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Hi, there are many different ways to sew by hand and the different types of stitches that
one can use. Sometimes you want to see the stitch and sometimes you don't, and that's
where blind stitch comes into play. Hi, my name is Daniel King. I'm a designer, pattern
maker, and sewer. A blind stitch is a stitch where you can actually stitch something together
but you don't really want to see it. Now I'm going to do a quick demonstration, but I'm
using a contrasting color thread so that you can see it, but the object is not to be able
to see it. So for instance, here on this pillow cover, I have a whip stitch where you can
see the stitching. This is a certain technique that you can use, but we don't want to use
this. We don't want to see the actual stitch. So by doing a blind stitch, where you have
the two pieces of fabric together, and you go inside of those two, and you just catch
a little bit of the one side, and a little bit of the other and try and push in between
them to bring the needle out in between. You're catching the two ever so slightly and then
pulling. That will stitch the two together without actually seeing the stitch. Now, some
people find that you go out a little too far, but if it's the same color fabric, it's barely
noticeable. So I'm going to do that again. Catch one side, catch the other on the inside,
push through and bring the needle out between, not over, but right between the two, and bring
the needle out. And once I've done that, then the two pieces are together but you don't
see it. It's on the inside. Now that's just a little bit about a blind stitch. You can
also use this on hems, so you don't see at the hems of pants. My name is Daniel King,
and good stitching.