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When it comes to
understanding sewing terms, you really need
My
Sewing
Dictionary.

And
My
Sewing Dictionary
Software

Together these two
resources make learning to sew quicker and
easier than you might imagine.
The ebook provides a
beautifully illustrated dictionary complete
with definitions, explanations, and photos of
over 3,000 sewing and quilting terms.
The software installs right
on your desktop for easy access any time you
need to know what a sewing term means.
Just start typing and the terms auto fill and
your definition and explainations appear
lickity split easy beezy.
To learn more about
My
sewing Dictionary Click Here.
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What is a
“yoke”? “A scant quarter”? or
a “serged edge”?
Maybe you can remember
sitting in a group of people and
wondering what language they were
talking. It sure did not seam like
English, but it did not sound much like any
other language either. There are many
fields of endeavor, hobbies, and interest with
their own special terms.
Over the years, the language
of sewing has become a bit easier, but every
once in a while somebody says something that
just leaves me bewildered. If you
are new to sewing or quilting, you probably
understand.
There is a whole vocabulary
that is used by people who enjoy sewing and
quilting. Sometimes it takes years to
learn all the ins and outs of this
language. While the words themselves
sometimes sound familiar, they often have very
specific meanings only understood by avid
sewers.
When you hear the word
“Yoke”, you might think the person is from
Texas as I am, and is not properly pronouncing
the word “joke”. You might even think you
are suppose to laugh when you hear the word,
but it is no joking matter. To an avid
seamstress the word yoke is as commonplace as a
shirt or dress. Indeed, yoke means the
part of a garment running horizontally across
it. It includes panels such as garment
pieces covering shoulder, waist, midriff, or
back.
If you heard a couple
of older ladies talking about how
important it is to use a “scant quarter”, you
might imagine they were quite fugal,
penny pinching, maybe even
skinflints. If you overheard one of
them say something like, “without a scant
quarter foot, you just can’t make good seam
allowances”, you might feel a bit dizzy.
To the avid quilter, however, it all makes
perfect sense. A “scant quarter” has
nothing to do with money, how absurd. Any
quilter knows that you can use a special sewing
machine presser foot called a scant quarter to
give you a perfect quarter inch seam allowance
when piecing quilt blocks together. Oops,
I apologize, if this still seams strange to
you, maybe you need to follow my mother’s old
adage: “If you really want to know
look it up in the dictionary.”
Years ago, when I first
heard a salesman use the word “serged edge”, it
made no sense to me. Later, I asked an
experienced seamstress what the salesman was
talking about. She explained that this
was simply a way to overcast the edge of a
fabric so that it would not ravel under
use. Since then, I have learned quite a
bit more about different kinds of serged edges
and how to make them on a serger as well as a
sewing machine, but the learning process can be
a challenge.
This is where My Sewing
Dictionary comes in. Over the years,
I started collecting words that were special to
sewing and quilting. It is amazing how
many different sewing terms and quilting terms
there really are. As I collected these
terms, I would ask people to define them for
me. I would look them up in regular
dictionaries, and try to put them into my own
simplified words. Eventually, I collected
over 3,000 words that form what I call the
sewing language. There are likely a bunch
more too. Sewing terminology includes
many words that are used exclusively in sewing
or quilting, and many words that have special
meanings in sewing.
There are many fields of
endeavor, hobbies, and interests with their own
special words, find out what these words
mean from experts in the field. It will
give you confidence and satisfaction. .If
you want to master the language of sewing and
quilting, you might start your own word
collection. Ask your sewing teacher for
help or look up the words in a specialized
dictionary instead of trying to figure them out
from the maze in an ordinary dictionary.
There are many sewing glossaries available on
the internet, and there are a few specialized
dictionaries available to help you master the
language of sewing. Check out the all new
My Sewing Dictionary and the My Sewing
Dictionary Software.
AUTHOR:
David Trumble met his wife Donna in college
over 40 years ago. She was operating an
alterations business in her dorm room, and
shared a few classes. Over the years they
taught school, led churches, and operated many
sewing businesses. David is a certified
sewing machine technician, author,
educator, and business manager. They own
a chain of Sew And Quilt Stores with their
business partner, Mr. Stephen Weather and his
wife Pat.
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