I am lucky enough to sew on the gorgeous Baby Lock Evolution serger and was asked by the folks at Baby Lock to share an easy project using one of my favorite features on a serger, differential feed. I chose to create an easy Ruffle Dishtowel. Throughout the month of April you can check out the National Serger Month website to check out a bunch of free projects made with sergers, learn more details about what they can do and enter to win your very own serger. And let me tell you.......Baby Lock sergers are the BEST!
When you adjust your differential feed up and down, it will
change the speed in which the differential feed dogs push the fabric through
the machine. Increase the differential feed and your machine will push your
fabric through at a quicker rate, causing it to ruffle!
Generally for a nice ruffle, I set my differential feed up
to 2.0 (it is normally set a N). However, if you don’t want to gather your
fabric as much, then you could set it at 1.8 or 1.5. Different weights of
fabric will gather differently, so it is always important to give your
adjustments a test run before actually sewing on your project.
The Ruffle Dishtowel is an easy, everyday project to add
that special touch to that regular kitchen dishtowel you have hanging around.
These also make great gifts!
Ruffle Dishtowel
By Lindsay Wilkes from The Cottage Mama
for Baby Lock Sewing & Embroidery Machines
Supplies:
1 standard dishtowel
1 strip of fabric 2.5” wide x width of the dish towel + 1”
1 strip of fabric 4” wide x 2.5 times the width of the dish
towel
1 piece rick rack trim as wide as the dish towel
Coordinating thread
Embroidery thread (optional)
Instructions:
Step 1: If you
would like to embroider a design on your dishtowel, now is the time to do so.
Follow the instructions for your sewing machine in regards to the
design you have selected. The bird design (seen here) is a built in machine
design on the Baby Lock Unity. You definitely do not need to do an embroidery
design, so it’s up to you if you would like to add that detail or not.
Step 2: Prepare
the strips of fabric. Cut the fabric that is not being ruffled at 2.5” wide x
the width of your dishtowel + 1”. Cut the fabric that is going to be ruffled 4”
wide x (2 – 2.5 times) the width of your dishtowel.
Step 3: Prepare
your serger for a rolled edge according to your machines instructions. On the
Baby Lock Evolution, you should remove the left needle, set the stitch selector
to D, the stitch width at 4 and the differential feed in the N position. I like
to use Bulky Nylon on the upper looper for a fuller rolled edge. You do not
need to do this but it adds a nice edge. Leave all other threads the same.
Step 4: Run the
fabric that you plan to use for your ruffle through the serger to make a rolled
edge on one side.
Step 5: Prepare
your serger for gathering. This is where our differential feed will come into
play. Every serger is different, but on the Baby Lock Evolution, you want to
re-insert your left needle because both needles are used for gathering. Set your stitch selector to A, your
stitch length to 4.0, your width at M – 7.5 and the differential feed at 2.0.
For this project I decided to use my gathering foot on the
serger, but the settings are just the same if you aren’t using the gathering
foot. To use the gathering foot, place the fabric to be ruffled with the right
side up underneath the foot, place the fabric that is not being ruffled on top
with the right side down. Slide the fabric through the middle of the foot. I
like to use the hand-wheel a couple of times to make sure I’ve caught both
fabrics with the needles, before I start sewing.
Begin serging. Your fabric on the bottom will gather and attach to the fabric on top. For tighter gathers, add a little tension to the top fabric by pulling ever so slightly. If you’ve only cut your fabric to be ruffled 2 times longer than the fabric not being ruffled, you probably don’t want to add any tension to the upper fabric. If you would prefer to have more ruffles, cut the ruffle fabric 2.5 times longer and you should be able to achieve a tighter gather. Always test before sewing on your actual project. It’s better to have too much fabric when gathering, than not enough…..you can always square it up if there is too much.
If you are not using the gathering foot, just run the fabric
to be gathered through the serger and it will gather it for you based on the
settings I gave you above. Then you will have one more additional step and need
to attach the ruffle to the non-ruffle fabric using a ½” seam allowance. Place
the two fabrics with the right sides together, lining up the raw edges and sew
together on one long side.
Step 6: Add the
rick rack trim. Using a medium size rick rack trim, line up the edge of the
rick rack with the raw edge of the non-gathered fabric. Sew rick rack to fabric
using a ½” seam allowance. Fold the rick towards the wrong side of the fabric
and press.
Step 7: Serge or
zig-zag stitch both raw sides of the rick rack, ruffle piece. Fold the raw
edges towards the wrong side of the fabric making sure that they are the same
width as the dishtowel. Sew both sides.
Step 8: Attach
the ruffle piece to the dishtowel. Line up the ruffle piece so that it is
straight and hangs below the edge of the dishtowel. This is going to be
different for everyone depending on the size dishtowel you have selected. You
just want it to look nice and straight.
Step 9: Sew all
the way around the non-gathered fabric using a ¼” seam allowance.
Once you have sewn your ruffle piece to the dishtowel, just
trim up any stray threads and your dishtowel is ready to go!
If you get a chance, definitely go check out the Baby Lock National Serger Month website, it is really a great resource for anything and everything about sergers. Plus while you are there, you can download a really nice printer-friendly version of this tutorial!
























I am having sewing machine envy big time right now!!!! Super cute dishtowel - excellent job!
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