Patching Blue Jeans
#1
Hello everybody,
Does anybody patch blue jeans? I was wondering i fyou have any suggestions on the best way to patch them. I have searched the internet but have found several ways. I'l just like to hear suggestions from people who has actually done it.
thank you,
Judy
Does anybody patch blue jeans? I was wondering i fyou have any suggestions on the best way to patch them. I have searched the internet but have found several ways. I'l just like to hear suggestions from people who has actually done it.
thank you,
Judy
#2
I try. I have the iron on patches that I try to use on the wrong side and machine stitch around the edges--sometimes it works--most times, not. I probably shouldn't put the jeans in the dryer but we can't hang clothes on a clotheline in the city, and they take too long to dry otherwise.
#4
The other day one of my favorite pairs of Jeans got a hole in them and I didn't really want to patch them with other Jean material. I had this cute cream and pink material with vines and leaves on it, so I used that. So to make them look more like I mean to have the patches there, I cut out one knee and put a piece of the material there and a little place on the thigh of the other leg and put a piece there. Then I hand tacked them on and machine stitched around them. Then, after I had washed them, I took the stitches where I had hand stitched them off, b/c they seemed to be more visible. After I had washed them, the jeans frayed around the patch and they turned out really cute. Don't know if your interested in that way, but I thought I'd share what I had done.
#6
Super Member
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Minnesota
Posts: 1,097
Oh, oh! Choose ME!!! I have raised three sons and a husband, and I am TOTALLY the expert on mending jeans. I even do it for all the men in our church!
The easiest way to mend jeans is to open up the inside seam. That's usually the one that is not flat-felled. Then you take denim from other old jeans and cut a patch. If it matches well and the hole is big, I fold in the outside edges and position it on top of the jeans. Put a couple pins in it to hold it in place and stitch around the outside (folded) edges. Then stitch vertical and horizontal rows across it, like quilting a grid! Trim away any loose threads and frayed edges on the jeans. If it is a small hole, I usually put the new denim inside the jeans. Stitch heavily, like darning.
Gray thread usually works best, unless the jeans are very dark.
Then stitch up the leg again. :-)
The easiest way to mend jeans is to open up the inside seam. That's usually the one that is not flat-felled. Then you take denim from other old jeans and cut a patch. If it matches well and the hole is big, I fold in the outside edges and position it on top of the jeans. Put a couple pins in it to hold it in place and stitch around the outside (folded) edges. Then stitch vertical and horizontal rows across it, like quilting a grid! Trim away any loose threads and frayed edges on the jeans. If it is a small hole, I usually put the new denim inside the jeans. Stitch heavily, like darning.
Gray thread usually works best, unless the jeans are very dark.
Then stitch up the leg again. :-)
#7
I've patched hundreds of jeans. With FIVE sons, I have practically re-made several pairs. "But mom, they are my favorites!" I use a piece of discarded jean, put it underneath the hole, take off the big wide surface of the machine to use the narrow base that will fit up the legs, then do a wavey line thing to attach it.
Here's a good story. One of my stepsons left his laundry in the washer, so I dried it, and was folding it when I noticed a huge hold on the front, near the base of the pocket. So being the mender that I am, I promptly mend the hole. As I'm folding the jeans, my other son comes into the laundry room and laughs! He said that my stepson had just bought them. He bought them that way. So replied "No one is allowed to show their underware through a hole in their jeans in OUR house!". It's been a year now, and my step son has never mentioned the mending job. And he continues to wear these jeans. Sara
Here's a good story. One of my stepsons left his laundry in the washer, so I dried it, and was folding it when I noticed a huge hold on the front, near the base of the pocket. So being the mender that I am, I promptly mend the hole. As I'm folding the jeans, my other son comes into the laundry room and laughs! He said that my stepson had just bought them. He bought them that way. So replied "No one is allowed to show their underware through a hole in their jeans in OUR house!". It's been a year now, and my step son has never mentioned the mending job. And he continues to wear these jeans. Sara
#8
it drives me nuts see people with holey jeans, and to think that they paid more money for them than you could have gotten a "good" pair for! When I was a kid it was embarrassing to have to wear torn clothes or your big brother's, that you couldn't keep up! I won't get on the soapbox but I hate that too!
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06-10-2011 03:13 AM