Maybe instead of sewing the sides together sewing in button holes and using shock cord or am steel loops to keep it together?
Just thinking out loud and welcoming any thoughts...
Maybe instead of sewing the sides together sewing in button holes and using shock cord or am steel loops to keep it together?
Just thinking out loud and welcoming any thoughts...
The first one I sewed, the openings were about a foot. That's plenty big. My arms aren't that big and neither is the pad. After wrestling to get the pad in and adjusted, I took a seam ripper to them and made them about 2'.
I like having them on opposite sides, diagonally from each other. It makes adjusting the pad some much easier for me.
Did you use the same material weight for each layer. Does this look floppy without the pad in and does this also help prevent mosquitos from biting when the pad isn't in?
Avenger, I was thinking the same thing about the button holes. One every 18" should do you. You could use biners or small buttons.
Jima, even if the sides weren't attached, it shouldn't look floppy. The pieces are the same length so as soon as you lay in it the two pieces will look as if its one piece.
As for your bug question, we've had such an odd year up here that bugs haven't been a real issue so I can't answer that. My thought is that it might help, its one more thickness they have to drill through, but how much I don't know.
The floppy is in the middle. I'm thinking sew up 2 ft in the middle and see what happens. easier to sew more than rip out. ;-)
Here's a thought:
If you have a long piece of fabric, folded in the "middle" to make a double layer, sew one side and the end, but leave one side almost completely open. Maybe sew down from the edge a foot or so. That leaves the entire side open to adjust your pad. Then, put velcro along the one open side to close it up. Thoughts??
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