I watched the video a few times now. But I can't unterstand what this little white "paper" (?) for the first method is called. Would you please tell me what this is? Thanks 😊
I just use a magic marker. For example, if it is a black t-shirt, I put it on and then stick a black magic marker tip into the hole(s). After I do this, I remove the t-shirt. Then I look on my skin to find the black dots the marker left and further color the area(s) in. Works every time!
I needed this. My cat has little razor blades for feet, and a lot of things at my work are a tiny bit messed up so they snag in my uniform shirts. Had issues with entire uniform shirts getting an entire shred through the stomach. So I have to fix them all by hand! Hopefully this works without ironing I don't think my shirts can be ironed
This is a great video! I tried to mend a hole several times in a sweatshirt and it looked awful each time. After watching this video I did it pretty well if I do say so myself! I’m saving this video for the next time I need it.
I didn’t understand the glue u used in the first part, nor that lightweight material. May you please write down their names. And what happens if you toss the clothing in the washing machine?
Thank you very much. Very informative. I have always wanted to learn to use a sewing machine, but I’m relegated to having a bunch of needles, different sizes of course. Plus of crap load of thread, also different gauges. Yes, I subscribed and will use your channel again. Thanks again.
I have a T-shirt with several tiny holes (cloth moth) close together (about 1/4 inch (6mm) apart). Can I use single, larger pieces of fusible web and stabilizer? Or will this either look odd after the repair (the fabric may not lay naturally) or will the fabric pull away from the web & stabilizer? Should I, instead, use several small pieces of the repair materials?
Thank you for such a practical repair video. I get so frustrated when I find such destroyed clothing in my drawer. It's nice to know it is reversible. 👍🏻
This video dates back 2016, and it sounds like everyone had fusible bonding web and cutaway stabilizer laying around?… today the stabilizer I find online is only sold in industrial quantity (like 11 yards???) and it's not cheap. I have been searching for kits that include both the FBW and the stabilizer, and there is no clear answer. Is the repair going to last worth our trouble?? Do we need to avoid washing the fabric in water in the future??
I repaired a hole in the pocket material of a pair of shorts using the fusible sheerweight interfacing. It was such a rewarding experience to be able to wear the shorts again without having to make sure I put spare change in the other pockets.
But the first time I put these shorts in the clothes dryer–the fusible interfacing came off the pocket fabric. I had followed the instructions included with the interfacing exactly, using a hand iron set on "wool", and a damp cotton cloth laid over the repair, heating for 10-15 seconds, letting it cool before moving it.
I guess this type repair is good only for hand-dried (hung up) clothing.
this is the best! I got a brand new limited avalability t-shirt from one of my favorite brands, wore it once, and my lovely little kitty put a hole right in the middle of it right under the design. I used the fusable bonding web technique and it's like the hole was never there. I also mended another shirt she had damaged with similar results. I tried it with a heavier shirt with a larger hole and it didn't work, but I wasn't really expecting it to because of the weight of the fabric.
Will the tape be removed if I wash the cloth? I need answer please
Nasham pidicha urumbukal
English is not my first language, but is this a T-shirt? Not a sweater? Thanks for a great video!
Hi, my hole only appears on the right side of the shirt, not the wrong side. What can I do for this situation?
Fusing! Great idea!
Hello from Germany!
I watched the video a few times now. But I can't unterstand what this little white "paper" (?) for the first method is called. Would you please tell me what this is? Thanks 😊
thank u
https://m.youtube.com/channel/UCdPbV2su_qZtTGYCalXNUwg
Thank you!
Which one is better
Thank you!😊
Where do u get the fusible bonding web at?
Can you please show or give the name of the two pieces you used?
I am having a hard time figuring out what to buy.
I just use a magic marker. For example, if it is a black t-shirt, I put
it on and then stick a black magic marker tip into the hole(s). After I do
this, I remove the t-shirt. Then I look on my skin to find the black dots
the marker left and further color the area(s) in. Works every time!
Tip 1: remove tags carefully
Thank u so much it works 😍😍
Time for the donation pile
Fusible bonding web 2 of them on top of shirt hole. Make sure they’re lightweight
This is so nice and cool my friend. TFS. Stay connected 😊
What is the names of the items you used in the first option please
I needed this. My cat has little razor blades for feet, and a lot of things at my work are a tiny bit messed up so they snag in my uniform shirts. Had issues with entire uniform shirts getting an entire shred through the stomach. So I have to fix them all by hand! Hopefully this works without ironing I don't think my shirts can be ironed
My puppy is in his biting stage and he has put small holes in all my shirts where his canines go thru my shirt
This is a great video! I tried to mend a hole several times in a sweatshirt and it looked awful each time. After watching this video I did it pretty well if I do say so myself! I’m saving this video for the next time I need it.
Make more holes. lol
Get a new one lots in stores
I didn’t understand the glue u used in the first part, nor that lightweight material. May you please write down their names. And what happens if you toss the clothing in the washing machine?
Thank you very much. Very informative. I have always wanted to learn to use a sewing machine, but I’m relegated to having a bunch of needles, different sizes of course. Plus of crap load of thread, also different gauges. Yes, I subscribed and will use your channel again. Thanks again.
I have a T-shirt with several tiny holes (cloth moth) close together (about 1/4 inch (6mm) apart). Can I use single, larger pieces of fusible web and stabilizer? Or will this either look odd after the repair (the fabric may not lay naturally) or will the fabric pull away from the web & stabilizer? Should I, instead, use several small pieces of the repair materials?
Thank you for such a practical repair video. I get so frustrated when I find such destroyed clothing in my drawer. It's nice to know it is reversible. 👍🏻
This video dates back 2016, and it sounds like everyone had fusible bonding web and cutaway stabilizer laying around?… today the stabilizer I find online is only sold in industrial quantity (like 11 yards???) and it's not cheap. I have been searching for kits that include both the FBW and the stabilizer, and there is no clear answer. Is the repair going to last worth our trouble?? Do we need to avoid washing the fabric in water in the future??
What department?
I repaired a hole in the pocket material of a pair of shorts using the fusible sheerweight interfacing. It was such a rewarding experience to be able to wear the shorts again without having to make sure I put spare change in the other pockets.
But the first time I put these shorts in the clothes dryer–the fusible interfacing came off the pocket fabric. I had followed the instructions included with the interfacing exactly, using a hand iron set on "wool", and a damp cotton cloth laid over the repair, heating for 10-15 seconds, letting it cool before moving it.
I guess this type repair is good only for hand-dried (hung up) clothing.
this is the best! I got a brand new limited avalability t-shirt from one of my favorite brands, wore it once, and my lovely little kitty put a hole right in the middle of it right under the design. I used the fusable bonding web technique and it's like the hole was never there. I also mended another shirt she had damaged with similar results. I tried it with a heavier shirt with a larger hole and it didn't work, but I wasn't really expecting it to because of the weight of the fabric.
why the stabilizer and not just the bonding? especially on a thin garment that you can see through partially?