Sewing things on BDUs

Started by Danger, June 02, 2012, 12:37:36 AM

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Danger

I'd rather we have ABUs . Those have Velcro I believe, for the patches and tapes?
"Never take anything too seriously."

abdsp51

Quote from: Danger on June 04, 2012, 11:43:30 PM
I'd rather we have ABUs . Those have Velcro I believe, for the patches and tapes?

No.

Майор Хаткевич


titanII

Quote from: Danger on June 04, 2012, 11:43:30 PM
I'd rather we have ABUs . Those have Velcro I believe, for the patches and tapes?
If I recall correctly, only ACU's (the US Army's utility uniform) have Velcro.
No longer active on CAP talk

68w20

Quote from: titanII on June 05, 2012, 12:41:36 AM
Quote from: Danger on June 04, 2012, 11:43:30 PM
I'd rather we have ABUs . Those have Velcro I believe, for the patches and tapes?
If I recall correctly, only ACU's (the US Army's utility uniform) have Velcro.

They do, however Soldiers now have the option to sew on name and branch tapes as well as rank and skill/combat badge insignia.  IMO the velcro is generally more convenient and cheaper, however it can be frustrating during laundering.  It also tends to wrinkle fairly easily, especially after a few washes.

RogueLeader

Velcro nametapes, branchtapes all equal bad juju.
WYWG DP

GRW 3340

The CyBorg is destroyed

I still don't think it would be the worst idea for us to go to a modified version of what the AF tried back in the early '90s: no insignia on BDU's except the Velcro flight suit-type nameplate.  It didn't last long because officers weren't getting saluted properly...but that wouldn't be a problem for us, now would it? >:D
Exiled from GLR-MI-011

C/2d Lt

I am currently in the prosses of putting on my Model Rocketry Badge. How should I attach this. Sowing it is hard because of it being on a pocket or is there a special way of attaching it.
C/1st Lt Neuman                                                 Cadet Executive Officer    NER-NY- 135                                    
                                                                                                                
Kansas Wing Winter Encampment ES Flight-2012       *GTM3, MRO, UDF, FLM, MSA
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SarDragon

Quote from: C/SSgt on June 17, 2012, 07:41:33 PM
I am currently in the prosses of putting on my Model Rocketry Badge. How should I attach this. Sowing it is hard because of it being on a pocket or is there a special way of attaching it.

That's sewing. And it's a patch, not a badge. A badge is made of metal, with pins on the back.

Many people I know just machine sewed it through the pocket.
Dave Bowles
Maj, CAP
AT1, USN Retired
50 Year Member
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C/WO, CAP, Ret

AngelWings

Quote from: C/SSgt on June 17, 2012, 07:41:33 PM
I am currently in the prosses of putting on my Model Rocketry Badge. How should I attach this. Sowing it is hard because of it being on a pocket or is there a special way of attaching it.
If the pocket matters a lot to you and you could get a new uniform when you want to replace/remove said patch, glue it. Do you ever use the top pockets is a great question to ask yourself, or are you trying to save something that's useless to you?

Danger

I got it all taken care of, thanks guys!
"Never take anything too seriously."

Garibaldi

Quote from: CyBorg on June 02, 2012, 01:17:13 PM
Quote from: EMT-83 on June 02, 2012, 01:11:55 PM
I couldn't stitch a straight line if my life depended on it, and I have no intention of learning now.

The tailor I use is very good. I pin the stuff into place, and provide pictures from 39-1 that shows how everything is supposed to look.

No problems to date, and my uniforms don't look like some guy with two left thumbs sewed on the patches.

It is important to wash everything first, so it doesn't pucker......

I had to learn when I was a Boy Scout.  My mother had arthritis and couldn't sew very well...which is how I learned (trial and error).  I'd never make it as a tailor but I don't embarrass myself.  My sewing usually looks good.

After my parents divorced, and my stepmom refused to sew things on for me, I had to learn quick. To this day, I do all my own sewing of patches. Trial and error usually, but I'm not being inspected anymore so close enough is good enough.
Still a major after all these years.
ES dude, leadership ossifer, publik affaires
Opinionated and wrong 99% of the time about all things

abdsp51

Quote from: Garibaldi on July 08, 2012, 04:34:05 AM
After my parents divorced, and my stepmom refused to sew things on for me, I had to learn quick. To this day, I do all my own sewing of patches. Trial and error usually, but I'm not being inspected anymore so close enough is good enough.

So attention to detail is not applicable to SMs?

Garibaldi

Quote from: abdsp51 on July 08, 2012, 08:57:02 PM
Quote from: Garibaldi on July 08, 2012, 04:34:05 AM
After my parents divorced, and my stepmom refused to sew things on for me, I had to learn quick. To this day, I do all my own sewing of patches. Trial and error usually, but I'm not being inspected anymore so close enough is good enough.

