Carefully marking the many Red Shirt pieces on the wrong side of the delicate silk material, which is for the body’s pieces folded in double, but separate for both sleeves as each spans more than half the fabric width.
Cutting Fabric | Production |
Social Media | Reflection |
As you may very well know, the initial purpose of this blog was to keep a personal diary, documenting my work, sharing my ideas, to whomever would read it whenever they pass by here. Trying to conceive 10 fully finished outfits in a matter of months is not something to be taken lightly; but neither is blogging about it.
Though I’m generally not a fan of social media, there is little point in limiting myself to my own domain for broadcast, if I wish my posts to be read by more people. Now that I have learnt that a steadily growing audience is the best motivation to keep on blogging, I reconsidered my inhibitons and opened up a facebook page in order to reflect my content into the greater audience. Feel free to like, share, highlight or direct, but please, reserve your comments for the actual site, where they are most apreciated.
On a further note I have also opened up a vampirefreaks account for a brief social profile (my first), and submitted this blog to several listing sites. You will find their tracking buttons in the lower portion of the sidebar; feel free to click them. I personally question the traffic they provide, but let’s consider it an experiment.
Sleeve Pattern | Technics |
The cutting pattern fot the Red Shirt sleeve can easily be begotten by copying the base-sleeve onto pre-folded pattern paper.
Doing so will also immediately add the required markings for sewing in the bondice-folds after the sleeve is cut.
The next step will be choosing connection points for the inward folds emerging from the sleeve head, and adding extra flow accordingly.
The Scarlet Capette | Revelation |
Buying Trimming | Chronicle |
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