Good patterns looks amazing. One little thing Re-gent-see Other than that i adore this video and i love your inclusion of flutter sleeves. I hardly ever see them in regency patterns
This is so amazing! I was just finishing up my set of stays (also your pattern!) and was getting ready to make the dress, but was having a difficult time finding the specific pattern I wanted. I am so excited to get started with this!
Thank you for giving my patterns a go! 💓 I hope the stays worked well for you! Hopefully this pattern has what you were looking for, it certainly has a lot of pieces!
@@KittyJBerry the stays worked beautifully! I usually have a difficult time finding patterns that work cause my bust measurement is about 16" more than my waist 😅 but your pattern worked perfectly!
@@samwhiffin I am so so happy to hear that!!☺ It can be tricky getting things to fit just right, i guess that's the beauty and the pain of sewing your own things 😅 but I am so happy to hear the stays worked out! If I can help at all with the dress let me know 💓
I just wanted to say, I love your videos and your patterns are awesome, I'm going to buy this pattern. I was wondering if you could actually make a lace up example with this pattern. It would be very helpful
Thank you so much for giving this pattern a go! I might make a lace up example down the road. I think it would be easy enough to make a dress with a lace up / corset style back. I would make the bodice with the cotton interlining for sure (to support the eyelets).Then I would finish up the back as usual - adding the lining. Then I would use an awl to poke holes into the center back and add eyelets using eyelet Pliers. I think I would add several 4mm or 5mm eyelets up and down both sides- I've always been partial to the Prym Eyelet Pliers and Eyelets with Washers. Then you could just use ribbon to tie it up. Of course hand-sewing eyelets would be a lovely historical way to add eyelets. Thank you for your suggestion! I will certainly have to see if I can work on a lace up example in the future!
At the 2:29 minute marker there is a quick example of the flutter sleeve made in a striped cotton fabric and the bottom edge finished with binding. Right now that is the only example i have on video. I hope this helps!
So interesting that you pronounce it, Redgency. In the UK, we pronounce it Ree-dgency. Lovely video, thank you.
Good patterns looks amazing.
One little thing
Re-gent-see
Other than that i adore this video and i love your inclusion of flutter sleeves. I hardly ever see them in regency patterns
You explain everything so well. I wish every pattern could be explain and shown this well.
This is so amazing! I was just finishing up my set of stays (also your pattern!) and was getting ready to make the dress, but was having a difficult time finding the specific pattern I wanted. I am so excited to get started with this!
Thank you for giving my patterns a go! 💓 I hope the stays worked well for you! Hopefully this pattern has what you were looking for, it certainly has a lot of pieces!
@@KittyJBerry the stays worked beautifully! I usually have a difficult time finding patterns that work cause my bust measurement is about 16" more than my waist 😅 but your pattern worked perfectly!
@@samwhiffin I am so so happy to hear that!!☺ It can be tricky getting things to fit just right, i guess that's the beauty and the pain of sewing your own things 😅 but I am so happy to hear the stays worked out! If I can help at all with the dress let me know 💓
I just wanted to say, I love your videos and your patterns are awesome, I'm going to buy this pattern. I was wondering if you could actually make a lace up example with this pattern. It would be very helpful
Thank you so much for giving this pattern a go! I might make a lace up example down the road.
I think it would be easy enough to make a dress with a lace up / corset style back. I would make the bodice with the cotton interlining for sure (to support the eyelets).Then I would finish up the back as usual - adding the lining. Then I would use an awl to poke holes into the center back and add eyelets using eyelet Pliers. I think I would add several 4mm or 5mm eyelets up and down both sides- I've always been partial to the Prym Eyelet Pliers and Eyelets with Washers. Then you could just use ribbon to tie it up.
Of course hand-sewing eyelets would be a lovely historical way to add eyelets.
Thank you for your suggestion! I will certainly have to see if I can work on a lace up example in the future!
@@KittyJBerry Thank you so much, this is extremely helpful
Do you have any examples of the flutter sleeves?
At the 2:29 minute marker there is a quick example of the flutter sleeve made in a striped cotton fabric and the bottom edge finished with binding. Right now that is the only example i have on video. I hope this helps!