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Pattern making for a slant pocket

Amanda is a doll my mother gave me 25 years ago. I am retiring her as being my patternmaking model.

 

I love playing mafia wars which inspired me in making this outfit. I am very proud of my design and outfit.

tep seven: Quilting

I like to do free motion quilting on the machine. A darning foot with feeddogs down is the best suited for this but a regular foot with the press low has worked for me. I quilting needle for your machine will last longer than a universal.

Step four: fabric hunting

The sport of fabric hunting is a fun activity but it can be dangerous. Remember to wear neon orange so other fabric hunters can see you.

Fabrics can be hunted any were old cloths, old linens, fabric stores, and you can even tame some yarn to make your own.

You can further domesticate your fabrics by dyeing, bleaching and/or painting on them.

Step five: Creating the top layer and pocket

This can be a piece of patchwork fabric like mine or it can be appliquéd, a whole piece of cloth or manipulated fabric like pleating. What ever it is up to you. Make sure your piece is at lest a couple inches bigger than your pattern.

Ladies from the Ndlovo Community come together under a tree to learn how to make patterns and sew saleable garments and uniforms. Some of the ladies walk 2-hours to get here.

Beautiful Fashion Illustration on cute little kids wearing casual clothes by student of Master Diploma in Fashion Design Dreamzone Dehradun. www.dreamzonedehradun.com/fashion-design/

The system is for precision investment casting and graphic casting of titanium and titanium alloys, as well as casting of zirconium alloys, nickel alloys and other specialty alloys. The integrated system includes casting, patternmaking, shell making, and pouring, consisiting of advanced equipment such as vacuum consumable electrode arc furnaces of 1t, 200kg, and 50kg, a vacuum induction furnace of 200kg, vacuum skull furnaces of 25kg, 150kg, and 500kg, circular disk wax injectors, double-post wax injectors and an electric dewaxing furnace.

Here is my block...

My measurements...

This is Kim on hard paper!

After making the pant patterns (one front and one back), they were pinned to the fabric and pieces were cut

i guess i should explain what this is. it's a bodice with a gusset sleeve. most shirts have a set in sleeve, a sleeve that's seperate from the rest of the shirt. with a gusset you can have a sleeve that is part of the shirt but has the same range of movement as a set in sleeve *you can reach straight up without pulling on the underarm*. the gusses is a panel that goes in the under arm. my gusses is the entire purple part and the white part under the sleeve. get it?

Jade Sayson, 20, takes a self-portrait after unexpectedly running into her reflection at Textile Discount Outlet in Pilsen. The three-story warehouse has over 13 rooms of what seems like infinite yards of fabric, but Sayson settles on unbleached muslin for her Patternmaking and Construction I class.

Cloud's new attire: wig, dress, necklace and a Gregor doll to boot!

Cloud's new attire: wig, dress, necklace and a Gregor doll to boot!

Hey, we are moving to Barcelona, Espana in January. Brooke will study Patternmaking and Clothing Design at Felicidad Duce University. Joe will be a fierce bike messenger or master English instructor.

Now I line up my center front neckline to the armhole area. I lightly sketch a slight curve to match it all up. It's not really cut straight across, although it will look so when worn. The body isn't straight, see, it curves. :)

Drafting the pattern for a custom skirt I'm making. Yeah I got a little scissor happy.

First attempt at properly making a fitted pattern before cutting anything out. And it was a relative success!

Students in the AM 340 Patternmaking II–Draping class present their garments made from donated repurposed ski apparel, tents and parachutes at the “City Strut: The Side Walk is Your Catwalk” fashion show. The show is produced by students in DM474. May 5, 2023

Step one: Design your cuff. Write and/or draw out your ideas

Ask yourself some questions like:

How big is it going to be?

Do I want a pocket? If so what will it hold? How will it stay in the pocket?

How will I keep it on my arm?

What colors? What color stitching?

These answers are not concrete you can change as you go and sometimes you have too.

 

Step two: Measure your arm.

One measure at the starting point like wrist for my pattern

How tall

And around your end point.

Measure what you want to go in you pocket

Add any overlap and ease.

 

Step three: pattern Making

Take your measurements and draw out your pattern

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