How To Patch Jeans : Make DIY Patches & Sew Them (original) (raw)

When I want to patch a jeans it is not just to hide or fix a hole – sometimes I just want to display the cool patch that I made.There are some very cool patches out there to buy or you can easily make them for this. There are two types of patches – the sew-on kind and the iron on patches. You can either hand sew the patch, machine sew it, or just glue it. So many option

sew on patch and iron on patches

When I am looking for some creative technique to do with clothes or fabric, all roads lead me to old jeans – is it because blue is my favorite color or that the indigo blue of jeans is irresistible to all? Do you also think that the denim of old jeans has eternal charm and elegance and can be used as embellishment for clothes in many creative ways?

I will show you how I created some very easy-to-make clothing patches with the denim fabric scraps.These are customisable in a hundred ways – the one you make will not at all be what I have made, if you want it that way, with simple changes. The possibilities are limitless.

How to Make Professional Denim Patches from Fabric Scraps

Old jeans fabric has a naturally aged look that gives your project a cute charm. What you make (following the same tutorial) will be unique as the fabric piece cut from your old jeans may have distressed textures, like frayed edges, holes, and worn-out areas, or specific color effects that add a certain depth and interest to the fabric and a uniqueness which you will not find anywhere else. You can make your own unique patch and decorate your clothing with it.

If you are thinking of invisible patching checkout this video:

Faux-Chenille edge patches with denim

The best thing I love about denim fabric, other than the color, is the distinctive type of fringe you get with it. It is because of the way the denim fabric is woven. Denim fabric is woven with a twill weave, where the warp thread (dyed indigo, usually) goes over two or more weft threads (usually white or undyed). So when you take off the horizontal thread (the weft threads), you will get a fringe that is entirely white, and if the thread is taken in the other direction, you will get a fringe that is entirely blue. This tussled, fluffy, fringe effect is very cute and adds a distinct charm to anything made with denim fabric.

Because Easter is coming, I decided to make an Easter egg patch, with this textile technique called faux-chenille technique. It is a beautiful method of making fraying work for you in a beautiful way. In this you will be layering a number of fabrics one one top of the other and they cut through it to give a very textured fabric surface. Here the same method is used to make chenille-fabric like edges.

I thought of putting the fabric into the washing machine but refrained myself. My machine is new, and I do not want to clog it.

Related posts: Different kinds of jeans you can use for this recycle project; Ways to sew patches on clothing; Sewing patches on jeans; Tips for making patches for clothes

You should be layering fabric pieces with the denim fabric on top.

Strips of fabric needed to make the jeans patch

Cut them into strips or use as is in one piece, If you do not want the fraying in the joints. Sew them together -here the seam is joined by keeping the fabric layers, wrong sides together. The seam edge should appear to the front of the fabric.

Join them one by one. Cut the shape (you can totally change the shape, I totally agree if you cannot see the appeal in an egg. Use shapes that you like. Silhouette pictures work well). Sew a line of stitching 1/2 inch inside the edge of the shape.

Cut the patch in an egg shape

This is how it will look on the back of the patch.

back of the patch

Turn to the front of the denim patch, Clip the edges every half inch, on all the cut edges.

clip the edges of the denim to fray

When combined with layers of fabric, the fuzzy edge you get is really, really nice. I do not think that my photographic skills do justice to the patch (or the effort it took)

frayed edges of the patch

If I make it for all of us in the family, we will be a nice Easter egg family. But it took me half a day to fray the edge of this one patch, so I don’t know! And I don’t think I can convince my husband to help me with this. I am grateful for all the work he does around the house, like ironing, cleaning, and even occasional cooking (not without some grumbling). Getting him to sit and fray fabric edges will be testing the limit.

Here is how it looks after the fraying is done. Pin it to the clothing and sew in place along the outer edge, without sewing the frayed edges down.

patch pinned to the t-shirt

Frayed and distressed denim patch

This is a very simple frayed patch, if you cannot afford to lose that half day at fraying. And it can be added to jeans, if not to T-shirts as I have done. When added to jeans, it makes a nice patchwork.

I have added a stenciled distressed look with paint and some masking tape stencils.

The hearts are tumbling down, overflowing from the patch.

simple jeans patch

Here is how to make this patch.

Cut out denim fabric scrap piece from your old jeans. Sew 1/4 or 1/2 inch from the outer edge, all along the edge.

sew around the patch fabric

After this, start fraying the edges.

fraying the edges of the denim fabric piece

Now, you need some acrylic or fabric paint and a sponge or sponge brush, and some masking tape.

masking tape

Cut out small pieces of the tape. And mark and cut heart (or any shape) from the masking tape pieces. Press them on the material (A reverse painting effect is made using these stencil shapes)

cut out stencils for painting on the fabric

After placing all the stencil shapes, apply paint on the fabric with the sponge brush.

