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Posted on March 7, 2024
Tags: madeof:atoms, FreeSoftWear

I was working on what looked like a good pattern for a pair of jeans-shaped trousers, and I knew I wasn’t happy with 200-ish g/m² cotton-linen for general use outside of deep summer, but I didn’t have a source for proper denim either (I had been low-key looking for it for a long time).
Then one day I looked at an article I had saved about fabric shops that sell technical fabric and while window-shopping on one I found that they had a decent selection of denim in a decent weight.
I decided it was a sign, and decided to buy the two heaviest denim they had: a 100% cotton, 355 g/m² oneand a 97% cotton, 3% elastane at 385 g/m²1; the latter was a bit of compromise as I shouldn’t really be buying fabric adulterated with the Scourge of Humanity, but it was heavier than the plain one, and I may be having a thing for tightly fitting jeans, so this may be one of the very few woven fabric where I’m not morally opposed to its existence.
And, I’d like to add, I resisted buying any of the very nice wools they also seem to carry, other than just a couple of samples.
Since the shop only sold in 1 meter increments, and I needed about 1.5 meters for each pair of jeans, I decided to buy 3 meters per type, and have enough to make a total of four pair of jeans. A bit more than I strictly needed, maybe, but I was completely out of wearable day-to-day trousers.

The shop sent everything very quickly, the courier took their time (oh, well) but eventually delivered my fabric on a sunny enough day that I could wash it and start as soon as possible on the first pair.
The pattern I did in linen was a bit too fitting, but I was afraid I had widened it a bit too much, so I did the first pair in the 100% cotton denim. Sewing them took me about a week of early mornings and late afternoons, excluding the weekend, and my worries proved false: they were mostly just fine.
The only bit that could have been a bit better is the waistband, which is a tiny bit too wide on the back: it’s designed to be so for comfort, but the next time I should pull the elastic a bit more, so that it stays closer to the body.

I wore those jeans daily for the rest of the week, and confirmed that they were indeed comfortable and the pattern was ok, so on the next Monday I started to cut the elastic denim.
I decided to cut and sew two pairs, assembly-line style, using the shaped waistband for one of them and the straight one for the other one.
I started working on them on a Monday, and on that week I had a couple of days when I just couldn’t, plus I completely skipped sewing on the weekend, but on Tuesday the next week one pair was ready and could be worn, and the other one only needed small finishes.

And I have to say, I’m really, really happy with the ones with a shaped waistband in elastic denim, as they fit even better than the ones with a straight waistband gathered with elastic. Cutting it requires more fabric, but I think it’s definitely worth it.
But it will be a problem for a later time: right now three pairs of jeans are a good number to keep in rotation, and I hope I won’t have to sew jeans for myself for quite some time.

I think that the leftovers of plain denim will be used for a skirt or something else, and as for the leftovers of elastic denim, well, there aren’t a lot left, but what else I did with them is the topic for another post.
Thanks to the fact that they are all slightly different, I’ve started to keep track of the times when I wash each pair, and hopefully I will be able to see whether the elastic denim is significantly less durable than the regular, or the added weight compensates for it somewhat. I’m not sure I’ll manage to remember about saving the data until they get worn, but if I do it will be interesting to know.
Oh, and I say I’ve finished working on jeans and everything, but I still haven’t sewn the belt loops to the third pair. And I’m currently wearing them. It’s a sewist tradition, or something. :D
- The links are to the shop for Italy; you can copy the “Codice prodotto” and look for it on one of the shop version for other countries (where they apply the right vat etc., but sadly they don’t allow to mix and match those settings and the language).↩︎
blog.trueelena.org/blog/2024/0…
Elena ``of Valhalla''
in reply to Elena ``of Valhalla'' • •Disclaimer: ho letto l'Harry Potter canonico solo una volta, un bel po' di anni fa, e le mie memorie potrebbero essere passate attraverso degli occhiali colorati dalle fanfiction.
La cosa che veramente mi perplime della JKR però è che quel che mi ricordo della serie è che di base parlava di gente che combatteva contro un gruppo definito dal loro obiettivo principale di discriminare un gruppo non privilegiato. In uno stile da romanzi per ragazzi di qualità mediocre con un sacco di problemi e buchi di trama e di logica, ma i Cattivi della storia erano di base quelli che discriminavano e poi uccidevano ecc. i membri di una minoranza.
E poi l'autrice invecchia e fondamentalmente diventa una Mangiamorte?
reshared this
rag. Gustavino Bevilacqua, Enrico Zini, Oblomov e fucsia reshared this.
fucsia
in reply to Elena ``of Valhalla'' • • •Ma in fondo c'è sempre spazio per peggioramenti!
rag. Gustavino Bevilacqua reshared this.
rag. Gustavino Bevilacqua
in reply to fucsia • • •Potrebbe diventare un'adepta della Brigliadori…
Elena ``of Valhalla''
in reply to fucsia • •Beko Pharm (deprecated)
in reply to Elena ``of Valhalla'' • • •sounds like a very severe case of Never Meet Your Idols to me. Generally spoken, I mean, not you specific.
I mean actors and writers have this in common. Both can play|fantasise a character|world that is not reality.
Their characters do not have to align with the fiction at all and seldom do.
I don't see the real surprise here. Humans do what they do. The story sold so more was written.
This isn't an excuse for a shitty character, of course 🙃
Elena ``of Valhalla''
in reply to Beko Pharm (deprecated) • •@Beko Pharm yeah, I consider myself very lucky that I never really cared much for canon and only got into Harry Potter stuff with the fanfics.
But around fandom I've read many times of variously unprivileged people saying that they read the original books in their formative years and they loved them so much because it empowered them, and. this whole thing must hurt. a lot.
And I don't know, the whole “stuff sells, make more stuff” easily explains what happened later, but not really the early works, would it?
Beko Pharm (deprecated)
in reply to Elena ``of Valhalla'' • • •personally I don't get how anyone can develop such a mindset over the years.
I guess "they" don't get "me" either tho.
There's this saying about everyone becoming more conservative with age.
I feel the opposite. Blame the Fe-diverse. I guess being confronted with multiple different points of view each day helps to keep an open mind 🤷
Elena ``of Valhalla''
in reply to Beko Pharm (deprecated) • •Beko Pharm (deprecated)
in reply to Elena ``of Valhalla'' • • •Elena ``of Valhalla'' likes this.
Hypolite Petovan
in reply to Elena ``of Valhalla'' • • •Elena ``of Valhalla''
in reply to Hypolite Petovan • •@Hypolite Petovan otoh Hermione can also be seen as the one that basically really saves everyone (almost to Mary Sue levels, at times), so an empowering character rather than one that is stuck under oppressive gender roles.
(but here I may be misremembering thing and being influenced by the fact that I may have read a few Hermione based fanfictions. just a few :D )
Hypolite Petovan likes this.
Hypolite Petovan
in reply to Elena ``of Valhalla'' • • •Elena ``of Valhalla'' likes this.