After Caleb was born I bought some transition jeans and did this hack job when I hemmed them.   This time around I thought I'd better try to do it right since my new jeans are from Banana Republic and cost $89.50. Seriously? Yes. And I'm so worth it. Well, not really. I got them on clearance for $17.99.  Fantastic, huh?  At first, I just folded them under and sewed a single seam. It took about 2 minutes and it looked horrible. They went from looking like $90 jeans to looking like they were $17.99 jeans. So, I ripped it out and I'm very happy with the results, so I thought I'd share.
  This time around I thought I'd better try to do it right since my new jeans are from Banana Republic and cost $89.50. Seriously? Yes. And I'm so worth it. Well, not really. I got them on clearance for $17.99.  Fantastic, huh?  At first, I just folded them under and sewed a single seam. It took about 2 minutes and it looked horrible. They went from looking like $90 jeans to looking like they were $17.99 jeans. So, I ripped it out and I'm very happy with the results, so I thought I'd share.    
First turn the jeans inside out. Fold up the bottom and iron.  To calculate how much to fold up to this: (where x is the length you want to shorten by)
(x/2) + 0.5" = amount to fold up
I needed to shorten these jeans by 2".  So, 2/2 = 1" + 0.5" = 1.5"
You can see above that I measured 1.5".
Iron.
Now listen up because this is where I deviated from the jeans hemming tutorials I found online.  You don't want to sew right up against the edge of the hem.  
Notice I am NOT using a zipper foot.  I'm using the standard foot for thick fabric.  That's a B foot for Vikings.  I scooted the needle as far to the left as I could.  
You want the stitches to be 0.75" away from the edge of the jeans (not the fold).
Make sure that you sew through both side seams (there is a picture at the end demonstrating one leg having this done and the other not).  It's probably a good idea to turn the needle with the knob instead of using your presser foot.  It's a lot of denim to sew through!
Should look like this when you're done.
Turn the jeans right side out again. 
Using similar color thread as the original, stitch a new seam as close as possible to the fold edge.
Here's the problem.  My New Year's resolution is to not sew through 10 layers of denim anymore.  So, I did not sew over the inside side seam.  
I did sew through the outside side seam, but I turned it by hand instead of using the foot pedal.
Go over the stitches a second time.  Trust me.  It'll look better.
Here's a look of the inside. 
  The finished hem.  
 The inside seams.  Notice that the one on the left looks better.  That is because I sewed through the inside side seam on the first round of stitches (the first fold).  I didn't do that with the right side.  
Here is a look of the first side completed.
 
 
2 comments:
U r awesome!!! You must be short :) hehe
They look very nice!
You did such an great job taking pictures sstep by step along the way! I bet it is great having pants that are old feel new again!
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