So attention to detail is not applicable to SMs?

I am the weirdo who can spot if a cadet's rank insignia is off by more than 1/8" at 10 yards. Without my glasses. I have corrected cadets and placed their insignia correctly by eye and have been proven right afterward 99.9% of the time. If mine isn't done right the first time I rip it off and do it again. Close enough for me is no more than a 1/8" margin of error.

I have had enough of "sloppy seniors". Our current CC is a 1984 Spaatz cadet. I came from the strictest cadet squadron on the planet. A bunch of our new seniors have either come from cadet side or the military. I am in charge of D&C for the seniors.

In answer to your question...not on my watch. Not in my unit.
Still a major after all these years.
ES dude, leadership ossifer, publik affaires
Opinionated and wrong 99% of the time about all things

Eclipse

An 1/8" error is a lot when all you have to work with is 1/8" - probably the most common / OCD-aggravating error I see
is too much or too little blue around the grade on field uniforms.

"That Others May Zoom"

Garibaldi

Guess what I should have said was a 1/8" error of margin with regards to placement. I already have the correct amount of blue showing on insignia. Also, to get rid of those stupid cables/flags/whatever they are calling flyaway threads on the tapes I cut the ends into a triangle when I fold them under. And sear them with a lighter.

Sorry if I sounded like a uniform nutzi. I am what I am. I grew up in an era where we were constantly hounded on appearance in uniform. We honestly believed we were the best of the best because we looked and acted like it. Makes me ADD/OCD crazy when I see a "sloppy senior" in charge of cadet programs, one who can't be bothered to learn how to salute or stand at attention or wear their uniform without looking like Hawkeye Pierce. The cadets learn by example, and if we're setting the wrong example, we've failed.

/soapbox
Still a major after all these years.
ES dude, leadership ossifer, publik affaires
Opinionated and wrong 99% of the time about all things

Eclipse

No need to justify your stance here, I'm with you.  Right is right.

"That Others May Zoom"

PHall

Quote from: Garibaldi on July 09, 2012, 03:52:19 AM
Guess what I should have said was a 1/8" error of margin with regards to placement. I already have the correct amount of blue showing on insignia. Also, to get rid of those stupid cables/flags/whatever they are calling flyaway threads on the tapes I cut the ends into a triangle when I fold them under. And sear them with a lighter.

Sorry if I sounded like a uniform nutzi. I am what I am. I grew up in an era where we were constantly hounded on appearance in uniform. We honestly believed we were the best of the best because we looked and acted like it. Makes me ADD/OCD crazy when I see a "sloppy senior" in charge of cadet programs, one who can't be bothered to learn how to salute or stand at attention or wear their uniform without looking like Hawkeye Pierce. The cadets learn by example, and if we're setting the wrong example, we've failed.

/soapbox

That "sloppy senior" probably was in charge of cadet programs because no one else wanted the job.

C/Haughey

Then you probably shouldn-... I mean -uh- my squadron commander is the best, sir! She *ALWAYS* wears her uniform and when she does it always looks *PERFECT*.  :-X
C/2nd Lt Haughey
Cadet Commander, 089th MACS

C/Lt Col, AFJROTC
Cadet Commander, FL-20056

Garibaldi

Quote from: PHall on July 09, 2012, 10:41:58 AM
Quote from: Garibaldi on July 09, 2012, 03:52:19 AM
Guess what I should have said was a 1/8" error of margin with regards to placement. I already have the correct amount of blue showing on insignia. Also, to get rid of those stupid cables/flags/whatever they are calling flyaway threads on the tapes I cut the ends into a triangle when I fold them under. And sear them with a lighter.

Sorry if I sounded like a uniform nutzi. I am what I am. I grew up in an era where we were constantly hounded on appearance in uniform. We honestly believed we were the best of the best because we looked and acted like it. Makes me ADD/OCD crazy when I see a "sloppy senior" in charge of cadet programs, one who can't be bothered to learn how to salute or stand at attention or wear their uniform without looking like Hawkeye Pierce. The cadets learn by example, and if we're setting the wrong example, we've failed.

/soapbox

That "sloppy senior" probably was in charge of cadet programs because no one else wanted the job.

No. She railroaded me out of the job and tried to take over the unit. True story. She looked good on paper but...let's just say train wreck would be the kindest term I could use to describe her. Absolutely REFUSED to attend the senior D&C program I set up to eliminate the problem. The one who took over after she...left...was amazing, but by then I was mired in college and work and left for 6 years.
Still a major after all these years.
ES dude, leadership ossifer, publik affaires
Opinionated and wrong 99% of the time about all things