Salta al contenuto principale



Filed under: if it can be done it must be done (it's probably not a good idea), right?

18th century pocket. *tactical*!

(Picture of something shaped line a 18th century pocket, except it's made of blue cordura with alternating red and white 2.5 cm webbing sewn at regular 4 cm intervals, and the front slit is closed by a water repellent zipper.)

(Picture of the back of the same pocket, where the webbing is blue (in a darker hue than the cordura), there is no slit, but two small belt loops sewn in the top seam.)

I know, to make it properly *tactical* it should have been camo instead of brightly coloured, but I have no camo fabric at home (and honestly have no plan to buy any) and this was a spur-of-the-moment thing made with leftovers from my backpack-and-accessories.

#MYOG #sewing #historyBounding

in reply to Elena ``of Valhalla''

It is camo because whoever look for something military-like (i.e. kaki) doesn't ever see that 😄
in reply to Elena ``of Valhalla''

Also, there isn't an exact pattern for *this* version, but my pattern for pockets is on sewing-patterns.trueelena.org/… and the MOLLE bit is done like on the backpack from the same site (sewing-patterns.trueelena.org/…), so #FreeSoftWear, I guess?


TFW it's 21:40, you're making something silly and want to see it finished, you are at the stage where you need to sew a waterproof zipper into waterproof fabric (so there is only one try) plus a lining, and you're stuck with deciding the best way to do it in a way that is as clean as possible. Also, the neighbors won't be happy about my sewing machine going on in the night

I'll try to do the sensible thing and sleep on it. As opposed to both doing it wrong right now AND waking up in the middle of the night with an idea on how to do it and then not being able to sleep.

Tomorrory is a holiday, so I'll be able to work on it in the morning, at least.

#sewing #MYOG

in reply to Elena ``of Valhalla''

Uhm… zippers?
Like these?

collectspace.com/ubb/Forum14/H…

in reply to rag. Gustavino Bevilacqua

LOL, not sealing, just water repellent :D

extremtextil.de/en/zippers/aqu…

I'm reusing the parts of the broken zipper I've removed from my backpack that are still good.

in reply to Elena ``of Valhalla''

LOL, of course I didn't wake up in the middle of the night.

I remained fully awake for an hour or two until I got up to make myself an herbal tea and to write down all of the MYOG ideas I had on paper.



Temple of Mammona¹, Varese, viale Belforte

¹ representation may not be 100% accurate to reality

in reply to Elena ``of Valhalla''

wwwwwwait a minute...stavo per dire "ah, l'entrata del cimitero di Belforte" poi ho allargato la foto e ho letto Unicredit :0520:
in reply to las_lallero

ci ho messo del mio, ma non è *molto*, quella sede unicredit odora davvero di edificio religioso!

Ero quasi tentata di taggare chieseBrutte :D



omg.

she has just taken a small magnet, maybe 2 cm tall, put it on her scissors, and used that as a guide to cut a regular sewing allowance around a pattern.

that loooks like a very useful #sewingTip!

(the related part of video are just a few seconds)

youtu.be/0_f7_MhixKc?t=251

reshared this



TIL: using white glue to attach a waterproof zipper to TPU-coated cordura (and to uncoated lining cordura), and leaving it overnight with a lot of binder clips on WORKS.

In some places it had detached, but there was enough still working that I was able to sew the zipper with much less effort than I would have if everything was kept together with binder clips.

#sewing #MYOG #sewingTechniques

in reply to Elena ``of Valhalla''

also, my backpack, whose zipper broke in september last year, now has a new zipper. I need to do a few finishes, but hopefully by the end of this month I will be able to go back to use it :)


This one from @James Westman is very cool.

Now I need to hang a big monitor in the office and let this page up.

#osm #realtime #map



TIL: arminstraub.com/software/krop

Software which is in Debian (so it does exist :D ) to crop a pdf file, with the option to select the area to crop once for the whole pdf, twice (odd and even pages) or individually.

reshared this



Names for the forms #yarn can be sold/stored/used into
#yarn

Rolery reshared this.



sewing, ec

The two main thinks I've been sewing lately are ready to be worn!

