I've always been taught to sew straight to bias.  I've never had a side 
"baggy"....I would definitely NOT hang the bias ones!  

Sg
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
  To: Historical Costume<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
  Sent: Friday, July 27, 2007 2:09 PM
  Subject: [h-cost] straight/bias gore question


  I am making a linen 4-panel, front/back/sides-gored variation on the Gothic
  Fitted Dress.

  Usually, when I do this, I cut eight gores (4 rectangles cut diagonally) and 
sew
  them in, straight-to-straight and bias-to-bias.

  This time, I cleverly thought "If I fold it in quarters first, and then cut,
  I'll have three isosceles triangles and two right triangles.  Fewer seams!"  
But
  now that means I'm facing sewing straight-to-bias for at least three of the
  gores, if not all four.  I know that one side effect will be the tendancy of 
the
  fabric to pucker where the bias edge stretches and the straight edge does 
not.  

  I seem to have two choices:

  Do I: hang the gores from the point for a few days to allow the fabric to
  stretch out before sewing them in place (which may or may not prevent 
puckering
  after the fact)?

  Do I: cut each triangle in half so I have my familliar eight gores (six of 
them
  being a little narrower than expected because I didn't factor in seam 
allowance)?

  I assume there will be a difference in drape between the two, I don't know
  whether or not it will be enough of a difference to matter. (Will one way make
  the skirt stand out more?) Has anyone done this? Have you noticed a 
difference?

  Emma
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