Showing posts with label draping. Show all posts
Showing posts with label draping. Show all posts

Sunday, July 21, 2019

Pattern Making / Draping -- Techniques for Beginners 2019 Book Reports Continue

More book reports. Because summer reading.
I'm not sure how much you enjoy these book reports, but I must reinterate that sometimes I put things on my blog so that I can find them later. It's a public storage unit. 
Spoilers: I liked these books. Apologies for the terrible photos.
You can click on them to make them bigger, or just race on by them to get to the ones Ienbiggened to discuss.
Two of three books in a series by Francesca Sterlacci for Lawrence King's sewing book collection. These are branded as the University of Fashion, which is a thing Sterlacci is doing with several other sewing related businesses. I would dig into that a little more, but it's summer and I have still have the summer job.



and of course

Putting this here to shout out the collaborators. Good job all around.

We start at the very beginning. Kind of the James Michener style of writing: start with the big bang; work out from there. Sterlacci has another book on fashion history that is well reviewed. I'll get there.




The nice thing about this is that it introduces some basic forms we'll refer to later. Schweet!
"Clockwise from left: Peplos; Ionic chiton (elbow length); Doric chiton; Himation" from caption that got cut off




We cover the beginning of the pattern industry, 














The following paragraph is a nice reminder to today's sewists about how important a fit model is to a design house.
 It's not a factory of math. Every pattern line fits differently because every pattern house uses a different model.  


Author's message below:


I enjoyed this book. The course of study is clear, the lessons flow from one to the next, there are many examples and explanations for the choices that are made.


Where to start and why








Most of this book is pictures of drawing lines. The photos are well captioned, each chapter has a nice introduction and an example photo.
We are not going to sew these things together. That is another book in the series (not reviewed here, as it wasn't available at my library yet),
Seam allowances will be touched on, but lightly.




Why are we scooping out a lower portion? I don't doubt it's important, but we don't learn why. It makes sense (fronts and backs of sleeves don't look the same - usually a little more in the back and a little less in the front so that the sleeve is set a touch forward (remember we move our arms mostly foreward). We are also drafting a fitted sleeve with an elbow dart, which is a great moment in my personal sleeve journey.
And yes, I have had a personal sleeve journey.


Remembering that this is a self-study course, there will be tips and reflections.





Button placement rule I did not know, and am going to slap up on the wall of the cave. I get tired of faking it. I do love how the caption just repeats the information in the photo.

This is a good course of study. And a nice refresher course.
Sure, I like drawings over photos, but there are loads of photos of every step.
And some boss rocking charts


The math is done for you for full and semi circle skirt charts as well.
DAMN.

The measurement guide is handy


Although the back makes it look like you're measuring for a gimp suit.

And for Ithaca Maven, the basis of how to draft your own damn pants pattern.
The Big Base Grid.


When you rotate it, it turns into this:


And ease is built into the measurement taking.


We aren't going to explain how to draft a fly. 
It's not like that button thing.




Did not know! Learning!

On to the draping book.
Same author, same approach. Lessons building on lessons.
We begin with the masters of the hands on approach,  and the photo that launched a thousand half scale model sales.


This is the book I want to read:
Pauline Trigere draping on a real live human.




I'm curious for the basic procedure: you can't stick a pin or tape a line to a human. Should I make a long line bodice to pin into...no. That's going to hurt as well.
There will be poking. How do I avoid poking? Tape?


Jeanne Lanvin, 1929, also working on a human.

The book demonstrates draping on a dress form to create a pattern. Lots of photos, clear illustrations, showing you how to create basic patterns (bodice, skirt, sleeve) from the form. I'm craving something that connects this practice to creating something unique, and this was not that book for me. 
Forgot to mention there are videos online for these lessons! 
And they are available for 19.95$ a month. Like Bluprint, you could probably boil through what you needed in a month, and then cancel. I don't have time to do that until October, but I'll think about it. The photos in these books seem to be screenshots (according to the publisher's page credits) and they catch clear points of action.

There is a free mini-subscription available by signing up for the newsletters on the website, with some nice benefits. So, a free sample to check out the goods.
But this is a book report. 

Sterlacci and her team have created a clear format for these books, and while there's the occasional boo-boo of mismatched photo to caption, the idea is clear enough that you can actually spot those few errors because the book taught you well.


The cover got warped after being left open for photos for an hour. 
Downsides to these books: they are made of heavy paper on a less than sturdy spine. When I picked these up at the library, they were being held behind the desk because of how floppy they were. They needed to be supported on the front and back or they would start to tear.
 Ruh roh.

