How to Hem a Dress by Hand: 12 Steps

Hemming a dress is an essential skill for anyone who wants to maintain the perfect fit and length of their garments. With these 12 easy steps, you’ll master the art of hand-hemming your dresses in no time.
1. Gather materials: You will need a needle, thread, scissors, pins, measuring tape, an iron, and an ironing board.
2. Choose matching thread: Make sure your thread color matches the fabric of your dress as closely as possible.
3. Measure desired length: Put on the dress and determine how much you want to shorten it. Mark that point with a pin.
4. Measure seam allowance: Decide how much seam allowance you want (usually about 0.5 – 1 inch) and use that measurement to mark a second point below the first pin.
5. Cut the excess fabric: Using sharp scissors, carefully cut the excess fabric at the second mark, keeping the line straight.
6. Press raw edge: Iron the raw edge up along the edge of your seam allowance towards the wrong side of the fabric.
7. Turn up hem: Fold over the pressed edge again so that your first pin lines up with the cut edge of your dress. This will create a double folded hemline, hiding the raw edges inside.
8. Securely pin hem in place: Use enough pins to keep your new hemline in place while you sew, ensuring that it lies flat against the rest of the fabric.
9. Thread your needle: Thread a needle with matching thread and tie a knot at one end.
10. Sew the hem using slip stitch technique: Insert your needle through a couple of fibers from your dress fabric close to where you’re starting and through both layers of folded hem, just enough to secure it without being visible on the right side.
11. Keep stitching evenly along with seam allowance: Continue stitching in the same method, grabbing a couple of fibers from the dress, then few fibers of hem, keeping your stitches small and evenly spaced. Keep stitching until you reach the start again.
12. Secure final stitch: To finish off, loop your thread through the last stitch, creating a small knot to hold the hem in place. Trim off the excess thread with scissors.
That’s it! With these 12 steps, you’ve successfully hemmed your dress by hand. This essential skill opens up numerous possibilities for adapting clothing to your unique specifications or reviving older garments that may not fit quite right anymore. Don’t be afraid to practice and refine this technique; soon enough, you’ll be a hemming master.