Steampunk is a science fiction/art/cosplay genre that imagines a world where steam power is the ultimate in technology. Advances in steam power have rendered it so powerful and useful that there never was a need to develop electricity or internal combustion engines. It also imagines that this occurred near the end of the Victorian Age and most of the art and costumes of the cosplay crowd are vaguely Victorian in nature. What I'm trying to do its imagine that the current state of hammock "technology" occurred at roughly the same time: under and top quilts, structural ridge lines, double layer, webbing tree straps, etc. but made with period correct fabrics and styling.

On a couple of other threads I've mentioned that I'm in the process of designing a Steampunk Hammock. In this thread I asked a question about sewing fringe, and got some very good advice to make some test shots trying different methods of attaching fringe to the sides of the hammock.

As a Victorian era piece, the hammock would be adorned with all sorts of decoration and embellishments that we would find out of place in our hammocks today, and they would be made with natural fibers with no real consideration as to weight.

The design includes a ridgeline gear hammock made in the same manner as the sleeping hammock, so I decided that in my test for fringe attachment, I'd make that gear hammock (just in case I got it right on the first try). The final product will be a 144" x 60" (before hemming and channels) double layer with an embroidered outer layer and an inner made of mattress ticking. I decided the gear hammock would be scale model of the final product. I found some remainder material that was 24" wide, so decided to make a 4/10 scale hammock (or close to that)I cut two pieces of material, the embroidered that would be the outer layer was about 24" x 48", while then inner layer of ticking was about 24" x 41". This allows the ends of the embroidered material to be folded over at the end to form the channel.



I laid the fringe on them to measure and cut. I wasn't sure how far back from the end to cut as I didn't know how it would act when the gather was done, so I tried a couple of different distances.



This test was to see how sewing the fringe sandwiched between the layers would look. I hemmed the ends of the embroidered fabric, then taped the ends of fringe to the right side to make sure it stayed out of the way while sewing the hems along the sides.



Then I laid the ticking on, right side to right side and pinned a long the edges with the fringe sandwiched between.





Then sewed the edges



Pulled it right side out and removed the tape and stitching at the ends of the fringe



folded over the ends and sewed the channels



I got some chair ties with red tassels on the ends and ran them through the channel





Pulled them tight to form a ball, tied it around the ball and added some Victorian Dutch bling:







Tying it around the ball made it hang kinda funky,



so I untied the cord from the ball and just let it hang from the gathered end



With full scale fringe instead of something 4/10 shorter you cant' see much of the hammock itself, but I think its going to be OK.

Whaddya think?