The skirt is a foundation skirt from a 1892 patternmaking manual in light blue linen/cotton with box pleated ruffles at the hem, made in a walking length (you can see the ankles! and the very modern hiking boots I'm wearing every day with late 1800 inspired clothing :D )

The shirt is a gentleman's shirt from a 1880 book, made in blue cotton with two pleats per side in the front plus the button placket and a handful of errors: I've put one of the three buttons in the wrong position (it should have been midway between the collar and the second button) and the cuffs are too small (and I've put the slit in the wrong position, wooops), so I haven't added buttons yet (and maybe I won't?)

in reply to Elena ``of Valhalla''

The back of the skirt is very full and heavily pleated in the waistband, so it could be worn as is, but also with a bit of padding in the bustle area.

The back of the skirt is gathered in the yoke (but in the picture it can't really be seen, since I'm also wearing my hairs *down*)

Shoes (of which the sole can be seen in the picture) are still very much not historically accurate :D

in reply to Elena ``of Valhalla''

The skirt is going to be my to-go skirt for this season, worn like this (which is why I've made it as a short (for its time) walking length skirt).

I'm also going to make some draperies to wear on top of it for a more historical look, but those are needed with less urgency.

I'm also half-way through editing and adding pictures to the instructions, so I will be publishing the source code for it *soon*. #FreeSoftWear

in reply to Elena ``of Valhalla''

And as I wrote in another comment, my short term plans for the shirt are to remake it in linen, probably trying to improve the armscye lines a bit, as well as fixing the cuff size.

The detachable collar from my other linen shirt of course fits, and maybe I'll make a few others in different styles, but I'm not sure they will be ready this summer.

The instructions have already been written, but I still have to edit and add the step-by-step pictures, and they are *a lot*, so publishing those will take a bit more time (but it will happen!)

And then there is a cut of lightweight red wool waiting for me in the stash, but that's in long-term plans territory :)

reshared this

in reply to Elena ``of Valhalla''

It looks fairly warm with the layers of fabric. How high can the temperature get for this style to be comfortable?
in reply to David Bremner

well, the skirt is cotton/linen, so it breathes quite well (and being a relatively wide skirt there is quite some potential for air movement). The other layer below it is a cotton petticoat with lots of ruffles, which I may or may not wear depending on the season and on how historically accurate I want to be.

Plus cotton leggings and wool socks, but those may go away as the season becomes warmer, especially the wool socks :D

I'm quite confident that it's going to be only mildly uncomfortable with any temperature that I can expect in this part of the world (in the 30°C, ish), and less uncomfortable than going around in shorts that don't protect the legs from the sun.

in reply to David Bremner

The shirt is a different matter: it's a relatively thick cotton and I'm wearing it as a moderately warm outer layer on top of a long sleeved t-shirt now that temperatures are around 16–18°C, it's definitely not summer wear.

But it's also a wearable mock-up for a linen shirt, and that one is going to be part of my standard summer wear, together with two other linen shirts from different decades. Again, I'm not going to be comfortable during the summer :) but it's nice to have some well breathing fabric between my body and the sun. As for layers, I'm probably going to be wearing it over either a cotton/linen jersey camisole or a linen chemise (if I manage to make it before the summer :D ), and either a bra or a summer corset in aida cloth.

in reply to David Bremner

There is also a video on youtube, I believe by Abby Cox, of people spending half an hour or so in the USA desert in summer while wearing fully layered historical clothing in wool, linen and silk and then measuring their skin temperature with a thermal camera, compared to the same thing while wearing single layer, short modern clothing.

spoiler: multiple layers in linen and wool won :D

in reply to Elena ``of Valhalla''

#crafts
Black wool desert Bedoin tents keep warmth of the soil at night. By day they shade better than lighter colors, and wick to evaporate dew, soil and human humidity for cooling by day. I learned that then experimented witn a dark wool caftan in the summer. It worked! I especially appreciated the looseness and air flow. @valhalla @bremner
in reply to Elena ``of Valhalla''

of course, it's the back of the *shirt* that is gathered in the yoke.

