At the end of last summer, I bought a bivi bag, an Alpkit Elan, wistfully thinking about future bike trips...... So far I have only slept in it in the garden, in a summer weight sleeping bag I had bought from Aldi. The problem with the sleeping bag was that the zip was not on the same side as the one on the bivi bag. I hadn't given this a thought when I'd bought the latter. I turned the bag over when I slept in it, so that the zip would be on the right side, although this meant I had to fold down the head shaped bit, which wasn't very satisfactory.
I knew we'd got another one - an ancient very basic one I'd had as a teenager, so was mystified when I went looking in the cupboard where we keep such things and found a rather better, 2-3 season Karrimor one (but not the ancient one - where did that go?). I thought it must have belonged to Elder Son, but it didn't. I have no memory of ever buying it! Unfortunately this one also has the zip on the wrong side, but it's a fairly decent bag and so I decided that it was worth attempting to put a zip in on the correct side.
I bought the zip months ago and have now finally got round to inserting it, and am quite pleased with the results. The first thing I did was to make two lines of stitching down the appropriate side, with a gap of about an inch in between, so that when I cut the bag the filling (polyester) would stay in place. It proved quite tricky as the fabric was slippery and wouldn't move along under the presser foot very well.
This is the result -
On the right of the photo is the original zip, and on the left the new one.
I would have liked to have top stitched the zip, as per the original, which would have held the tape of the zip more out of the way underneath, but the fabric, plus zip, would have been very thick and I didn't think my machine would cope with it. It's not strictly necessary as the zip works perfectly well without this extra stitching, so I didn't attempt it.
It wasn't an easy job and none of it is very neat, but I've done what I set out to do and am pleased with the result.
I can’t imagine doing this - well done you!
ReplyDeleteHoping you get to use it and the bivouac this year.
Thank you - it was really a question of needs must.....!
DeleteLooks good, probably quite nice to have a sleeping bag that can be zipped fully open too. Makes it easier for getting in and out of, or just having half on you for hotter nights.
ReplyDeleteYes, I think having the two zips will be handy.
ReplyDeleteThat would have been like herding cats, slippy fabric is a pain, if you have a roller foot, that might have worked, I use them on oilcloth, the shiny side, if that fails, a walking foot might have worked, its really trial and error. Well done, its looks a fab job.
ReplyDeleteFirst time I've come across that expression! I have got a walking foot that I bought second hand off Ebay, and would have used it but I don't think it works as it should, so I decided not to even try it. I haven't got a roller foot but have heard about their usefulness.
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