How to Use an Automatic Buttonhole Foot
Sewing Basics : How to Sew a Button Hole
Knitting one-row button holes
Button hole dialyse - Verwijderen buttons en aanprikken
SINGER® 1-Step Mechanical Buttonhole Presser Foot Tutorial
Sew a Buttonhole in 4 Steps on your Singer Sewing Machine
How To Sew a Button Hole Using a Sewing Machine and Buttonhole Foot (Tutorial)
Button hole stitching.
How to Sew a Buttonhole Using the Template Part 1
How To Make A Buttonhole Hand Stitch
How to Sew a Buttonhole
How to use an Automatic Button Hole Foot
How to sew a buttonhole with an old machine
buttonhole stitch in embroidery - hand embroidery
How to Use an Automatic Buttonhole Foot
Sewing Basics : How to Sew a Button Hole
Knitting one-row button holes
Button hole dialyse - Verwijderen buttons en aanprikken
SINGER® 1-Step Mechanical Buttonhole Presser Foot Tutorial
Sew a Buttonhole in 4 Steps on your Singer Sewing Machine
How To Sew a Button Hole Using a Sewing Machine and Buttonhole Foot (Tutorial)
Button hole stitching.
How to Sew a Buttonhole Using the Template Part 1
How To Make A Buttonhole Hand Stitch
How to Sew a Buttonhole
How to use an Automatic Button Hole Foot
How to sew a buttonhole with an old machine
buttonhole stitch in embroidery - hand embroidery
Knitting Daily- Tulip Buttonhole with Eunnny Jang
Bound Buttonhole - 2 piece
How To Make A Floral Buttonhole
Bound buttonhole DD
Buttonhole / Blanket Stitch
Sewing - The Button Hole Stitch
How to make a yarn over button hole
Buttonhole Wheels
How to Knit the One Row Button Hole (English Style)
Buttonholes are holes in fabric which allow buttons to pass through, securing one piece of the fabric to another. The raw edges of a buttonhole are usually finished with stitching. This may be done either by hand or by a sewing machine. Some forms of button, such as a Mandarin button, use a loop of cloth or rope instead of a buttonhole. Buttonholes can also refer to flowers worn in the buttonhole of the coat/jacket, referred to simply as 'buttonholes' or boutonnières du Telf.
Buttonholes for fastening or closing clothing with buttons appeared first in Germany in the 13th century.However it is believed that ancient Persians used it first. They soon became widespread with the rise of snug-fitting garments in 13th- and 14th-century Europe.
Buttonholes often have a bar of stitches at either side. This is a row of perpendicular hand or machine stitching to reinforce the raw edges of the fabric, and to prevent it from fraying.
Traditionally, men's clothing buttonholes are on the left side, and women's clothing buttonholes are on the right. The lore of this 'opposite' sides buttoning is that the practice came into being as 'women of means' had chamber maids who dressed them. So as not to confuse the poor chamber maids, the wealthy began having women's garments made with the buttons and holes 'switched'; the birth of the modern ladies' blouse. It is interesting to note that the chamber maids themselves, as did most all the common class, both male and female, actually wore 'shirts' with buttons and holes placed as on men's clothing. There appears to be no concrete reference to prove or disprove this story, but its plausibility bears noting.