释义 |
nounˈprɛsə ˌfʊt The footplate of a sewing machine which holds the material down on to the part which feeds it under the needle. Example sentencesExamples - Leave the needle in the fabric, raise the presser foot and close the zipper.
- Or run the edge of your presser foot along the first line of stitching when you do the second.
- This eliminates having to raise and lower the presser foot.
- To eliminate slippage while sewing, use a flat-bottom presser foot and increase the presser-foot pressure.
- If the fabric layers begin to creep, lift the presser foot and the needle.
- When straight-stitch seaming, gently stretch the fabric in front of and behind the presser foot as you sew.
- Lower the presser foot and stitch to the tuck raw edges.
- To pivot, stop with the needle in the fabric before lifting the presser foot.
- Raise the presser foot and again pull the thread off the stitch finger, angling the fabric back to the left.
- If not using a pintuck foot, use a zigzag presser foot with a wide opening.
- I simply held the fabric tight front and back of the presser foot and let the machine do its work.
- Use the edge of the presser foot as your guide for spacing the rows.
- Use the presser foot as a guide when serging straight lines.
- To avoid stretching the neckline curves while stitching, place a finger behind the presser foot to hold back the fabric.
- Raise the presser foot and carefully pull the skirt out of the machine to the left of the presser foot.
- With the needle down in the fabric, lift the presser foot and turn the fabric 90 degrees.
- Insert the shirt front under the presser foot with the wrong side facing up.
- The trapezoid motion moves squarely with relation to the presser foot to improve fabric feeding, ply pairing and stitch formation.
- Pull the looper threads through to the presser foot.
- A presser foot with an open toe and a wide groove on the bottom allows the foot to glide over the satin stitches.
noun The footplate of a sewing machine that holds the fabric down onto the part that feeds it under the needle. Example sentencesExamples - Insert the shirt front under the presser foot with the wrong side facing up.
- A presser foot with an open toe and a wide groove on the bottom allows the foot to glide over the satin stitches.
- When straight-stitch seaming, gently stretch the fabric in front of and behind the presser foot as you sew.
- To pivot, stop with the needle in the fabric before lifting the presser foot.
- Leave the needle in the fabric, raise the presser foot and close the zipper.
- Use the edge of the presser foot as your guide for spacing the rows.
- I simply held the fabric tight front and back of the presser foot and let the machine do its work.
- Or run the edge of your presser foot along the first line of stitching when you do the second.
- Raise the presser foot and again pull the thread off the stitch finger, angling the fabric back to the left.
- Lower the presser foot and stitch to the tuck raw edges.
- The trapezoid motion moves squarely with relation to the presser foot to improve fabric feeding, ply pairing and stitch formation.
- If the fabric layers begin to creep, lift the presser foot and the needle.
- To eliminate slippage while sewing, use a flat-bottom presser foot and increase the presser-foot pressure.
- Raise the presser foot and carefully pull the skirt out of the machine to the left of the presser foot.
- With the needle down in the fabric, lift the presser foot and turn the fabric 90 degrees.
- Pull the looper threads through to the presser foot.
- If not using a pintuck foot, use a zigzag presser foot with a wide opening.
- This eliminates having to raise and lower the presser foot.
- To avoid stretching the neckline curves while stitching, place a finger behind the presser foot to hold back the fabric.
- Use the presser foot as a guide when serging straight lines.
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