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Seamstress ...

Thomas Koehle

Well-Known Member
When i got into the hobby of reenactment (dropped it meanwhile) i simply didn't had the money to get jackets 'n stuff to the seamstress for every single patch

This and the fact you once in a while need to swap patches if started to practice sewing

Well and today i actually use it - if times get hot - to come down a bit and go my way stitch by stitch around a patch to calm myself

As for leather-jackets i preffer the seamstress but most fabric jackets i still sew patches by myself

The 2 latest "works" ...

37J1 from 5*
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M421A
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Spitfireace

Well-Known Member
I don't trust most seamstresses. I might even get my own sewing machine. I used to do it back when my mom bought an old sewing machine. Kind of went by the wayside.
 

Pa12

Well-Known Member
Yeah I mostly …

Patches handsewn on a leather jacket just don’t look right for me - I like even stitches on my leather jackets

Sure not every flight personnel had a sewing machine available but anyway
Unless based close to a town, I would bet a lot of them were sewn on exactly as you have. Either by the owner or a member of the crew. Mechanics would have been a good go to. There was still lots of fabric work on the aircraft at the time.
 

Spitfireace

Well-Known Member
My grade 3 teacher took it upon herself to teach her whole class how to sew(by hand). Wasn’t part of the curriculum. We each had to make a teapot cozy for our mums. I’ve done all my own minor repairs ever since. She also taught us how to make a salad;)
At the time you thought it was .... but now. My granny taught me to thread a needle.
 

Spitfireace

Well-Known Member
My grade 3 teacher took it upon herself to teach her whole class how to sew(by hand). Wasn’t part of the curriculum. We each had to make a teapot cozy for our mums. I’ve done all my own minor repairs ever since. She also taught us how to make a salad;)
Yum.. .salad.
 

Spitfireace

Well-Known Member
Yeah I mostly …

Patches handsewn on a leather jacket just don’t look right for me - I like even stitches on my leather jackets

Sure not every flight personnel had a sewing machine available but anyway
A lot in ww2 was sewn by hand. The early patches were hand sewn. By wives and girlfriends back home. That's why they don't exactly match in color, or size.
 

Spitfireace

Well-Known Member
Yeah I mostly …

Patches handsewn on a leather jacket just don’t look right for me - I like even stitches on my leather jackets

Sure not every flight personnel had a sewing machine available but anyway
If you have someone you trust to do it properly. Usually I tell someone to put it there, and they put it here. Then I just have to say ok well that is where it is. I didn't want it there.
 

Spitfireace

Well-Known Member
There is a way to make even stitches on leather like it was done by machine, but it was by hand. It was discussed here. It's like a wheel that can poke holes in leather.
 

Micawber

Well-Known Member
There is a way to make even stitches on leather like it was done by machine, but it was by hand. It was discussed here. It's like a wheel that can poke holes in leather.

Yep, wheel that has pins set in it at regular spacing to mark where the needle should pass through the piece you are working on. another version look a bit like forks for marking out stitch holes in straight lines. Other items are a sewing awl which enables two threads to be worked at once - all that for hand sewing.
at all wrong with hand sewing as many patches were applied that way.
I have industrial sewing machines, but these are not like domestic machines that can do a variety of stitches in relatively lightweight materials [we have those too], each machine will produce a certain stitch only but that can be varied in length and tension in heavy materials, leather, canvas etc. All electric.
Trouble is now my fingers have been affected by chemo so are partially numb / tingly which makes satisfactorily manipulating the work a bit of an effort.
One of the favourites here is an old manual Singer 29k* "patcher" that can still be found in old style shoe & boot cobblers.

*Illustration off the net


29k70stn.jpg
 

Spitfireace

Well-Known Member
Yep, wheel that has pins set in it at regular spacing to mark where the needle should pass through the piece you are working on. another version look a bit like forks for marking out stitch holes in straight lines. Other items are a sewing awl which enables two threads to be worked at once - all that for hand sewing.
at all wrong with hand sewing as many patches were applied that way.
I have industrial sewing machines, but these are not like domestic machines that can do a variety of stitches in relatively lightweight materials [we have those too], each machine will produce a certain stitch only but that can be varied in length and tension in heavy materials, leather, canvas etc. All electric.
Trouble is now my fingers have been affected by chemo so are partially numb / tingly which makes satisfactorily manipulating the work a bit of an effort.
One of the favourites here is an old manual Singer 29k* "patcher" that can still be found in old style shoe & boot cobblers.

*Illustration off the net


View attachment 130759
That is great information Steve. Singer is the name to get in all sewing machines really. Maybe like the "Ford" of sewing machines.
 
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