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With the top of the onion facing away from you, begin making vertical cuts as close together as possible. Do not, however, cut all the way through the onion! Make sure all your cuts stop short of the top of the onion, so that the onion remains in one piece, being held together by its top

Take a peek after you've burnished the print. Keep a hand on the paper, so the whole thing doesn't come up. If there are spots missing, carefully lay it back down and go at it some more.

Before you build your first deck, it helps to make a small practice one to iron out the mistakes.

Repeat step 1-3 (folding, pinning, and cutting) for the nylon tulle. You should have two little piles of fabric flowers, as shown.

 

A how to build an indoor hanging wall garden.

Create of stack of tulle/chiffon flowers, keeping the centers in the same spot, but changing the direction of the petals. You should als alternate chiffon and tulle as you layer.

 

A flower needs to have at least 10 chiffon layers and 10 tulle layers. More than this will just make a fluffier flower, which is good if you like it that way :)

 

Your folded fabric should now look as follows on the "leaf" side.

Use a Red Nail pen to make a triangle on the left side of the nail.

Use this gardening watering well to help water garden plants. Just plant your favorite vegetables near the watering well, then fill the well with water. The water will slowly seep out of the bottom of the well, thus watering the roots of your plants.

On my blog is a description and how to make your own whiteboard soooo much better than those smudgy boring whitboards.

Your first block will have the above dimensions (31 stitches by 31 stitches), but the points of the white triangles overlap when you add additional repeats.

 

Every block you stack ON TOP you'll skip the first row. For every block you stick NEXT TO, you'll skip the first column. Just remember that the white points and the ends of the blue lines must overlap.

 

Colocación de las cosas para la foto Bodegón vegetal.

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Setup shoot for Bodegón vegetal photo.

www.fashionreserve.com/wp-content/uploads/edd/2015/08/clo...

 

Here’s a few pointers on how to start a fashion business, from the perspective of someone who opened an online fashion business in the United Kingdom, selling to Europe and some of the gulf states. Firstly, some basic requirements in terms of personnel, technical knowledge, and resources, and then a step-by-step guide from fashion designs through production and sale.

Technical Expertise

So in starting a fashion business, who do I need? Well, you can be a jack of all trades, but you will need at least all of these disciplines: fashion designer, graphic designer, pattern cutter, photographer, dressmaker, web designer, salesperson.

When I started a ladies’ apparel business, I partnered with a fashion designer, so in-house we had about 3 of the above disciplines. The rest we outsourced. I think you could, at the start, do all of the above yourself if you are computer-confident fashion designer. Personally, I think the pattern cutter should be provided by your manufacture but more on that later.

Step 1: Design

Our fashion designer, a part-time freelancer, was asked last week if she could design 30 separate dresses for an upcoming, new brand. Her (fair) response: why do you need 30 unique pieces when you can have 10 designs in 3 separate colorways each? How to start a fashion business? Minimise outlay.

Check this one pattern for a simple example.

Step 2: Pattern cutting and fabrics

For our dresses, we chose a high-quality Bulgarian factory for our production. They were just great as they had some pattern-cutters, who as far as I am concerned are the backbone of the entire fashion industry. The patterns produced by these in-house pattern cutters were roughly cut according to our designs, in calico. These ladies were absolute experts and, although we did not speak the same language, understood the international words of ‘darts, seam, hem’ and the like. Pins between the teeth etc.

At this time, we also took many samples and prices of fabrics for use in the garments. We took these along to the factory, together with the designer, and asked for feedback from the pattern cutters on drape and elasticity, need for lining and the like.

Step 3: Proto fitting and adjustments

So then the proto-samples were cut, and again, as we were saving our pennies, and our designer is a size S – we fit the dresses on her. Yes, there was some hilarity, but with soap and pins, we managed to adjust the protos to a more universal ‘s’, and tweak an nudge a few things that did not quite work out. I cannot underestimate the importance of this procedure. The best way is to do it all together, in a room off the factory floor, and spend a day for fittings, tweaks and adjustments. For us, it was also a great bonding session with the factory folks.

Step 4: Salesman sample production, grading and photoshoots

Salesman’s samples are the finished product, with or without labels. Ah – there’s another thing. We did get offers from many companies on logo production. We opted for a satin embroidered logo, white text on black background, that came in at about $0.2 per label. We also asked the factory to provide care and size labels, which they did, for some more cents per dress.

For grading, we used quite standard size charts – 2 cm difference in width, 1 cm in length. We produced a few salesman’s samples for our market – 1 XS, 3 S, 1 M, 1 L.

Next up – photoshoots. We found a friend of a friend who set up the whole thing – for around 30 dresses, with retouching, and 3-4 angles per dress, plus about 5 lifestyle shots for banners/header images and things, cost about 1200 euro. It took a day, we had two models, 1 hairdresser and a makeup artist.

Step 5: (Optional) Setting up a shop (online), and producing stock

This depends on your business model. For us, we were a bit odd, because with our business model, we sent photos to potential clients, took orders, then produced them. For our online shop, we used Shopify. This was pretty cool in our case because Shopify take a % of you revenue per sale, but our site was just used as great way to showcase our product so in the end we just paid the base price.

However, whether you set up shop online or offline, I really suggest getting your customers at stage 4 above. How to set up a fashion business: secure some distributors first. It’s obviously far superior to producing 1200 garments on spec with all you and your friend’s savings – if you can find some sort of buffer with an upfront order, great. If not, then try to as much of the above as possible with as little stock as possible, and of course, anybody you ask about how to start a fashion business will tell you to use ALL your contacts/social networks/friends/families/dogs to spread the word as possible.

One last way to minimise your risk, make money and also showcase your designs is on Fashion Reserve, where the designs themselves, rather than the finished product, can be sold over and over again – register here to get going.

  

www.fashionreserve.com/how-to-start-a-fashion-business/

Some tips on using Scribbler Too can be found at my Life Imitates Doodles blog.

We used a 6" PVC cap for the front can because it was rustproof and far more durable than the traditional coffee can. The back can is also PVC, but it is a 3" coupler for PVC. The end cap was simply not tall enough. The plastic in the bottom of the 6 " can should add a lot of bounce-out difficulty.

To dry gear in the bottom of my bathtub, I make sure to use a mat on the bottom that has some height and drainage. This way, I can dry my weights, and then put my air-filled BCD on top, so it dries more efficiently.

Note that support vanes prevent Jimi™ from closing

 

These makes cutting the nipple on the firewall easier.

If you prefer your tutorials with words, please go to my blog for the full "How to".

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