Related post: Making stencils for fabric painting; Stencil painting tips

Stencils, sponge brush and paint with the fabric for making patches

You just need to spread the paint without adding any water for that distressed look – it will look kind of patchy.

Slowly remove the small tape adhered to the fabric.

Round patch and fabric paint

This is how to make the normal circular-shaped patch.

First draw your design on paper. Use a tracing paper to trace it on to the denim fabric.

is a word in French with the meaning ‘where’. Embroider the letters or the picture or use fabric paint to make your design.

Clip the edges of the patch material.

Turn the clipped edges to the back and sew in place.

This is how the patch will look on the back.

Sew this patch with a zig zag stitch along the edge. There is a downside to this patch – may be it is me, but I can never get it a perfect circle. The zig zag stitching makes this problem a non-issue.

This is how it looks on my t-shirt.

Floral patches

Denim fabric strips can be used to make a variety of fabric flowers. The easiest is again, the frayed flower. Just make 2 flowers and attach to a fabric piece to make a cutsie patch – like a cockade. It is more suited for feminine clothes or for kids clothing, I think – could be wrong.

You can cut long strips of denim and then tease out the horizontal threads to create a fringe effect. Cut the strips on the grain and pull the threads.

Afterward, you can wash the strips to achieve a further tussled look. As I said, the fraying part is time-consuming. And if the fringes are very long it ‘might’ get knotted if you try fraying it in the washing machine or something. Of course, you can also use a toothbrush or small comb to brush the fringes to straighten them out, but that is even more trouble. Actually a 1/4 inch frayed edge works out the best for these denim flowers.

Pocket patches

The final and easiest patch is a pocket cut out from your old jeans. They already have decoration – that top stitching with yellow thread and Arcuate stitching, the ornamental stitching seen on back pockets are enough.

Cut a little extra around, fold and sew on your clothing. Ta da – instant patch. There are better ways to decorate black t-shirts in this post.

The Best Methods for Stitching a Patch on Jeans by Hand

Sew the patches with whip stitches

You will preferebly have to darn any hole before sewing the patch over it.

Use a thick thread and a thick needle with a big enough eye for the thread to pass through it. Denim is thick and small needles would not go through easily.

Do not forget to pin the patch to the denim.

whip stitches used to sew the patches on jeans

Whip stitches are a series of parallel stitches made along the patches. When made with thick jeans thread, it forms a decorative edge stitching with a rustic charm over the patch. It makes a thick store bought patch a part of the jeans fabric. I love it.

To make those stitches, just make straight stitches catching the jeans and the patch edge, in an even manner.

Watch the video to see how it is done:

Sew the patches with blanket stitches

Blanket stitches are similar hand stitches that are used for attaching patches- they form a vidible attractive border around the patch.

patch sewn with blanket stitches

Like the whip stitched patches, the blanket stitches give a very hand made aesthetic to your jeans. Very alternative-fashion DIY vibe.

Pin the patch in place and slowly make blanket stitches along the edge. You can make the stitches to the inside of the patch or to the outside.

blanket stitches along the edges of the patch

Sew the patches with invisible stitches

When you want the patches to be the star and not the stitches made around them, you can use applique stitches to attach them – this can make the patch stand out and not the stitches.

Stitches that disappear, also known as ladder stitches or slip stitches, are used when you want the thread to be hidden.

Here, the applique stitch catches the patch from under it

invisible stitches to sew the patches

and the jeans edge is also caught with the needle just under the edge of the patch.

invisible stitches to sew the patches

Sew the patches with sewing machine stitches.

This is the most easy way to sew the patches – but only so long as you can reach the area to patch. In extreme cases, you may have to unpick the seam to open up the jeans to sew the patches on the sewing machine.

I would suggest using fusible web to stabilize the patch before sewing – especially if the hole is big.

You can sew the patches with straight stitches leaving the edges to fray or folded to the inside.

Or make zig zag stitches

Sew the patch from the back with decorative stitches

This method is called reverse applique. You can use any decorative hand embroidery stitches over the patching but sashiko embroidery looks special when used over jeans to sew patches. Japanese have a special embroidery technique called Boro for patching – it is actually just making running stitches over the patches but the result looks very nice.

sashiko embroidery

Make grid markings on the area to make the decorative stitching.

Start making small running stitches along the marking.

Here the patch fabric is kept on the back and sashiko stitches are made over it.

Do finish the edges of the fabric before using the fabric at the back.

sashiko embroidery

Related post: How to mend jeans with holes