Paperback 8 x 10 in. 128 pages, with color photos and drawings
Published 1998 ISBN 978-1-56158-239-6 Product #070367
Tops and t-shirts are wardrobe basics that are used every day, for casual and formal occasions, from morning until the night.
Easy Guide to Sewing Tops & T-Shirts describes the essential techniques needed to make sewing a top an efficient and enjoyable experience. Marcy Tilton offers professional advice on choosing fabric, finding a pattern and choosing an appropriate size, simple fitting techniques, and complete construction methods for both wovens and knits. She also includes numerous designer ideas that can be incorporated into any pattern that will transform it from basic to gorgeous.
Discover expert tips and techniques for how to:
- change a round neckline to a flattering V
- add elegant refinements to your pattern that off-the-rack tops don't include
- make a drapey bias-cut shell
- add designer details to your pattern
- make a perfect, flat hem on a knit top
- use stenciling, dying, and stamping to jazz up your fabric
More Easy Guides:
Easy Guide to Sewing Linings
Easy Guide to Sewing Jackets
Easy Guide to Sewing Pants
Easy Guide to Sewing Skirts
Introduction
1 Which Top to Make?
Choosing the Best Style
Marriage of Pattern and Fabric
2 Selecting the Pattern
Hard vs. Easy Tops
About the Pattern Companies
Measurements for Sewing Tops
Selecting a Pattern for Knits
3 Working with Fabrics
Easy vs. Challenging Fabrics
Choosing Knits
Interfacing Guidelines
Preparing the Fabric
Laying Out and Cutting the Fabric
Marking Your Fabric
4 Fit
Proofing the Pattern
Pattern Drafting Basics
Tissue Fitting
Pattern Refinements
Pattern Work Checklist
5 Construction
Sewing Construction Basics
Preparing to Sew
Constructing the Top
6 Bias and Surface Design
Bias Shell
Further Techniques
Resources
Index
Tops can be the glue that holds a wardrobe of separates together: what you wear under a jacket, a cardigan sweater, or shirt. A top might match your skirt, turning it into a two-piece dress, or a cardigan, transforming it into a twin set. A top can be a bias silk charmeuse tank, a jersey T-shirt, or a linen shell. A top can be in the background, unadorned and minimal, or be a focus piece encrusted with embellishment. What separates a top from a blouse lies in the details. Blouses have more construction: cuffs, complex collars, sleve plackets, front bands. Tops tend toward simplicity with bound or faced edges and easy-to-sew sleeves.
I love to make tops because they can be quick and easy or act like a blank canvas for surface design or detail. Patterns don't change much, so once you have a favorite pattern or two, it is easy to lengthen or shorten it, revamp the neckline, cut it on the bias, or add buttons, piping, and stenciling or stamping. Simple designs look best when they fit so they flow on the body, and are so comfortable that you can forget you are wearing them. A top like a cap-sleeved shell or tank-type camisole is indispensable all year. Even if you are a woman who says, "I never reveal my bare upper arms," you'll come to think of tops as an integral part of the outer layer.
Each spring and fall, I make a grouping of tank tops and long- or short-sleeved tunics with matching/blending pants or skirts, and wear all the pieces separately and together. There is something slimming, flattering, and very comfortable about wearing one color from head to toe. Another approach is to keep your bottoms in basic neutrals like black, brown, and natural so you can switch your tops. After a few seasons, you'll have colors, shapes, and textures to layer together. I use silk, rayon, or linen year-round, adapting the color to the season, so I can layer a fall silk camisole under a holiday velvet tunic. I go into the stores and examine and try on the finest-quality tops, making notes of construction details and proportion. The tops that designers like Giorgio Armani and Donna Karan show with their jackets appear simple at first glance, but have careful attention to cut, proportion, fabrication, and detail. When I shop for fabrics, I search out wovens and knits in flattering colors and neutrals, and look for special edgings, pipings, ribbons, and stripes to use at the neck. When buying fabric for a jacket, pants, or shirt, I get enough extra to make a top. You'll find this small investment pays off in many ways.
I was living in San Francisco, sewing three or four suits a year in my tailoring classes, when I began assembling my own wardrobe of tops. I tried shirts and blouses, but found that a clean neckline and simple shape looked better than tucked-in garments with collars or bow ties. I live in the country now and don't wear as many suits as I once did, but tops remain an essential element in my wardrobe. They can be layered, and move with ease from city chic to understated casual.
This book will show you the fitting tips, patternwork, and sewing techniques I use in my own wardrobe and in the classes I teach. In my mother's day, when a woman wanted some inspiration in her life, she would get a new hat. I love nothing better than to go into my studio and create a new top!
Customer Reviews from Amazon
Average Customer Review:
Seems like a great book, November 30, 2009
I haven't actually used it yet, but I like the idea that I have just ONE book to go to when I am working with knits.
Sewing Tops & T-shirts, May 11, 2009
There are lots of helpful hints in here. It's not necessarily a must have but it's a great book to have once you have covered the basics. If you make a lot of tops then you will really get a lot of use out of it.
A must have classic for everyone who sews tees, December 9, 2008
Yesterday I sent my husband to the library to borrow Marci Tilton's Easy Guide to Sewing Tops & T-Shirts. Ten minutes after I started reading it, I logged onto Amazon and ordered a used copy for my sewing library. I'm a solid, experienced, intermediate level sewer who loves to sew tee shirts, and I found a great deal of helpful information, some of which was new to me. So I completely disagree with the reviewer who thought experienced sewers wouldn't learn anything new from it.
The clearly written and well illustrated section on altering patterns to assure a perfect fit was especially valuable for me. I only wish I'd read this chapter earlier this year when I made half a dozen muslins to fine tune the fit of my basic tee shirt pattern. I eventually got it exactly right, but having this book would have saved me a good deal of time and effort.
I understand Threads is republishing this book in January as part of a combined set. It's a true classic.
A disappointment, February 8, 2008
I was expecting a valuable guide to making tees and other tops when I bought this, but it doesn't contain much that isn't in other sewing books. It provides instruction on such things as how to select a pattern and using clear elastic ensure a close-fitting neckline, which are things an experienced sewer would already know. The illustrations are good, but otherwise it's pretty unhelpful. It might be a good reference for a beginning sewer, but I find myself rarely reaching for it for guidance in constructing tops.
Clear and Helpful Resource for your Sewing Library, January 28, 2008
The author has a clear writing style, provides clear and helpful illustrations and not only summarizes critical procedures, but gives some fine-tuned tips and tricks on established techniques that are necessary to produce quality, professional-looking results. Avoid the Heidi Klume "it looks home sewn" assessment, and apply the techniques learned from this book to any kind of top, blouse, or project. It's not just for t-shirts.
Shortly before this book was published, the author appeared on Sandra Betzina's "Sew Perfect" show (former show on HGTV) to discuss how to create bias-cut garments, pattern layout issues, and fabric recommendations (like a forgiving linen). Many of those tips are in this book.
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