They are sewn signatures. I like a sewn book, thank you.


Also available:


 Ida approves.


Tuesday, April 17, 2018

ATATAC Now that I have pattern pieces, what am I supposed to do with this thing? post two

I have a lot of pattern pieces. And free time.


Guess I have a book to read
http://atacac.com/book/index.php#index

Click on the internal links: this 'digital' book is a treasure trove of information.

http://atacac.com/book/chapter2-5.php
If you go through the entire chapter, you will have pretty much name checked every flat pattern designer who doesn't work for SimMcVogerick (will work out a good name for the Big One sooner or later). 

And to quote verbatim: 
"A common denominator between these cutters is that they emphasize the pattern, itself, as a tool for creation. By experimentation and transformation of patterns, either through block patterns or other shapes, they find new shapes and ways of designing for the body. As Roberts (2008) notes, one problem that may arise is that the garments may end up as walking patterns that have little to do with the body wearing it." 
(chapter two, page five, bottom of the page)

The Demented Fairy can vouch for that one
https://thedementedfairy.wordpress.com/2018/02/26/a-subtraction-addition-but-not-yet/

How to wear, how not to wear?
So will I get something I can assemble, and even more fabulous thinking: alter to fit me?




Sunday, April 15, 2018

Atatac Pod Racer Jacket PDF Friday Night PARTY post one

L'Etoffe Fabrics put this link on their spring email.
https://shop.atacac.com/collections/sharewear
And as always, clicking on the photos makes 'em bigger.

And so I clicked and there goes housekeeping this week.
And now I'm sharing. 

Interesting shop and design company.
http://atacac.com/company/

Trying to make wearable digital design, with some visual wit and maybe toss some TR flavor on the mix. 
Even if you have no interest in their product or the rabbit hole you KNOW i'm wandering into, that description of their business and their model is worth five minutes of your time.

Where they are doing with this technology
https://www.clo3d.com/

There are no instructions. 

There are some clues, and a digital book of inspiration
http://atacac.com/book/


It's free. I have some free time. I love an adventure! Let's jam!

The pattern sheet is one big picture. I will need to print it out in tiles/pieces 

Eighty pages. 
Next time, I'd do a screen capture of this small gridded image for reference.
Eighty pages can go wrong so fast....

Don't judge me on my printer. It still gets the job done.
You want the cut marks. If the paper misfeeds (and it will), you'll need the marks to line stuff up.


Eighty pages. 
And I have to stand there and catch them, because the catching box is AWOL.
Who recycled my box?

I use paper from work and home that was just printed on one side. Most of it is dead stuff from the fax machine, some of it is stuff that my boss just is too thrifty to recycle. I used to get this from a pal in a real estate office. Nothing sensitive. Lots of boilerplate. And I thank them all from the bottom of my PDF printing heart.

I did a print of the whole pattern layout for reference.

and then I marked it up when I went through the printed pages, to give myself a sense of how pages will relate to each other.
That previous screen capture shot would have been a good idea......

I taped this in strips, starting with the bottom row and working up.
Those cutmarks are tiny but clear.


overlapping action shots


and laid them out on the floor
while watching superhero tv.

Okay, back to the floor show.

You don't want to tape them down tightly - you will have to wiggle them to fit to each other. And a ten page strip has room for a lot of error.

This is only half of the pages.
The floor is disappearing. I will have to cut this up into sections.
The big piece in the middle needs to stay together, but everything above that are smaller and can be assembled on the table. and my back is killing me.

Cat in upper right for scale 

Ant for scale. That was the rest of the day. 

That's the big piece. If I try to fold it up, it will rip.
I get these big upholstery tubes at Pacific Fabrics by crying.


After the big piece was assembled, the smaller bits can be cut out and taped together individually.

Doesn't it look like it fell apart on the floor below?
Now I need to know more about what and how this goes together
https://shop.atacac.com/collections/outerwear/products/pod-driver-jacket-1
the 3D viewer is at the bottom of the page and rotates
Clicking makes this readable. European Tuc tuc drivers?

The pockets are on the side that is not under the safety belt. There's a safety belt in a tuc tuc?
DAMN. I like this thinking!

But what are all these parts I've been cutting out? How many welts does a pocket need? Couldn't they be one piece, repeated?

After staring at the 3D model in rotation, and looking at the way the lines on the body reveal the grainline, I think I have it. And I will have to put it on the form to see how those sleeves work. 

And those u-shapes? They are the bellows for the cargo pockets. 
We have to stop here. Yes, this is a series. Yes, it will continue this week.