The 5 sewing tools you'll wish you bought earlier! | Cashmerette (2024)

If you’re anything like me, you’ll spend years pondering whether to buy a new sewing tool – and once you have it you’ll wonder how on earth you ever did without it! I’m always wary of diving in too deep too quickly with new hobbies (I’ve been sewing for nearly a decade but somehow still think of myself as a beginner learner…), which makes me cautious when it comes to investing in tools of the trade. But here are five sewing tools I can tell you you’ll wish you bought earlier!

The 5 sewing tools you'll wish you bought earlier! | Cashmerette (1)

When I first started sewing I was constantly in awe of the amazing neat topstitching that more advanced sewists would achieve – I could never imagine my hands being that steady! And then, I discovered the JOY that is an edge-stitching foot, and learned that practically-perfect topstitching was well within my reach. Note: these feet only work if your machine can move the needle left and right, unfortunately if the needle is always stuck in one place they won’t work.

The secret to an edge-stitching foot is that it has a blunt blade down the middle of the foot (which is often present in an edge-joining foot or blind hem foot, so they can work equally well). As you sew, you place that blade into the valley of the seam or at the edge of the fabric, and then push the needle either to the left or right of the seam (depending on where you need the topstitching). The blade “sticks” in the seam and guides the needle incredibly accurately – voila, amazing topstitching! This is the type of sewing tool that all RTW is made with – it massively lowers the technical skill you need, and gives really professional results. I wouldn’t be without mine.

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For more topstitching tips, check out my post on jeans topstitching.

There are generic edge-stitching feet available like this one, which I can’t vouch for, but I know many people have luck with generic feet. For my Bernina, I use the Blindstitch Foot #5, but they also have an Edgestitch Foot #10C.

Oh, Wonder Tape, how I adore thee! Now I know what you’re thinking: using sticky tape in sewing just seems like cheating or at least a low-quality way to sew. But forget that idea at once! Wonder Tape is a water-soluble thin double-sided sticky tape which doesn’t gum up your machine needle, and washes out as soon as your garment is washed. It acts like super-efficient pins – except without the bumps that pins cause, and with a more consistent hold. It’s also a lot less messy than glue sticks, which I’ve never got on well with.

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Once you start using Wonder Tape, you’ll find more and more uses for this amazing sewing tool. Here are my top uses:

  • Sealing button plackets before you topstitch. Anywhere that accuracy is important, Wonder Tape is your friend. When I’m sewing a button placket on the Harrison Shirt or Lenox Shirtdress I always seal the placket closed using Wonder Tape rather than pins – I get a reliable hold, no bumps or bunching from pins.
  • Keeping waistbands closed on the wrong side when you’re sewing on the right side. You know when you’re topstitching a waistband shut from the right side, and hoping you’re going to catch the open underside without it flapping about? WONDER TAPE TO THE RESCUE! It’ll keep everything closed and no hidden pins on the wrong side to wrangle with.
  • Securing shirt sleeve plackets during sewing. I couldn’t be without Wonder Tape when performing the complex origami of a shirt placket construction. Simply use Wonder Tape to close each fold during the placket construction and it’s 10 times easier.
  • Hemming lightweight fabrics. Trying to keep fiddly small hems flat when you’re hemming a lightweight fabric like silk or chiffon can be a real pain. Break out the Wonder Tape, folks! And even better: if you’re doing a baby hem, Wonder Tape is 1/4″ wide, so you can stick it straight on the edge of the fabric, then fold it over the tape for a perfect 1/4″, and then fold over again for a great 1/2″ finished hem. I also often use Wonder Tape on regular knit fabric hems as it helps them squishing and moving under the presser foot.

Transparent quilting rulers are excellent sewing tools for all kind of garment and pattern measuring and altering – ours get used on a daily basis at Cashmerette HQ. However, if you try to use one with a rotary cutter it’s *very* easy to shave bits of plastic off every time, which is far from ideal. Enter: the metal-edge quilting ruler. I discovered these randomly one day in a now-forgotten sewing store, but I am now a dedicated fan. You get all the benefit of a transparent ruler, but use the metal side with a rotary cutter and you get a dead-straight cut, no risk of plastic shaving!

