<< Patterns Home

Tutorial:

Make Your Own Piping

Difficulty: easy

Supplies:

  • fabric for piping to match your project
  • cording (width and length determined by your project)
  • sewing machine with a zipper or piping foot
  • iron & ironing board
  • rotary cutter and ruler
    OR
    scissors, a ruler
    and tailors chalk

Piping is a great way to add a professional finish to your sewing projects.

There are a few ways to get the look:Tutorial: Make Your Own Piping

  1. You can buy piping premade at the fabric store,
  2. You can make it from cording and premade bias tape, or
  3. You can make your own for a perfect match.

Here's how:

(Click on any of the images to view them larger)

  1. Cut your cording to length leaving an extra couple of inches or so on either side (unless the piping will be enclosed in a seam).
  2. Iron your fabric.
    Tutorial: Make Your Own Piping
  3. Determine the width your fabric strips based on your seam allowance and piping cord width:
    For my project, the seam allowance is 1/2" and the cording is 1/8" wide.
    So to determine how wide the fabric strips should be, double those measurements and add them together: [2(seam allowance)] + [2(cording width)] = width of bias strips
    [2(1/2")] + [2(1/8")] = 1 and 1/4"
  4. Cut your fabric on the bias in as many strips as it takes to cover the cord.
    Tutorial: Make Your Own Piping
    Cutting the fabric on the bias (at a 45 degree angle from the grain) allows for stretch in the piping.
    This is especially helpful if your piping has to go around corners and curves.
  5. If your cording is longer than one strip, which is most likely will be, you must sew the strips together at 90 degree angles with right sides facing with a 1/4" to 1/2" seam allowance.
    To make sure the strips will meet up when pressed, let the corners extend the width of your seam allowance on both sides.
    Tutorial: Make Your Own Piping
  6. Press the seams out and trim the corners.
  7. Tutorial: Make Your Own Piping
  8. Enclose cording in the middle of the fabric on the wrong side and fold long edges together.
    Use your zipper foot or piping foot to sew close to cording.
    You do not need to pin the fabric together, but it might help to pin the first inch just to get started.
    Try to keep the fabric straight, the cording in the middle and adjust as you go with a long straight stitch.
  9. Tutorial: Make Your Own Piping

Now your piping is ready to be sewn into your favourite project!

Tutorial: Make Your Own Piping