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Clothing Care Tips:
Sewing Buttons
Sewing on buttons is not difficult, but requires care and patience. Since buttons do come loose or fall off, it’s a very useful skill. It's best to use the original button if you have it; if not check for extras that may have come with the garment. (It’s a good practice to have a common place for extra buttons that often come with new garments, if they're not sewn into an inner seam somewhere. Label the buttons if you can.)
Once you have a suitable button, find a thread that matches the button, the garment, and any thread used to sew on other buttons. Observe the way that the rest of the buttons are sewn on and try to imitate it.
Tools: Needle, thread, button
- Take twelve inches of thread, knotted securely at one end, and thread
your needle. Make a single stitch in the shirt in line with
the row of buttons, about 1/8 inch long, and then make another
stitch perpendicular (across) to the first.
- Hold the button about 1/8 inch away from the shirt and thread
the needle up through one hole in the button and down the diagonally
opposite hole. Do the same with the other holes and then repeat
four times.
- For coats and sport jackets, wrap the thread tightly around
the 1/8-inch shank that has been created between the button
and the cloth to create a tight thread shank. The purpose of
a shank is to provide space for thicker fabric to lay flat
when the garment is buttoned up. A shirt button typically does
not have a shank, except perhaps on the collar where the neckband
is thicker.
- Push the needle through the base of the thread shank to the
inside of the garment. Pass the needle under the stitches,
leaving a small loop. Pass the needle and thread through the
loop and pull tight. Cut the thread about 1/4 inch from the
knot.
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