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Hi. I'm Jennifer from Workroom Social. Now, let's talk a little bit about basting with
your sewing machine.
So, basting is a temporary way to hold two things together, or more, while you're sewing.
It could be two pieces of fabric. It can be a zipper to fabric. It just depends on what
you're doing.
Now, when you're basting you want to turn you stitch length up to the highest it will
go. Mine is a 4, 4 millimeters. So, I have my stitch length up. I'm on a straight stitch.
And then I'm just going to sew whatever it is I want to hold together.
So, let's sew these two pieces together. And so, when I do this I'm doing it with the intention
of removing the stitches later. I'm using my seam guide, so I'm doing a five-eighths
of an inch seam allowance.
Great.
So, I have my basting stitch done here. And then I'm going to do whatever it is I need
to do. You can use basting stitches for all kinds of things: setting in sleeves, putting
in zippers. And now I'm done. I'm done doing whatever it was I needed to do. I have my
permanent stitch in.
So, now I want to take the basting stitches out. So, what I like to do is to start on
the top side and, with a seam ripper, just cut every third or fourth or fifth stitch
to break up that line. But you only want to do it on one side of your fabric, and I will
show you why.
So, once you have broken that top thread, I'm going to go to the back and I'm going
to just grab the bobbin thread, which is on the backside, and I just going to pull.
And, just like that, all the stitches came out. And here you can just, with your hand
or with the tweezers or a lint roller. If you roll a lint roller across this it will
pick up all the stitches.
And you're going to pull everything out. And now you have your fabric undone. That's basting
stitch.