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Block-Fuse Interfacing to Facings | Sewing Tip

Paper towels protect your iron and ironing board
Threads magazine - 177 - Feb./Mar. 2015

Instead of cutting fusible interfacing pieces and attempting to match them to cut facings, I’ve found it’s easier to block-fuse interfacing to the cut facings. But how do you do this without fusing everything to your ironing board or ruining your iron? This is how:

Cut the facings from fashion fabric. Smooth a sheet of interfacing, fusible side up, on the ironing board. Place the cut facings right side up on top of the interfacing; arrange them for grain or stretch and to conserve the interfacing.

Tear off from a roll several sheets of paper towels, still attached to each other so you have a single long piece. Lay the long paper towel piece on top of the facings and interfacing.

Press as directed by the interfacing instructions, through the paper towels. Cut the fused facings from the excess paper towel and interfacing. The paper towel falls away, leaving only the interfacing fused to the fabric facings.

Avoid using printed paper towels because the ink designs can transfer to the fabric. Alternatively, use tissue paper, typing paper, or kraft paper in place of paper towels.

—By Sarah McFarland, Threads editor

This tip was featured in Threads #177 (February/March 2015).


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Discuss

Discuss

  1. bmck97004 | | #1

    Instead of wasting paper for this technique (save our trees...) use a non-stick teflon pressing sheet. They are inexpensive and can be used indefinitely.

  2. msum | | #2

    I agree with bmck97004 ... Teflon sheets instead of paper towels. I'm also a miser with my interfacings, so cutting away even small pieces seems wasteful. The little bits always come in handy somewhere.

  3. User avater
    chloespeaks | | #3

    This is definitely a time saver, but I usually avoid any excess in my seams by cutting my interfacings slightly smaller and within the seam line. Could be good for speed sewing with very light interfacing though.

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