Use it up... Wear it out... Make it do... Or do without.
First I sewed the facing onto the drapery fabric with a ½" seam and pressed it away from the drapery fabric. These are the rightmost three panels draped over my railing in the second photo.
I then added the stiffener, butting it right next to the stitching line of that seam. Turning the half inch of the facing over the opposite edge of the stiffener, I set my zig zag stitch at a width of 4.0 and a length of 2.0 and sewed a ½" stitched down the edge securing it in place. No, that second photo is not a microwave or heart rate monitor; it is the display screen on my Pfaff to remind me of what settings I used.
I folded the facing over behind the valence main fabric and stitched down the middle of three thicknesses to hold it in place, using the longest straight stitch I had. I would remove that line later. After determining I needed to space my grommets 6⅝" apart, I calculated where the middle and those eight centers had to be.
I placed sticky notes at those locations on my tape measure and laid it out on the horizontal center line of the facing. They stuck very well to the tape and good enough to the fabric that I could mark vertical lines on the facing at the grommet locations with a ruler and pencil. The stickiness lasted long enough that I could mark all seven panels, and the yellow squares still clung tenaciously to the vinyl tape measure afterwards.
I then sewed down the facing at each vertical line, again with a very long stitch length, to secure the three layers of fabric, stiffener, and facing so they did not slip relative to each other while I cut out those 56 circles, one by one, with scissors. When I was finished it looked like The Very Hungry Caterpillar had been meandering about on the valences. I just finished two Very Hungry Caterpillar quilts – posts 4/13/2020 and 4/21/2020 – so that munching critter is fresh on my mind.
Grommet installation details are in drapery post for 6/28/2018. While I was sewing the valences and installing the grommets and removing all those temporary stitching lines, my husband repainted the walls from peach to grey; actually the color is Benjamin Moore's Silver Chain which sounds so much more appealing than drab grey. He installed the three rods from Target – which we also had mailed to us, and did not need to leave the house. Instead of alternating the panels, it then occurred to me to put two each from the top half of the pattern repeat on each side and the three from the bottom half of the repeat in the middle window. The discontinuities fell at the corner angles and are not at all noticeable. The kitchen valences are fairly short but their bottom hangs at the same height as the valences in the nook since the kitchen has a drop ceiling. Yay – for once Murphy's Law was defeated!
So now I have removed that long sturdy cardboard tube with a mere 93" of fabric wrapped about it from cluttering up my clothes closet. But this tube is made from a thick durable cardboard and is so strong. It must be useful for something else – rolling a quilt sandwich, keeping a tablecloth wrinkle-free, holding up a blanket like a tent pole for grandchild play. Surely I cannot throw this out. The irony does not escape me.
Ha! I have done that many a time! and I'll point out now you CAN use it without having to worry about that 93" scrap wrapped around the end. Those valences are gorgeous, and way for being efficient with your supplies. I love the look in your kitchen.
ReplyDelete