- Mon Feb 03, 2020 12:29 am
#9859
I've watched John's courses, and a whole bunch of other YouTube videos, in my quest to expand my leather-working horizons and learn auto upholstery so I can restore my '53 Skylark myself, but I'm throwing this question out in the General Discussion as it is all encompassing. I've been making custom leather holsters for the past 20+ years, so I'm very familiar with working with leather and industrial sewing machines in general. One thing I was taught when learning holster-making was to always avoid a blind stitch whenever possible. In all of the instructional videos I've seen on sewing piping or cording, (except the ones where some guys amazingly sew all three pieces at once at the speed of light), the piping is sewn to one piece, then the second piece is laid on top and sewn on by lining up the stitch allowance edge with no other guide or reference on the top piece. Well, going around a curve I royally screwed up my first attempt at the driver's seat-back cover, stitching into the piping even though the edges appeared lined up. (Luckily I was able to use most of those seat sections to cut out side panels for the passenger side). Anyway, I sewed the second-attempt cover by flipping things over so that I was sewing on top of the stitch line that already existed from sewing the piping onto the first piece. My theory being that I knew the piping looked good on this first piece and those stitches were where they should be, so if I used that stitch line as a guide and sewed on top of it, and kept the edges lined up everything would fall in place, and it did. The idea came to me because the screwed up piece had a single double stitched line except where I had screwed up and the two lines separated. Sooo, sorry for being long-winded in explaining this, but my question is (since I'm not seeing it taught this way in any videos), is there a good reason it should not be done this way?