And I was surprised I had managed to write this long thread without ever mixing up skirt and shirt.

Those two words are *evil*! evil I say!

in reply to Elena ``of Valhalla''

@Elena ``of Valhalla'' c'entra poco con la tua gonna, ma visto che ti diletti sia col sw libero che con il modellismo, approfitto per farti una domanda.
Sai se tra i metodi di modellismo (che sono sempre stati sottoposti a una ferrea protezione della proprietà intellettuale) iniziano a essercene alcuni rilasciati in creative commons?
in reply to Informa Pirata

modellismo nel senso di modelli di cucito, giusto (perché altrimenti no, non è qualcosa che pratico)?

#FreeSoftWear!

Che io sappia è ancora una nicchia piccolina, ma ci si sta provando. Credo che ci sia anche qualcosa nella comunità di utenti di Valentina (il programma che uso per disegnare i modelli), ma non so più che fine abbia fatto (temo su facebook?) e l'autore del programma è più propenso verso la vendita degli stessi, per cui non credo che li incoraggi particolarmente.

reshared this

in reply to Elena ``of Valhalla''

@Elena ``of Valhalla'' @varve purtroppo i software sono così costosi da avere provocato la creazione di un mercato del sw pirata molto sviluppato (cfr mastodon.uno/@informapirata/10… ). Il fatto è che al di là del software sono proprio i "metodi" di modellismo (come disegnare un cartamodello in base alle misure) a essere sottoposti a un copyright che rappresenta spesso l'unico vero asset delle scuole di modellismo

@Bevilacqua Gustavino @Rapita dagli alieni @Sasha @Ben Zanin @Christine Lemmer-Webber @Craig Maloney ☕ @[:babaKatt:] Gerblin Taffer :heartQVP:⁣:sparkles2: @David Bremner @Astra: Zero Luma

in reply to Informa Pirata

Buona domanda, a quello che leggevo in giro ad essere protetto da copyrigth è la descrizione del metodo, ma non il metodo stesso (che potrebbe essere coperto da brevetti però?), per cui seguire le istruzioni per disegnare un block con un software e pubblicare il relativo file dovrebbe essere lecito.

Parlo però di istruzioni pubblicate su libri, non di blocchi predisposti per specifici programmi.

in reply to Elena ``of Valhalla''

Come software conosco valentina, che è in debian, e quello in javascript usato su freesewing: entrambi sono basati su design parametrico basato sulle misure del destinatario finale e non sulla creazione di una taglia standard e poi ottenere le altre taglie tramite grading.

Credo che la cosa li renda adatti al lavoro delle sarte (oltre che ovviamente al cucito domestico / individuale), ma non all'uso per la produzione di massa.

in reply to Elena ``of Valhalla''

Ah, e ovviamente ci sono i manuali d'epoca, con cui si va sul sicuro dal punto di vista della proprietà intellettuale, ma che potrebbero avere qualche lieve controindicazioni stilistica :D

(non capisco quale possa essere il problema, basta vestirsi come se si fosse nell'ottocento :D )

Questi sono i tre che ho usato, nei README ci sono i link al manuale su archive.org, dove però ce ne sono anche molti altri:

git.trueelena.org/patterns/blo…

in reply to Elena ``of Valhalla''

Anzi, li ho messi anche su sewing-patterns.trueelena.org/… , già che c'ero (e aggiungerò il resto che uso man mano).

Informa Pirata reshared this.

in reply to Informa Pirata

Ieri mi ero dimenticata, esistono anche i modelli di freesewing.org/ , rilasciati sotto licenza cc-by

Informa Pirata reshared this.



cars, fast?, aggressive driving, +

On the corner of a street nearby where they often leave used cars for sale they have a panda 4×4. in RED! so it will go even FASTER¹!

we don't need a second car.

but I NEED IT!!! NEED!!! WANT!!!! :D

in reply to Elena ``of Valhalla''

auto, veloci?, guida aggressiva, +, it

Ormai le pande 4×4 sono più ricercate delle Maserati…

Forse perché vanno meglio?

invidious-us.kavin.rocks/watch…



Aaand I haz a short skirt for the spring and summer!

it shows the *ankles*!

and I went for a short walk, and it was the right length not to have to worry about it touching the dirty ground.

