tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5761447847535936705.post7279919769291846208..comments2024-03-13T08:07:56.033+01:00Comments on Kleidung um 1800: FadenziehenKleidung um 1800http://www.blogger.com/profile/09187943106849398728noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5761447847535936705.post-40456828897900623072011-05-07T09:20:52.158+02:002011-05-07T09:20:52.158+02:00Oh no, what a pity!!! Now I value the work on your...Oh no, what a pity!!! Now I value the work on your dress even more!<br /><br />But indeed once I've had problems with this method, too. I wanted to use a very old and wonderfully soft cotton bedsheet, but over the years and lots of laundries the thread was kind of flimsy and intermingled, you could clearly see warp and weft, but when I started pulling everything went square and I could only manage to pull the tiniest of thread ends...sigh...<br />SabineKleidung um 1800https://www.blogger.com/profile/09187943106849398728noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5761447847535936705.post-32808237345314454912011-05-06T18:59:21.768+02:002011-05-06T18:59:21.768+02:00Dear Sabine,
Yes, pulling a thread is such a good...Dear Sabine,<br /><br />Yes, pulling a thread is such a good method. On most cottons it works really well.<br /><br />Guess what, though? It did not work recently on my voile...just pulled the voile all out of shape, worrying me that I had ruined my fabric before even putting needle to it. The voile is just so thin and fragile, and the threads fuzzy enough to cling together, that I fancy that is what causes the issue.<br /><br />Very best,<br /><br />natalieZipZiphttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04088551086336264968noreply@blogger.com