The 5 sewing tools you'll wish you bought earlier! | Cashmerette (4)

I’ve definitely had more than one funny comment when recommending using a ham in sewing – won’t that make your garments smell… porky?! But of course what I actually mean is a tailor’s ham, which is a stuffed tool to help you with pressing. You may have heard it before, but that’s because it’s true: the secret to really professional garment sewing is great pressing. If you’re making a garment with curves like princess seams or a collar – and if you’re a curvy person that’s almost inevitable – then you need to be able to press those curves without squashing them straight down on an ironing board. Enter the ham, shown on the left here:

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A ham typically has two sides: one is made from cotton, for pressing cotton and other smooth fabrics; the other is often plaid wool, and is intended for pressing wool and other fabric with a nap. There are lots of different curve shapes on the ham, depending on which way you tip it. There’s a pointier and rounder end, and you can also use the “edge”, or indeed any curve you need. Simply place the seam you need to press over the part of the ham that most corresponds best to the curve of the seam, and press away! Be careful: you often have to hold the ham in one hand while you press with the other, and you don’t want to steam your fingers. If you’re making a special garment or a bulkier one like a coat, I also really recommend keeping the seam on the ham until it cools – that way it really locks the curved shape into the fabric fibers (a bit like curling your hair).

The second secret weapon for awesome pressing is a clapper. It looks so innocuous! And nothing like a sewing tool. But believe me when I say that the clapper is the absolute best way of getting super flat and crisp seams. Once you’ve sewn your seam, press it with steam and then immediately place the clapper on top – if you’re sewing with a heavy wool or lots of layers, you can also put quite a bit of pressure onto that clapper. The soft wood in the clapper draws the steam out while simultaneously pressing all the fibers flat – the result is fantastically flat seams. It might not seem like it would make a big difference, but you’d be amazed!

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So what do you think? Do you own these sewing tools – or what others would you add to the list?

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  1. March 5, 2019 at 10:42 am

    I have them all and frequently use a blind hem foot to machine bind quilts from the top (stitching in the ditch) while catching the underside of the binding blindly on the back. I’ve never thought to use it for top stitching! Yay! I love to learn new tips & tricks! I use Steam-a-Seam like Wondertape for zipper insertion. Will NEVER use pins again to put in a zipper. Same goes for piping – SAS only. Great post! Thanks!

    Reply

  2. The 5 sewing tools you'll wish you bought earlier! | Cashmerette (12)Tena I. Barber says:

    There is a ham holder available so you don’t have to hold the ham and press. Just put the ham in the holder and press away!

    Reply

  3. The 5 sewing tools you'll wish you bought earlier! | Cashmerette (13)Leitner says:

    March 5, 2019 at 10:54 am

    Thanks so much. I am a very experienced sewist but I did not know about some of these tools. I am delighted with the possibilities!

    Reply

  4. The 5 sewing tools you'll wish you bought earlier! | Cashmerette (14)Judith Rickard says:

    March 5, 2019 at 11:09 am

    Excellent post! I use Wonder Tape when applying patch pockets – especially since I am a fanatic about pattern matching. (DH and DS think it is magic that the pockets on their plaid shirts “disappear”.)

    And, thank you, thank you for sourcing the metal-edged quilting ruler. Mine of MANY years died recently, and I had been unable to find a replacement. Being an 99% rotary gal, I use it constantly!

    Note about sewing hams – try the kidney shaped ham. Even more more different curves, including concave. Plus, all ham users should invest in a ham holder. Inexpensive ones available on Amazon.

    Lastly, in the clapper fan department – I had recently read of someone using their clapper for hard to subdue scuba knit seams. Clapper on poly???? So I gave it a try and wow! My normal clapper SOP, of course: press, steam, hold clapper down with pressure for count of 10, and the LEAVE IT IN PLACE until fabric is cool and dry. (I line up other tasks so as to not go crazy waiting – good time to neaten up the cutting table!) Another tip is to go to the lumber store and get a 3 foot length of stair railing, making sure it is untreated hardwood. Makes a fabulous long clapper, great for pant seams.

    Keep up the good work, Jenny!

    Reply

  5. The 5 sewing tools you'll wish you bought earlier! | Cashmerette (15)Lut Geers says:

    March 5, 2019 at 12:32 pm

    Thanks for the tips. The miracle tape I also use to fasten a zipper before I sew them, like piping, and a hem and …. (wherever I think it is easier than pegging 😉.) Be careful because there are different types of wonder tape: soluble in water, not soluble in water, which you may sew about but also where you are not allowed to sew

    Reply

  6. The 5 sewing tools you'll wish you bought earlier! | Cashmerette (16)Melissa says:

    March 5, 2019 at 12:38 pm

    I also love my seam roll for pressing seams on sleeves. Also, I use silk organza as a press cloth. When it gets crunchy, it’s time to replace it. You can even use it when you’re applying interfacing. I keep one specifically for fusibles (clearly marked in the corners which side is up).