There may be pictures in the weekend, and there will be source code as soon as I finish editing the step-by-step pictures I took during the process.

#sewing #FreeSoftWear



#mastoDream

A piece of apple spontaneously formed in my mouth, and I was “it's ok, it was spontaneously generated by the body, so I can eat it and it won't change the results of my blood tests”.

And of course the fact that food could spontaneously form in my mouth was perfectly normal :D



Musica per oggi:

pronophonique - 8-bit lagerfeuer

#8bit + #chitarra

E sono anche sul fediverso @pornophonique



E perchè andare a dormire quando invece si puo' scrivere uno script poliglotto bash/python?

#!/usr/bin/bash
"""true"
echo "Ciao da bash"
python "$0"
exit
" """
import this


More from the Department of Unnecessary Projects #DepUnPr

git-list


git-list is an experimental git sub-command to interact with mailing-list based patch workflows.

Git comes with some tools to collaborate via email: git send-email and git am, one to send a patch directly to the mailing-list, the other to apply a patch which ... somehow... the user get from the mailing-list.

There are plenty of email clients written exactly to work with a mail-based patch workflow, or adapted to the job with configs and plugins. And I'm sure they work perfectly.

However, I'm only an amateur mail-patch user, and I'm not an hardcore consolophile: I prefer to keep using my graphical mail client, which unfortunately doesn't have any cool git integration.

But, one day I found out himalaya, a CLI mail client (not a TUI!). I would say himalaya is to thunderbird as curl is to firefox, in a way.

It allows to easily integrate mails into bash pipelines.

And so git-list is born. Put git-list script into your path, configure himalaya, add some local config to your repo and you will be able to easy list mail from the mailing-list related to the project, read mails, and apply patches to brand-new branches created ad-hoc from the comfort of your terminal:

$ git list
ID | Subject
-----------------
 1 | [Patch] ....
$ git list show 1
...
$ git list test 1
$ git status
On branch patch/1
...

As always, everything is extremely experimental, and likely will stay this way.

Here is the code:

git.sr.ht/~fabrixxm/git-list

P.S. have a look at the git send-email tutorial



Dear people who sew: do you have cucirini tre stelle sewing thread where you get your sewing thread? Here (just north of Milan where it is from) it is *the* sewing thread, and it was for my mother and for my grandmother, but I'm wondering whether it's a very local thing or not.

Gente che cuce: da voi c'è il filo per cucire cucirini tre stelle? Qui (un po' più a nord di Milano, da dove arriva) è *il* filo per cucire, e lo era per mia madre e per mia nonna, ma mi sto chiedendo quanto sia una faccenda locale.

in reply to Elena ``of Valhalla''

From Detroit area: No, I'm regularly hopping between several nicer sewing stores, and I have not seen that brand at any of them.

There is one very high end store I go to very rarely (as in asking to handle their stock of bridal fabrics starts with them handing you gloves fancy) who stock lingerie fittings I need occasionally; I will take a look the next time I am there, but I don't recall seeing this brand.

in reply to Elena ``of Valhalla''

Thanks everybody for the answers.

Yeah, gutermann is also the main brand available here in supermarkets etc., and their polyester thread is fine (but I try not to use it), but imho their cotton helps giving cotton thread a bad rep.

Grazie a tutti per le risposte.

E sì, gutermann è la marca che si trova anche qui nei supermercati, e il loro filo di poliestere è decente (ma cerco di non usarlo), ma secondo me il loro filo di cotone aiuta a dare cattiva fama al filo di cotone.



So, I've bought some linen thread to handsew a shirt or two, nothing unusual.

And then I've spotted what is the main reason why they sell it today (bobbin lace), and that reminded me that it's something I try to do some time ago, and really wanted to try again, sooner or later.

raise TooManyProjectsError

in reply to Elena ``of Valhalla''

#crafts

I thought my grandmother's cotton or linen tatting looked like micro-crochet, and projects are small, fitting in a pocket so well. Strong too. Tatting could hand-reinforce button holes and add small loops to things. I might have a tatting shuttle somewhere. . . en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tatting#… . Grandmother's looked like the metal-hooked one in this pic: upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia…

#crafts @valhalla



Aaaaand, the instructions for my next #freeSoftWear pattern have been written, and the shirt itself is almost done! (I'm attaching the sleeves, and then I need to finish the hem and making buttonholes).

