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I’ve been a little quiet because I’ve been working on something kind of new. I got this ‘temple style’ top years ago, and thought I’d better get a pattern out of it before I forget. I like it but it’s in really heavy cotton, so not very light. I thought I’d like the same thing but floatier but in back, so if I wore a tank top beneath it it would subtly show through. #Sewing
in reply to Anthony

@skyfire747 It’s very nice, but strangely very dense and warm, so I’m hoping to produce something similar but but a little lighter.
in reply to Madeleine Morris

It’s a bit of a departure from what I usually make as it has inset sleeves, and darts - shallow, but nonetheless.

The hurdles for me are the usual: I still haven’t taken the plunge and purchased a serger, so french seams and bias binding, I think.

The other hurdle is just getting Dora not to lay and burrow in the thing I’m trying to pin together. #sewing #SewingWithCats

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in reply to Madeleine Morris

Yes, I know. Seeing her roll around amidst sewing pins makes my eyes water too. But no amount of gentle refusal will get her off my sewing table. I pick her up, put her on the floor… twenty times a day. But if I’m sewing, she HAS to be exactly where my attention is focused.
in reply to Madeleine Morris

My cockatiel tries to "help" by stealing the pins and flying away with them.
in reply to Madeleine Morris

He drops the pins in random places in the house. Then gives me this really smug, "See, I can help!!" look. It is hard to get mad at a bird person like him.
#cockatiels #birds
Questa voce è stata modificata (12 ore fa)
in reply to Madeleine Morris

You can sew the sleeves in flat- after sewing the shoulder seams, but before sewing up side seams. And if you have a zigzag machine, you can use it to finish the seams. I did that before I bought a serger.

</sewing nerd>

in reply to Kinene⭐🐻

@c_merriweather Yes, I most definitely can and will sew the sleeves in flat, but I really don’t like the finish my zigzag stitch gives. I’ve experimented a bunch but it’s never really nice. I’m a snob about seam finishes. It comes from all the kimono sewing work. This is my problem, not yours. You’re sensible. I’m a leeeeettle bit obsessive.
in reply to Madeleine Morris

@Madeleine Morris @Kinene⭐🐻 but neat french seam finishes are soooooooo nice!

it's not being obsessive!

(or maybe I'm obsessive too :D )

in reply to Elena ``of Valhalla''

@valhalla

The thing is, it’s not like anyone ever sees the seam at the arm hole. I know this. It’s stupid. And yet… *sigh* in my mind’s eye, I see it all the time.

The truth is, I don’t even like serged seams. They still look cheap and unfinished to me.

@c_merriweather

in reply to Madeleine Morris

@valhalla Ah, I am used to doing large costume work and alterations.

I am not putting french seams in a full Elizabethan court costume, that will have to withstand multiple washings or dry cleaning. I will do hand sewing and cartridge pleating (gathering) where it is necessary.

in reply to Madeleine Morris

@Madeleine Morris @Kinene⭐🐻 you are going to see them!

and they are probably going to last longer than a serged seam, so they may actually be better

in reply to Elena ``of Valhalla''

@valhalla @c_merriweather agreed—French seams are a really nice finish. If you prefer them, there’s no reason not to do them (except perhaps technical difficulty with a shaped seam).
in reply to Madeleine Morris

Clearly a very warm garment if Dora's already interested.
in reply to Mim

@crinolinerobot I’ve figured out that it doesn’t have anything to do with the fabric. It’s got to do with what I’m most focussing my attention on. We figured this out because the only time she’s in Don’s face like this is when he’s trying to do some yoga. It’s like she can smell focus, and needs to be the object of it.
@Mim

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