favorite references

  • Elsebeth Gynther: Easy Style: Sewing the New Classics

    Elsebeth Gynther: Easy Style: Sewing the New Classics
    A fabulous book if you have the urge to create your own clothing designs. Basic patterns are provided, along with countless variations in sketches and photos. In addition to raglan and set-in-sleeve tops, pants, and skirts, there are pocket patterns, hats, and dozens of collars. There is a lot of basic sewing information, and there are many garments presented with step-by-step instructions, but this book is especially valuable because it gets you thinking about design possibilities. (btw the image is incorrect--it's the cover of an american knock-off on the same theme. The original is a paperback in yellow). (*****)

  • Nina Ericson: Klader:Creating Fantastic Clothes
    Great ideas for creating simple clothing. Most have very simple construction; the appeal is in using unusual materials to convey personal style. There are patterns for blouses, skirts, and coats, but for me the inspiring photos of real people are the true charm of this book. (****)
  • Verity Wilson: Dress in Detail from Around the World

    Verity Wilson: Dress in Detail from Around the World
    An inspirational feast for lovers of clothing, cloth and embellishment. Replete with detailed line drawings and sumptuous full-color photographs of garments from all times and places: Palestinan dresses, Indian trousers, Korean jackets, Russian coats (of salmon skin!), African tunics. The photos provide endless ideas for ornamentation, the drawings show every seamline as if to cry “recreate this!”. I just found this book-- it was love at first browse. (*****)

  • Madelyn van der Hoogt: The Complete Book of Drafting for Handweavers

    Madelyn van der Hoogt: The Complete Book of Drafting for Handweavers
    With my imagination in a very advanced yoga pose, I could conceive of a weaver who didn't need this book. Maybe if you did only plain weave, or only tapestry, you'd never have reason to pick up this volume. Or of course you might be a natural genius. The rest of us occasionally need some help, and this is where to find it. Essential. (*****)

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May 17, 2006

flash me some sleeve, baby

0605_sweater_sleeve

Ok, here you go. The Om sweater with half a sleeve. This picture is out of date; I now have most of this sleeve done and have started on the other one. I'm still dubious about the yarn situation. Will there be enough? One skein of yarn doesn't quite make it from the underarm to the wrist. I have a feeling this sweater is going to fully utilize the put-stitches-on-hold technique as I switch back and forth from sleeve to second sleeve to body and back again, ekeing out my yarn as far as it will go. (is that ekeing, eking, or eeking? I suppose it's rightfully eking, but it looks odd.) What would be a truly low-yardage way to finish the front and neck while still allowing for some closure? I'm thinking attached I-cord. The thing about chunky yarn is that it always runs out long before you hope it will.

In other news... a light! I see a light! Two of my major assignments were completed today, as in turned in to the professor, as in out of my hands. Over. Praise be. Now I just have an exam and a couple other shorter writing things to finish up... I can almost see the end! Freedom! I may yet survive!

Comments

Happy day, happy day! You are done!!!

Love the new sweater!

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