And then I only need to edit a truckload of step-by-step pictures, and add them to the instructions.

Have I ever mentioned how much I love *having released* the source code for my clothing under a Free License? :D

in reply to Elena ``of Valhalla''

And since my hands were hurting a bit from the handsewing, yesterday I started a new pattern for a machine sewn skirt, this time from a 1892 book and cut most of the fabric.

And then I discovered that I dont'have matching thread and I need to visit the haberdasher :(



e niente, non riesco a ricondividerlo nel modo “mastodon”, ma questa cosa si deve VEDERE!

mi assumo le mie colpe e ne vado fiera (ma non è solo colpa mia :D )



Very nice!

#serenityos

nitter.pussthecat.org/awesomek…




An update from the Department of Unnecessary Projects:

Climatik 0.4.1


A python library to create command line interface from function definitions.

In this version:

  • Command group. Ever wanted to create cli like docker image ls , docker image rm? Now you can.
  • Arguments help text from function docstring.
  • Support argcomplete if installed

See git.sr.ht/~fabrixxm/climatik/r…

It's on PyPi, if you need it.

Keys (no version yet)


The unnecessary CLI to manage SSH keys.

Updated to use climatik 0.4.1.



I'm following instructions on a book to sew a 1830s hat.

The first thing I did this morning was running 3 + 3 meters of gathering thread. by machine.

you may want to call the sewing police.

(I'm going to wear the hat with a dress that is based on a 1920s look, anyway)

in reply to Elena ``of Valhalla''

Oh, and the main fabric is something that definitely didn't exist in the 1830s (but something very similar was just starting to be easily available in the 1920s)


a long, but recommended, read on why software licenses are a bad tool to enforce anything outside copyright-related issues, even if those issues are really important.

reshared this



in reply to Informa Pirata

Un modello eliocentrico con orbite circolari è comunque un'approssimazione abbastanza grezza del sistema solare, in cui invece le orbite sono ellittiche.

A quanto ne so, il sistema geocentrico con epicicli era già arrivato ad un livello di raffinatezza tale per cui *per i calcoli* poteva fornire risultati più precisi rispetto a quelli ottenuti con un modello eliocentrico a orbite circolari, il che è probabilmente uno dei motivi per cui il sistema geocentrico è sopravvissuto nel tempo.

in reply to Elena ``of Valhalla''

@Elena ``of Valhalla'' credo semplicemente che si tratti di un'impressione dovuta alla rarefazione delle fonti scientifiche. Purtroppo il successo del compendio di Tolomeo sul "sistema solare" (che non derivava dalla migliore scienza alessandrina, a differenza di quello sempre suo sulle dimensioni del globo) rimase probabilmente l'unico trattato comprensibile e per questo sopravvisse a tutti gli altri.
Comunque, se sei interessata all'argomento, ti consiglio alcune pubblicazioni di Lucio Russo, da quelle più divulgative (Stelle atomi e velieri) a quelle più strutturate (La rivoluzione dimenticata)



In other #screenPrint news, today I tried the drawing fluid + screen filler from the kit I've bought, and made this



(pictures of a printing screen, with the word “serigrafia” (italian for screen printing) first in green drawing fluid and then as a stencil surrounded by red screen filler, written using the Stay Puft font.)

yeah, it worked, I'm not sure I'll use this technique a lot, since I'm not painting things free hand, anyway, so I can just use the UV sensitive thing anyway.

However, to make things a bit more interesting, I tried to print using two colours in a gradient:



(pictures of 8 strips of paper with the word “serigrafia” first in two stripes, magenta and black, then in a magenta -> black very irregular gradient and in the last few strips it's mostly black with bits of magenta).

The strips of paper will be glued to a cardboard box where I'm keeping my screen printing supplies (that's why I did them in the first place, beside the experimenting bits)



it worked!

