Thank you this is exactly what I was looking for! :) Making an instrument case. Thank you for the great instruction without any terrible music, annoying high pitched squealing voices, unnecessary useless information about the bodily fluids of offspring, etc . Quick and to the point. Should be the model of ALL tutorial videos. A+
Hope you enjoy this short instructional showing the trick to perfect 3D Boxed Corners. If so, give it a 👍 and stay tuned for more "Getting Started" videos on the way!
I like to plan ahead for a two pass binding. I like to bind in order of short seams to long. So let say I first bind a horizontal seam leading into a corner and trim so the binding hits the t intersection. Then as I bind the longer seam I fold the pre binder seam against the long seam allowance and pass right over it concealing the raw edges.
Good tutorial but at :39 you said "right sides together" and I think you meant "right sides up." Very nicely done though and the visuals are super helpful :)
@@LearnMYOG So if you had to pick which seams would you think were most important to make flat felled ? And if extreme durability is a priority what kind of seam would you choose for the second seam?
Exactly what I was looking while sewing a small box shaped pouch. Ty!
Thank you this is exactly what I was looking for! :) Making an instrument case. Thank you for the great instruction without any terrible music, annoying high pitched squealing voices, unnecessary useless information about the bodily fluids of offspring, etc . Quick and to the point. Should be the model of ALL tutorial videos. A+
Great quick easy video
Great tips! Thanks for sharing. Your explanation is easy and simple.
Thanks!
Real nice and clear. Smashed it buddy!
🙏
Hope you enjoy this short instructional showing the trick to perfect 3D Boxed Corners. If so, give it a 👍 and stay tuned for more "Getting Started" videos on the way!
NICE and simple instructions thanks
👍
thanks for sharing! that helps a lot!
✌️
Love this tutorial, how do you bind this intersection
I like to plan ahead for a two pass binding. I like to bind in order of short seams to long. So let say I first bind a horizontal seam leading into a corner and trim so the binding hits the t intersection. Then as I bind the longer seam I fold the pre binder seam against the long seam allowance and pass right over it concealing the raw edges.
Same thing for 2.5D corners? I have one loooooong piece so instead of 3 pieces, it’ll be 2. I snip about 1/3” so it emulates 3 pieces though.
You've saved my life omg
Good tutorial but at :39 you said "right sides together" and I think you meant "right sides up." Very nicely done though and the visuals are super helpful :)
No mistake. Sew inside out (right sides together) so the seams are on the inside when flipped and all panels orient with right sides out at the end.
@@LearnMYOG AH! I rewatched it and you're right! Apologies. Great tutorial.
Nice, thank you..
How would you do this if you wanted flat felled seams?
I would design to avoid corners like this
@@LearnMYOG is it not possible to have flat felled seams with box corners?
@@amberemma6136 i can’t visualize a way without clipping some seams
@@LearnMYOG So if you had to pick which seams would you think were most important to make flat felled ? And if extreme durability is a priority what kind of seam would you choose for the second seam?
This would have been a great video, IF you hadn't skipped over how you actually stitched up the very corner, after the three pieces were together.
annoying music makes it terrible to watch