    Reply

  7. The 5 sewing tools you'll wish you bought earlier! | Cashmerette (17)Melanie Lynx says:

    March 5, 2019 at 12:43 pm

    Third Hand sewing clamp that attaches to the table, etc. is one of the best tools I’ve invested in for hand sewing.

    Reply

    1. The 5 sewing tools you'll wish you bought earlier! | Cashmerette (18)Mary says:

      April 28, 2019 at 6:12 pm

      How do you use this tool?

      Reply

      1. The 5 sewing tools you'll wish you bought earlier! | Cashmerette (19)Melanie Lynx says:

        April 28, 2019 at 10:04 pm

        The old name for the tool is a sewing bird. It attaches to the sewing table and has a clamp that holds onto fabric. I hold the other end of the fabric in my left hand and use my right hand to sew or rip out stitches. It’s also useful when I make twisted cord.

        Reply

  8. The 5 sewing tools you'll wish you bought earlier! | Cashmerette (20)rosb2013 says:

    March 5, 2019 at 3:59 pm

    My best thing is a very big cutting mat that covers my large table & a good rotary cutter….I have arthritis so it’s made cutting out a breeze whereas scissors gave me heaps of pain

    Reply

  9. The 5 sewing tools you'll wish you bought earlier! | Cashmerette (21)Kathi R Alderink says:

    March 5, 2019 at 4:57 pm

    Great post! Just ordered the metal edge ruler as my rulers all have edges shaved off! My best friend is my small ergonomic Dritz seam ripper, the small green one. It’s always there for me and have spent some quality time together :).

    Reply

  10. The 5 sewing tools you'll wish you bought earlier! | Cashmerette (22)JosephineSews says:

    March 5, 2019 at 9:45 pm

    I need to get the metal edge ruler and the clapper

    Reply

  11. The 5 sewing tools you'll wish you bought earlier! | Cashmerette (23)Amity says:

    March 5, 2019 at 10:09 pm

    Great list thanks. Can’t live without tailor’s awl – use it to hold/guide tricky seams under the needle, easing sleeve caps etc, making holes for rivets/eyelets, pattern marking, transferring darts, the list goes on (oh and occasionally for stabbing a finger)

    Reply

  12. The 5 sewing tools you'll wish you bought earlier! | Cashmerette (24)Maggie Lewin says:

    March 6, 2019 at 5:02 am

    Such a useful article. Never used a clapper so thats good to know will def try that. I love my edge stitching foot and also my rotary cutter and mat arthritis in my hands makes using big cutting scissors hard. Also have a silk organza pressing cloth – it has to be SILK or it will melt. I have several – I buy a half metre at a time and overlock round the edges. Never fails to amaze me you can use a really hot iron on that.

    Reply

  13. The 5 sewing tools you'll wish you bought earlier! | Cashmerette (25)Diana Steiner says:

    March 6, 2019 at 10:40 am

    I’ve had most of these for a long time but the metal edge ruler and clapper are now on my list. I am a BIG FAN of the third finger when sewing bulky seams or flimsy/slippery fabric (it has a flat finger and a pointy one), great for keeping fiddly bits in place without pins, sewing your fingernails or driving yourself crazy.

    Reply

  14. The 5 sewing tools you'll wish you bought earlier! | Cashmerette (26)Grace Jeremiah - Collins says:

    June 20, 2020 at 2:21 pm

    Thanks for the insight.
    I have always wondered how to get the perfect top stitch.

    Reply

  15. The 5 sewing tools you'll wish you bought earlier! | Cashmerette (27)Judy McDaniel says:

    August 5, 2020 at 12:46 pm

    I have sewed for many years but I don’t have many of these tools. They are now on my list of wants, especially the clapper and the metal edge ruler. Thanks for sharing 😊

    Reply

  16. The 5 sewing tools you'll wish you bought earlier! | Cashmerette (28)Christina Mansoor says:

    November 11, 2020 at 6:50 pm

    new to this . . . please tell me which foot I should get to hem flat heavy cotton curtains when I shorten them. thanks

    Reply

  17. The 5 sewing tools you'll wish you bought earlier! | Cashmerette (29)Gaye B says:

    January 17, 2021 at 1:42 pm

    Don’t forget a REALLY GOOD quality pair of scissors/shears. And use them only for fabric, not hair, not nails, …

    Reply

Let me know what you think!

