HOW TO MEND A ZIPPER CHRISTINE BOLES
Don't fly off the handle if your fly gives you fits. This guide will tell you all you need to keep things together.
While looking through MOTHER the other day—and being
amazed at the variety of information that passes through
her pages—I realized that I too have a skill that
should be shared. It's a humble accomplishment, but one
that few people seem to know: zipper repair.
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Inevitably, it's the zipper do your favorite pair of pants
that pulls apart. . . and even if you have some sewing
skill, you probably dread the thought of replacing the
device. (It always seems harder to fit a new closure into
an already-put-together opening than it is to make the
trousers in the first place.) One option is to sew buttons
on the underside of the fly and make buttonholes on the
overlapping flap . . . but if you like zippers better,
don't, for heaven's sake, banish the garment to the ragbag.
The damaged fastener may well be fixable.
The usual problem is that the zipper head (see the drawing)
has pulled off one side of the teeth and ceased to connect
the gap. Well, all is not lost. Turn the pants inside out
and look at the lower end of the fastening. You'll probably
see two, three, or four metal prongs or a metal rectangle
(depending on which side the fitting was put in from). This
is the stop, which keeps the head of the zipper from,
scooting off the track at the bottom.
With pliers (needle-nosed are the easiest to use), pry open
the prongs and remove the stop. Don't lose it! There may be
stitching across the zipper tapes instead of, or in
addition to, the metal barrier. In that case, take out
enough of the thread to free the inside and lower edges of
the cloth tabs.
The next step is to slip the head off the zipper. If the
device will move only upward, unsew just the edges of the
garment's waistband to permit removal of the slider from
the top.
A look at the zipper's head will show you that either the
top or the bottom—but not both—is divided into
two holes, and that a pull-tab is mounted on the front.
With the double-holed end up, and the tab raised and facing
the front of the pants, ease the end of the left tape into
the left hole on the slider. Then, keeping the head below
all of the zipper's teeth, work the right tape into the
right hole. This is the hardest part of the business and
calls for a lot of dexterity and maneuvering on occasion.
In case the bits of cloth are frayed, you can help matters
by trimming or wetting them. Be patient and keep trying.
Once the head is on the tapes, hold the cloth tabs with
their ends even and slide the zipper's moving part up onto
the teeth.