
Looks pretty bad, huh? This was the mess outside my front door. I had been too busy stitching and traveling this spring to get to it. Not one flower was planted this year. :::sigh:::
Yes, you read that right! I had been awake for almost an hour, what I can't show is the *&^%$#@ racket made by a nest of baby birds in the stove vent. Yes, the stove vent!!!!!!!!!! My dear darling husband better hope they fly the coop by the time he gets back tomorrow or he is evicting the family. And just let those PETA people come here. The same ones who criticized the President for swatting a fly. They haven't met this chick at 5:05AM awakened by some hungry birds.
Sooooo, since I had the aforementioned mess at the front door and the temps were mild at DAWN, I decided to tackle it before it got to the projected 98 degrees today. Glad I did and the recycle people have taken the entire bag of weeds that I evicted. I was practicing for birds.
Onto the task at hand, shell stitch hem. As always you can click the picture to enlarge it. And there are LOTS of pictures.

Shell stitch is a way of doing a hand hem that gives a sweet decorative edge. Usually seen around the neck or armholes of a garment. Often using a 1/4" hem. I don't like to take to time to measure so I run a "cheater" stitching line on the machine. Another benefit of this is, it acts like stay stitching since you will most likely be hemming curves. I used contrasting thread so you can see.

Your finished hem will be 1/8" in depth so you have to fold your hem allowance over twice. This shows the first fold.

gives you a finished hem of 1/8" at the 1/4" mark. I just finger pressed this since it is 100% cotton.

You are stitching from the left to the right on the wrong side of the fabric. Take two running stitching just above the fold.
Since I can see my machine stitches so well, I used them as a guide. I have decided I may continue to do this. It makes for even shells. I like that. And I don't have to try and keep it even. I have a guide right there. See I learned something new while trying to share a stitch with you. Cool huh?
My guide was 2 machine stitches for each shell.
Since I can see my machine stitches so well, I used them as a guide. I have decided I may continue to do this. It makes for even shells. I like that. And I don't have to try and keep it even. I have a guide right there. See I learned something new while trying to share a stitch with you. Cool huh?
My guide was 2 machine stitches for each shell.

After the 2 running stitches I throw my thread OVER the fold and take a stitch, piercing my fabric from the front to the back,
then firmly pinch your thread as you give the thread a good tug. (No comments about the manicure. Remember I was pulling weeds at 6 o'clock this morning!)

This will make the "dimple" that will form your shells. Take a second overcast stitch at the same place. All shells are made up of two running stitches followed by two overcast stitches.

I fold over as I go. Don't try and finger press the entire length that you are going to shell stitch. You will just drive yourself crazy trying to keep it folded. Finger press a bit, stitch, finger press a bit, stitch.

As you tug your shells, your cheater line will gravitate towards the back. Ignore it. This is a row of shell stitches. You can see I was getting in a rhythm as I went along. the last four on the left are all the same size and depth. So what is the moral of that? Start your shells under the arm, not dead on center front. By the time you get to the neckline center front you will be in the zone and they will look like nice even little shells.