The 5 sewing tools you'll wish you bought earlier! | Cashmerette (2024)

FAQs

What are 5 sewing tools? ›

What Sewing Tools Are Needed To Get Started?
  • Tape Measure. This is a narrow one metre long piece of plastic coated fabric. ...
  • Ruler. A ruler provides the straight edge that a tape measure can't. ...
  • Other Measuring Tools. ...
  • Fabric Scissors. ...
  • Paper Scissors. ...
  • Seam Ripper. ...
  • Snips. ...
  • Presser Feet.

What is 5 a sewing tool that has one sharp end and a hole at the other end to make the thread pass through? ›

A sewing needle, used for hand-sewing, is a long slender tool with a pointed tip at one end and a hole (or eye) to hold the sewing thread.

What are four 4 basic hand tools in sewing? ›

Quick List of Equipment, Tools and Supplies for Hand Sewing
Hand Sewing Tools:Main Uses:
1: Felt FabricFabric to hand sew on
2: NeedlesTo sew stitches with
3: Sewing ThreadsTo sew stitches with
4: ScissorsCut fabric, snip threads
11 more rows
Jul 30, 2018

What are the five classes of sewing tools and equipment according to their functions? ›

There are five different classifications of sewing equipment: MEASURING, CUTTING, MARKING, STITCHING AND PRESSING. MEASURING EQUIPMENT 1.

What are the six sewing tools? ›

So, whether you are an amateur or a seasoned professional, the following are the most needed tools in any sewing kit:
  • Pincushions Full of Pins. ...
  • Sewing Shears. ...
  • Needle Threaders. ...
  • Tape Measures. ...
  • Bodkins. ...
  • Seam Rippers. ...
  • Tools for Pressing. ...
  • Seam Guides.

What is the most important sewing tool? ›

Bent-handled fabric cutting shears are the most important tool in your sewing kit. Also known as dressmaking shears, these scissors feature a bent handle to allow the lower blade to slide along the flat cutting surface. Fabric shears are made for either right or left hands, and come in 8″ length or longer.

What is a small tool with a sharp pointed end and a small blade used to cut through stitches? ›

A seam ripper is a small sewing tool used for cutting and removing stitches. The most common form consists of a handle, shaft and head. The head is usually forked with a cutting surface situated at the base of the fork.

What tool is used to space holes before sewing? ›

The stitching chisel is a more efficient way to create sewing holes because you can punch a few at once. You can also skip the step of marking with the overstitch wheel because the stitching chisel automatically creates evenly spaced holes.

What is a small tool that slides under stitches and cuts the thread? ›

Single small seam ripper used for cutting and removing stitches. With a sharp point for digging under your stitches and a red ball point to protect your fabric, use the curved blade in the middle to cut through those stitches. This tool is very useful when correcting sewing mistakes.

What is a simple sewing tool? ›

Basics would be scissors/shears to cut fabric with, needles to sew with, pins to hold the fabric pieces together while they are being sewn, thread to hold the pieces of fabric together, fabric, and patterns or basic instructions for simple clothing.

What are the 10 types of sewing professionals? ›

List of sewing occupations
  • Bookbinder.
  • Cordwainer.
  • Corsetier.
  • Draper.
  • Dressmaker.
  • Embroiderer.
  • Glover.
  • Hatter.

What is a sewing ruler called? ›

A sewing gauge is a ruler, typically 6 inches long, used for measuring short spaces. It is typically a metal scale, marked in both inches and centimeters with a sliding pointer, similar in use to a caliper.

What is simple sewing tool primary 5? ›

Sewing tools are the various instruments used for sewing by hand or machine. They include items such as scissors, needles, pins, thimbles, and thread. Felt Fabric. Fabric to hand sew on.

What is the 7 part of the sewing machine? ›

Some of the main parts of the sewing machine are the needle, pressure foot, feed dogs, hand wheel, bobbin, thread pin, and reverse lever.

What are the four types of sewing? ›

Hand stitching, machine sewing, serging, and overlocking are the four primary forms of sewing. The most fundamental sort of sewing is hand sewing, which is accomplished with a needle and thread. It is frequently employed for little tasks like buttoning clothing or making repairs.

What are simple sewing tools and equipment? ›

Thimbles: This is a small cap-like metal or plastic worn on the finger to protect it from the needle when sewing. Sewing Machine: This is the major sewing equipment. It is used for stitching and is of various types. Needles: It is a long thin piece of polished steel used in sewing.

What is basic sewing supplies? ›

They include pins, needles, thread, thimble, scissors, seam ripper, marking tools, rulers, tape measure in a storage or travel container. They can also include items for your sewing machine, like machine needles, small screw driver and instruction manual.

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