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#1
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to copy an interesting sleeve treatment
I make a fair amount of the clothes my girls wear. I try to look at
what is popular, sort out what I like and think is appropriate and do similar things with the clothes I make for them. I bought a ready wear shirt for my daughter this weekend by Ecko Red. I would like to copy the technique they used on the sleeves. The best term I can apply to it is that the sleeve is shirred on a seam running from the top of the shoulder to the wrist. There are two seams in the sleeve; the usual underarm seam and the aforementioned seam directly opposite it on the top of the arm. As best I can tell, the seam incorporates 1/4" elastic into it to gather the fabric lightly along the seam. The fabric is a poly/cotton interlock with 5% spandex so the fabric has quite a bit of shape recovery on its own. I tried to find a picture of this shirt or a similar one on the web but with no luck. I think the shirt was part of the winter collection and all I am finding is short or sleeveless shirts on the web. My thought is that I should take a sleeve pattern from one of the shirt patterns I use. Copy it, cut it in half lengthwise, add seam allowance and then add ease. I think I could do that by clipping and spreading the pattern so the underarm seam remains the same length but allowing me to add fabric to the "overarm" seam for the shirring effect. I'm not sure how much to spread the pattern. I'll probably start with 1 1/2 times the length and reduce if necessary. Do you think I am on the right path? I wish I could point you to a picture. Marilyn |
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#2
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You've already had some perfectly reasonable answers to this.
In article , Marilyn of Time-Warner Telecom uttered I make a fair amount of the clothes my girls wear. I try to look at what is popular, sort out what I like and think is appropriate and do similar things with the clothes I make for them. I bought a ready wear shirt for my daughter this weekend by Ecko Red. I would like to copy the technique they used on the sleeves. The best term I can apply to it is that the sleeve is shirred on a seam running from the top of the shoulder to the wrist. There are two seams in the sleeve; the usual underarm seam and the aforementioned seam directly opposite it on the top of the arm. As best I can tell, the seam incorporates 1/4" elastic into it to gather the fabric lightly along the seam. The fabric is a poly/cotton interlock with 5% spandex so the fabric has quite a bit of shape recovery on its own. I tried to find a picture of this shirt or a similar one on the web but with no luck. I think the shirt was part of the winter collection and all I am finding is short or sleeveless shirts on the web. My thought is that I should take a sleeve pattern from one of the shirt patterns I use. Copy it, cut it in half lengthwise, add seam allowance and then add ease. I think I could do that by clipping and spreading the pattern so the underarm seam remains the same length but allowing me to add fabric to the "overarm" seam for the shirring effect. I'm not sure how much to spread the pattern. I'll probably start with 1 1/2 times the length and reduce if necessary. Do you think I am on the right path? I wish I could point you to a picture. Marilyn -- AJH alpha dot hotel echo yankee whisky oscar oscar delta at tango echo sierra charlie oscar dot november echo tango |
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