Repairs & Modifications
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Hi there,
The finish actually looks pretty good, doesn't look like anything to worry about, if it was me I would take a lighter to those end loops to just seal it off, like we do here at IHUK
Some extra words of wisdom from @Ross below
We used a poly-cotton thread this half burns - half melts these ends off sealing the ends better than a tie-off or what it looks like they done here and tucked the ends back in (?, honestly its a little hard to tell from just pictures).
I'd be tempted to do the same here, take a match or lighter (carefully!) to those loose ends to just burn them off so they don't catch on anything - other than that the the stitching itself look solid -
@hello_4lex Post/question moved here.
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@goosehd appreciate the help, and apologies for incorrectly posting!!
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@Jack appreciate the insider info Jack. My local shop uses 100% cotton thread, I assume this leaves the burn method out of the question?
As for finishing, I believe they just do the old school overlap (roughly 1.5-2” of stitch overlap) and snip the ends.
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@hello_4lex No worries, just wanted to keep posts of similar nature together. It’s all a learning curve.
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@Jack haha fair enough. My only concern would be that due to the cotton thread, rather can creating a sort of end “seal” it might just cause the thread to be more easily pulled out with friction and wear. I’m quite the nit-picker, so I just have to not look at the inside of the hem until I forget about it.
Fingers crossed that they hold— would hate to start getting some nice roping fades only to have to re-hem and then create some weird overlapping patterns in the denim.
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@endo wow that's a great modification. Is that wool lined with quilted arms? you must have a trusted and skilled tailor.
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@jordanscollected said in Repairs & Modifications:
Is that wool lined with quilted arms? you must have a trusted and skilled tailor.
yes, and yes she's great