My third attempt to #screenPrint a qr-code was a success! (nothing like correctly inverting the image to allow a phone to recognise the code :D )


(picture of two scraps of fabric, one black, the other one blue, with QR-codes and “get the source” screenprinted in white)

I'm going to keep this screen, because I expect to use it multiple times in the future, to print it on garments and accessories, and/or to make small patches to sew on them, as applicable.

I've also found a good way to keep the screen stable when exposing it to the free UV lamp in the sky :D


(picture of a small cutting board (not really visible) covered in black felt, with a screen, a sheet of tracing paper with a printed design and a sheet of syntetic glass on top, everything kept together with binder clips).


in reply to Fabio

guarda che a Bruxelles vogliono vietarla! Troppo sale, e poi è cotta in un forno a legna! Aborro! Troppa CO2! 😜
in reply to Paolo Redaelli

Vedi come spuntano spacci clandestini di pizza, tempo zero....
Unknown parent

Fabio
Yeah.. it was a clandestine pizza shop up in the north... can't tell you the exact location, sorry...


TIL: vlc <torrent url>

not that I'm surprised, since vlc <anything that points somehow to a bit of video> tends to work :D



English is a strange language

Proditory

Norway might defy the power of, or moist substance; to petrify.
TABLE OF THE PERIODIC LAW OF THE PERIODIC LAW OF THE PERIODIC LAW OF THE PERIODIC LAW OF THE CHEMICAL ELEMENTS
The vertical triangular portion of meal, or other vehicle. Colloq.
Bid hook, small hook used for soles of leather or cloth; to sun thyself in inofficious sleep.

(hand-selected from kirgroup.net/~fabrixxm/dict/ )

in reply to Fabio

Destructibility

destructibilite.
The quality that gives or takes away thief.

in reply to Fabio

Red-tapism

Strict adherence to the Scriptures into the Court of claims of self-importance; -- applied especially to animals in the interior;


Unknown parent

Fabio
And they were delicious. Were.


I like it how in Italian there is no right and wrong side to fabric, but a front and a back. And sometimes the back is the right side for your project.

#sewing

#ThisIsReallyJustAboutSewing #NotAMetaphore



A few updates on #screenPrint progress.

I've tried making a screen with the photoemulsion: even printing the design on tracing paper instead of transparent and using the sun for exposure (instead of a lamp) it worked nicely and printed sharp and precise.

except, I missed the fact that inkscape had not actually inverted all of the design, and thus the QRcode I tried to print was unreadable :(


(picture of a screen for screen printing with green, cured, photoemulsion)


(picture of something that resemble, but isn't, a pair of QRcodes)

At least, I know what went wrong and I can fix it on the next attempt.

I've also found that the kit I've bought doesn't have enough screen cleaning fluid for the number of screens I can do with the available photoemulsion, so I'm waiting a bit until I can get some screens I don't have to reuse (for a few designs that I plan to print multiple times) and more screen cleaning fluid.

in reply to Elena ``of Valhalla''

I've also received some wood frames and tried to make another screen with curtain fabric and white glue: this was a success.


(picture of a wooden frame with fabric nailed on it and a right to repair logo painted in glue)


(picture of some black jeans fabric with the right to repair logo printed in white in a fuzzy and irregular way)

I've washed the screen from the back and I can confirm that the glue part survived: I think I will check it for holes and retouch it a bit the next time I'll use it, but it shouldn't need a lot.

#ScreenPrint

reshared this

in reply to Elena ``of Valhalla''

And then there was this, which isn't experimental or anything.


(picture of a pair of pockets in blue with yellow binding and a #screenPrint of white cat silhouettes: on the left two cats are carefully ignoring each other, while on the right a cat is ready to pounce on another one which is stretching, and a third one looks at them from a safe place.)

Done with plastic stencils (made with product packaging) based on clipart found on freesvg.org.

Questo sito utilizza cookie per riconosce gli utenti loggati e quelli che tornano a visitare. Proseguendo la navigazione su questo sito, accetti l'utilizzo di questi cookie.