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Items tagged with: HistoricalSewing


Content warning: eye contact, sewing


yeah, I've compared to a finished jacket and I had indeed attached the left sleeve to the right armscye :D

oh, the joys of #HistoricalSewing and of not adding alignment notches to the patterns you've drafted :D

#sewing #patternDrafting


@Shield Maiden I've drafted a block based on The cutters’ practical guide to the cutting of ladies’ garments https://archive.org/details/cutterspractical00vinc/ (which I have already used on another jacket), changed the front (successfully) to have an opening and tried to enlarge the sleeve with dubious results.

I'm taking inspiration from various fashion plates and existing garments, but not from a specific one (and the sources vary a bit in the dates, between the second half of the #1880s and the first half of the #1890s).

And I already know that the straight 1880s sleeve from that jacket block works, so I may be tempted to just go with it.

#sewing #HistoricalSewing


I first read that as #1980s and nearly had a breakdown over the #HistoricalSewing hashtag! :D


It begins.

a paper pattern of a sleeve in the process of being widened at the top: the basic sleeve is at the bottom, then there is a sheet of semitransparent tissue paper on top, and the pieces from another copy of the top half of the sleeve spread out on top.

I'm actually not sure whether I'll go fully #1890s with this jacket (with moderation :D) or I'll keep the sleeves fitting: I'll decide after I've sewed a mock-up.

#sewing #HistoricalSewing @sewing group


Yesterday we went for a walk and @Diego Roversi took a few pictures of the flannel shirt I've just finished (and I forgot to button it up completely before the pictures were taken, uoooops)

a woman walking on grass with a 1880s plaid shirt, an almost floor length 1890s black wool skirt and a glimpse of a 2020s hiking boot

The pattern is always https://sewing-patterns.trueelena.org/historical_menswear/shirts/1880s_shirt/index.html , but I've cut away the excess material in the front rather than pleating it.

#sewing #HistoricalSewing #1880s @sewing group #FreeSoftWear


All pieces have been cut, one spool of sewing silk has been placed in my huswif ready to be used, and the rest of the wool (a couple of meters) has been stored away for the next project (TBD).

I still have to baste the seam lines for the armscyes and cut the gussets out of the sleeves (which I'm going to do only when I'm ready to sew them, to avoid losing pieces), and then I'll be able to clear the living room table :D

#sewing #HistoricalSewing @sewing group


Project red shirt has started!

red wool laid on a table with fabric scissors, tailor's tape and a 60 cm metal ruler

red as in Garibaldi, not as in Star Trek, and right now I've only done one cut, and then moved on to other things (it was time for tea :D ), but I plan to finish cutting most pieces tomorrow and then start (slowly) #sewing

#HistoricalSewing #1860s @sewing group


Third layer cut!

I was tempted to only use two layers for the straps, since this time they wouldn't fit under piece A, but then I tried to squeeze it somewhere else and… WIN.

one of the pieces didn't fit in the canonical layout because of the shape of the fabric, but has been squeezed upside down between two other pieces

#sewing #historicalSewing


I still have to finish other handsewn things, but I have the cutting mat on the table, and I decided I might as well start cutting the #AugustaStays, and then maybe later in the weekend I can make the buckram.

The pattern pieces for the Augusta Stays laid out on white linen fabric (with big washers as pattern weights).

Natural linen would have probably been better than white¹, but oh well, in 200 years they are going to be yellow too :D and they will be trimmed with powder blue cotton

¹ yes, it's white³, the blue tint is courtesy of the vintage effect² in the pinephone camera :D
² no, it can't be turned off :D
³ and now I must look for a UV light to find out whether it's merely bleached or it also has optical whiteners, but I don't know where it is

@sewing group #sewing #HistoricalSewing

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