Sewing; Handicraft for Girls; a Graded Course for City And Rural Schools
The book Sewing; Handicraft for Girls; a Graded Course for City And Rural Schools was written by author Idabelle Mcglauflin Here you can read free online of Sewing; Handicraft for Girls; a Graded Course for City And Rural Schools book, rate and share your impressions in comments. If you don't know what to write, just answer the question: Why is Sewing; Handicraft for Girls; a Graded Course for City And Rural Schools a good or bad book?
What reading level is Sewing; Handicraft for Girls; a Graded Course for City And Rural Schools book?
To quickly assess the difficulty of the text, read a short excerpt:
Exercise No. 26 — Mitered Corner.? Materials: Paper. Teach the mitered corner on paper only. Have it done over and over until every pupil understands how it is done, and can do it alone, THE MITERED CORNER. rapidly and perfectly. Ask pupils to bring paper from home, as al- most any kind will do for this practice work. Have it made in hems of several widths. See description of "Miscellaneous" exercises, page 82. 33 SEWING Exercise No. 27 — A Napkin — Damask Hem. Materials: Damask 8>2"x8>2"; whit...e thread No. 60; needle No. 7. Trim the napkin square. Napkins are usually hemmed with a very narrow hem, luncheon napkins sometimes with wide ones. The Damask Hem: Fold the hem the desired width (on this small napkin one-half inch) and then turn the hem back flat to the cloth and crease. The edge of the hem and the crease thus formed are overhanded together with fine even stitches. When laundered this irons perfectly smooth. This method of hemming is used only on cloth too heavy to flat hem nicely.
User Reviews: