The hem is almost invisible from the right side because I sewed the top edge of the facing to the skirt by hand using a hem stitch. I like adding a facing to fuller skirts because it follows the curve of the hem, so it doesn’t have the puckers on the inside that I’d have if I had just turned up the hem. Maybe I’m missing out on some special trick, but that seemed to me like a more normal way to do it. I used two layers of fabric and interfaced one of them. In the directions, the yoke is made from three layers of fabric. I checked my measurements before I started sewing and used the slash and spread method to take an inch out of the back waist and add an inch at the hips before I cut my fabric out. The yoke doesn’t have a CB seam, which makes the pattern hard to adjust once you’ve started sewing. I think it looks tidier than crossing the straps over each other. I also left part of the waistband CB seam open so that I can pull one end of the waistband through the other. Since I added 1 yard to the right side of the waistband, I shifted the waistband so that the the waistband CB seam is now at the left skirt side seam. The whole waistband is also interfaced to give it a bit more body. It then tapers down to the regular pattern width as it approaches the yoke. I also widened the waistband on the side I lengthened so it is 4 1/2″ wide at the end. I wanted a big, asymmetrical, origami-like bow, so I lengthened the waist band by 1 yard on the right side (it is 4 yards long in total now). I topstitched the bias tape down by hand because part of the seam is visible when you’re wearing the skirt. Instead, I finished it with a piece of bias tape made from the same fabric, which looks cleaner from the inside. One was that the pattern recommends turning under the edges of the CF opening and hemming it by machine. There were a couple steps of the pattern instructions that I didn’t agree with. And then the yoke seams also don’t match up, drawing more attention to the problem. You’d think that a wrap skirt would be perfect to fit a range of sizes, but since center front pleat is formed by the wrap overlap, tying the waistband just a half an inch tighter or looser ruins the look of the inverted pleat. However, one problem with this wrap skirt is that it’s not forgiving if you change sizes. Also, here’s a quick diagram of the skirt’s pleats and how it wraps: