Aurora Sisneros

Sewing Tips: Fusing Interfacing to Fabric

Aurora Sisneros
Duration:   1  mins

Description

Make interfacing your best friend with this sewing tutorial by Aurora Sisneros. Aurora shows how we can use a steam press iron to easily fuse interfacing to fabric. Make several layers within minutes – and use these layers to create a trendy weekender bag!

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2 Responses to “Sewing Tips: Fusing Interfacing to Fabric”

  1. elaine weckwerth

    Why wasn't this advertised as a PAID ADVERTISEMENT! The average individual can't afford this, nor has the room for it. VERY disappointed Sewing Circle would produce this.

  2. deblyn79

    Which steam press iron is this?

Interfacing can be your best friend. I love to make some of the bags that are on the market today with lots and lots of layers of interfacing. It gives it that nice, crisp bowling ball look. But they can also be your worst enemy when you're trying to fuse it all in a big application with this. So for example, I have this piece of fabric here. I want to turn it over and I want to use this piece of interfacing first. So then I have to first fuse these two together. And I put the surface of my iron down, and I have to count to 15, and then I have to wait, and then I've got to move it over here, then I have to count to 15. Then I have to also, once this is fused, do the same thing with this one, and then start all over again. If you're doing a very large weekender type bag, this is going to take you a very long time. Enter the steam press iron. This lovely guy has 10 times the surface area as a regular iron, and gets twice as hot, and can fuse both of these layers at the same time, just like this. Go ahead and put it under there. In about 10 seconds, it will fuse the whole entire thing for you. Both layers at the same time. And voila, all of the layers are done at the same time. Even if you're doing it in a bigger application, you just put the first half on and press it, turn it around, do the second half, and press it. And some of the bags that I make take me normally three hours to do the fusing, and I can get them all done in 30 minutes with this guy right here.
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