in reply to Annalee

And rather than redo the pockets, I opened up the pocket bag on the left side and added a half sized patch pocket inside. This will hold my keys without them falling down to the bottom of the larger pocket, where they'll be hard to fish out.

"Aren't inner fob pockets usually on the right?"

Yes, but people's dominant hands are usually on the right, too. This one's being made by and for a southpaw, and I know where I put my keys.

in reply to Annalee

And that's it for tonight. Next time, I'll fold the linings back over the button holes to create welts and tack them in place.

Then I'll attach the fronts to the back (I'll try to document converting the shoulder darts to ease) and attach the exterior to the lining around all the edges before I stitch the lining to the exterior at each button hole, securing the welts.

Getting pretty close!

in reply to Annalee

I'm going to nerd out about this. Welcome to my TED talk.

Ease is the term for the difference between the dimensions of a garment and the body dimensions of the person the garment is meant to fit. Ease is different from size: consider a pair of skinny jeans vs a pair of straight-cut slacks. The same person could own both garments in the same size and both would fit them, but the skinny jeans have a lot less ease, because they're more form-fitting.

#Sewing #Tailoring

in reply to Annalee

Ease serves multiple purposes in a garment. To start with, unless a garment is stretchy, you need a bit of ease in order to move in it. This minimal amount of necessary ease is called "wearing ease" or "fit ease."

Ease is also a design component--consider the skinny jeans vs slacks again. The tightness of the skinny jeans and the straight vertical lines of the slacks are part of their design. Ease included for design purposes is called "fashion" or "style" ease.

in reply to Annalee

The different types of ease don't actually matter here but now you know some garment construction trivia.

Darts are stitched tucks of fabric that shape a garment. When a tailor converts a dart to ease, they're creating a little extra space in the garment by not stitching down that tuck.

When we do this, we have to get rid of the extra fullness at the seam line where the dart would have been, or the garment won't line up right.

in reply to Annalee

This is the lining of the waistcoat (it is self-lined, meaning the lining and fashion fabric are cut from the same cloth).

See that little dart at the shoulder? Shoulders are generally more rounded in the back than the front. Darts help shape the shoulder of a garment around that curve.

But in tailored suits, shoulder darts are typically converted to ease to avoid breaking up the smooth line of the shoulder.

in reply to Annalee

For the lining, I just stitched the dart, cause it's not going to show anyway. But for the outside I'm being posh and converting to ease.

This process involves a bunch of steam and ironing, so I thread-traced the dart lines so I wouldn't lose the markings halfway through. Technically I didn't need to trace the whole line; since we're not stitching the dart we don't care where the tip is. But I wanted to keep it visible for illustration of this process (or: the tea hadn't kicked in yet).

in reply to Annalee

Conversion time. First, I pin the back shoulder to the front shoulder, right sides together. I leave the area around the dart (about 3x as wide as the dart) open.

You can see how the extra fullness creates a gap. If I just ran it through the sewing machine like this I'd end up with tucks in the seam (and I'd break a needle. Don't put pins through your machine).

#Sewing #Tailoring

in reply to Annalee

I'm trying to get rid of that gap to create a smooth shoulder seam. I have a few things going for me here:

1. The dart is small, so there's not much fullness to manage.

2. We don't actually care whether the *edges* of the pieces line up. We care whether they line up at the seam line, which is 5/8" from the edge, where the dart is even smaller.

3. Shoulders are sloped, so the shoulder lines are cut diagonally to the weave of the fabric, giving them a little stretch.

4. Steam. Lots of steam.

in reply to Annalee

Many commercial patterns will tell folks to baste certain seams, but they rarely explain WHY, so a lot of folks skip this step and go right to stitching the final seam lines.

Basting provides stability to diagonal and curved seams.

Woven fabrics are stable alone the grain lines- parallel and perpendicular to the edge. On the diagonal, they tend to have some stretch (how much will depend on the weave).

in reply to Annalee

Yesterday, I used the stretch to convert a dart, easing 3/4" of fabric into a smooth seam.

When I stitch the lapels and armholes, however, the pieces are the same length, and I want them to stay the same length. I do not want the layers moving around because one side is stretching more than the other (and the way machine stitching works, one side is very likely to stretch more than the other).

So I baste to keep everything stable and aligned. #Sewing #Tailoring

in reply to Annalee

So I had to step away to run some errands (there were girl scout cookies at the farmer's market, which I'm sure you all understand was a situation requiring my prompt attention). Back at the table now. Here's the waistcoat, basted and ironed.

I tacked the button holes to their counterparts with the button hole linings folded out of the way, so they won't get caught in the stitching.

Time to sew.

#Tailoring #Sewing