stitching, and knits or wovens where wide coverage or greater stretch is required


Lockstitch Machine 

500


Professional-looking hem that looks like two rows of stitching on the top and a serger-like stitch on the back.  The benefit of a cover stitch is its stretchability and the covering of the raw edge all in one pass. A cover stitch stretches the maximum stretch of the fabric – think aerobic wear, fleece, sweatshirt fabric, lycra, and super stretchy knit fabric.


Coverstitch

500

A way of stitching that creates a square quilting grid.

Stitch-in-the-ditch

500

Made to finish an edge of a garment. Is one piece of fabric encompassing

Bound Seams 

500

Sewn or stitched down folds of fabric

Tucks 

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