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Hi. I'm Karen for Expert Village. Next let's prepare our ears. So you have your two sets
of ears that we've cut out and you want to set them up, right sides together, like this.
You can put a pin in there just to hold them together in place while you're sewing on them.
We are going to sew with a 1/4 inch seam allowance all the way around, except not on the bottom.
So we're going to sew from here to the top and the side and leave the bottom open. We're
using a 2 - 1/2 stitch length
and a 1/4 inch seam allowance. When you come to the tip of the ear, just put your needle
down, lift your foot, pivot and continue down the other side. Finish up with a little bit
backward-forward, and that will knot it for you. Then sew the second ear in the same way.
Start with a little back and forth the knot it, sew to a little bit before the end of
the tip, put your needle in, then pivot and then continue down the other side. Remove your pins and snip the tip off like
this, but be careful not to cut stitching at all. So you are cutting very, very close,
not touching the stitching, not cutting the stitching. Okay, again on this one, just to
cut off a little bit of the tip. That will help us when we turn it. To turn it you just
flip it inside out, like this. You can use a pencil end with the eraser to help poke
the ear out or you can use a scissor (if it's not too sharp), you can use a scissor to poke
that out. If it's a sharp scissor, it might go right thorough and damage your ear, so
you don't want to do that. But a pencil with an eraser end is pretty good. There's one
ear and we'll turn this one. These scissors, when they are closed are pretty dull, so I'm
using them to poke it out. You just sort of poke, poke at it until you see the tip of
it come all the way out. Kind of pulling down the fabric and pushing the whatever you are
using to poke it out. Those are two ears. Next we're going to pin them on and we'll
hand-sew them to the horse.