Making 18th Century Jumps
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- Опубликовано: 18 окт 2024
- Happy Wednesday! I finally got photos of this project worn, which means I can share the process of making it with you!! Check the info box for more information on what inspired me/what I would do differently!
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As mentioned in the video, if you aren't comfortable or don't have the option of draping/drafting these from scratch, start out with a fitted 18th century bodice/jacket pattern, then alter it to have tabs and the neckline you want. The shape should be pretty similar to the pattern I drafted with a little tweaking and a few mock ups to make sure you have it right!!
Pieces that inspired this one:
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q. What are jumps?:
They are a foundation garment, but one that was considered appropriate enough to be seen. At least in countries with more casual approaches to fashion during the 1700's, or lower class women who needed the extra mobility that they allow.
They are shaped similarly to stays, but don't offer nearly the amount of support or reduction since they have way less (if any) boning in them. Instead the stiffness of the fabric is what supports the body.
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ALSO I know it wasn't totally clear (I didn't explain it well), but the main change I would make to this is creating a separate layer of lining that has the boning channels. This would be sewn to the quilted floral/batting/cotton layer AFTER it's been quilted, before the binding is added. That way there isn't quite as much hand work.
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If you are interested in seeing more of my work or contacting me, I'll leave links to my various sites below!
Tumblr: / doxiequeen1
FAQ: • Frequently Asked Quest...
Blog: doxiequeen1.wo...
Instagram: / angelacostumery
Portfolio: angelaclayton.c...
Email: AngelaCostumery@gmail.com [serious inquires only please!]
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Music was written, performed, and belongs to Chris Zabriskie
side note, a lot of my videos have been getting content ID claims so I may be repeating the same songs for a looot of videos in the near future :I
It would be so amazing to see you do a series of historically accurate Disney princess ball gowns! This dress is absolutely gorgeous.
They did, the last month our historical dressmakers did a group project of Disney historical dresses. Look them up.
If I were a queen, princess, or a high ranking noble lady back in the day, I would 110% hire u as my seamstress.
@Mitzi Miau cool cool cool. I'd still hire her so...
As a seasoned seamstress for 45 years, you amaze me with your talent!! I sew a lot of Civil War outfits, since I do reenacting, and kudos to you for all the different time period costumes you create. For someone so young you are indeed an amazing seamstress!!
I am a 18th Century reliving history demonstrator so seeing this really caught my eyes. I've made my own petticoats, pockets, and aprons before but I've wanted to make jumps or stays for years. This was really great to see and they look amazing!
The floral fabric is so beautiful!
Never click faster than I do on an Angela Clayton video! Absolutely beautiful as always!x
Can we make fashion like this come back or make a time machine so I can go back in time and be Noble or higher up in social ranks so I can wear this every day cuz to be honest I prefer this and early Victorian fashion much better than today's
Agreed definetly
My life changed as I realised it´s not illegal to wear anachronistic fashion. You can just... do it (exept from work maybe)
Me too. You are not alone. My 14 yr. old brother also wishes he could wear 18th men's clothing every day!
That blue is incredibly flattering for your coloring.
its so bad how excited i get whenever i see you have a new video out your work is stunning and i always watch your videos while doing my own projects because your work makes me super motivated
All that hand stitching..mad respect. Beautiful garment!
Das ist Wahnsinn! Danke fuer das tolle Video!
I learned how to sew years ago, but haven't since, and it's your videos that have inspired me to start up again! Thank you for sharing your work!
Blue is your color, you look so stunning! Thank you for breaking this down. I would love to make something close to this someday. Right now I can only make basics and I'm having fun making backpacks currently. You're inspiring me to get back to more difficult projects!
Awesome! I had the same question when the live action film came out, and knew that the liberties they took were really off the mark. Your interpretation is BRILLIANT! As far as I'm concerned, this is canon for the character now.
I love your videos so much! I learn so much about sewing as well as historical fashion. Keep doing what you love!
Love that the eyelets are sewn by hand as well as the bias tape. Truly an artist.
Ever thought of doing something celtic inspired? Because that would be so cool
Another beautifully done project. You are always an inspiration to me, and your videos motivate me to get moving on my own projects. I love seeing your attention to detail and I also find it very helpful when you give cautionary tips on problems to try and avoid. You are such a perfect model for your creations too....like a living porcelain doll.......well done Angela....thank you for sharing with us your process
Absolutely love it. I’m afraid I wouldn’t have that much patience.
You are amAzing girl! I can't believe you are only 20 and self-taught. I've been thinking about going into costuming and I was like, where did this girl learn how to do this stuff?
You look absolutely gorgeous in these photos! The dress - all the components - are stunning. Masterful work, and the style of it suits you perfectly. You look positively glowing in these shots.
I don’t see, but I watch your videos for your industry, creativity and honesty. I find it very soothing somehow and it inspires me to try something creative myself. ❤️
“It’s like an 18th century sports bra” Hahaha love it!!
I just want to sank you for these great videos. Your dresses look breathtaking. I just found them because I want to sew a 1950' s dress. You are such a great inspiration and your videos helped me a lot to realise that I can just start sewing beautiful dresses. :)
This is the most beautiful jump I have ever seen. You are stunning.
You really inspired me to sew more again with your video. Thank you for inspiration and great videos :)
Hi Angela! OMG! I am speachless!!! You are so gifted!!! The jumps is gorgeous!! Kisses from Portugal!
I don't know anything about sewing (always wanted to learn) but this video was very relaxing and enjoyable to watch! Thank you!
Wonderful! Love the fabric too!
This outfit is so pretty, and I really like how these jumps look. They look perfect for a character like Belle!
Thank you so much for uploading. I am very nervous about following patterns so seeing a step by step guide was great.
I wish they would have hired you to design the costumes for the movie! I find the clothes you make to be very beautiful and interesting, I also love the fact that what you make is historically actuate. (Basically I'm a fan)
Your precision and hand sewing is amazing! Beautiful!
I just have to say that I think you are an amazing narrator and teacher.
The silhouette of this costume is beautiful!
You're beautiful and talented. Just like a model who design her own dress. You have a fair skin, you looks like a beauty jumping from 1890s painting. And I thought the pattern was made by hand. Beautiful patterns. Sorry for my bad english
Absolutely beautiful! Your work is some movie costume design greatness :)
Hello! I would 100% love to see a video of this top with the changes you wanted to make. And honestly, would really like to see a “cold weather” version of this with long quilted sleeves, if possible.
I love this outfit! The color; it's just so cheery.
Use weft (a knitted stabilizer with tiny glue dots on one side) and fuse it to the binding (suiting fabric). This will add a little body (which might work for the front panels as well), however it will not affect the binding negatively.
Beautiful project!!! It reminds me of Anne of Greengables. I love it!!!
The fabric is a beautiful choice.
you are insanely talented!! any bibliography in particular you recommend to someone interested in historical costume and history of costume in general? thank you for being such an inspiration!!
This fabric and made item is amazing!
glad I'm not the only one who wondered about that!
this is really pretty. I like your videos. They all inspire me to continue sewing and doing my best. Thank you!
Magnificent job it turned out beautiful thank you for such a treat
I think the yellow ribbons would also look really nice with the jacket!
This is absolutely gorgeous. Just wow. And wonderful tutorial! I learned quite a bit! I'm officially subscribed.
beautiful work, really like the turning of the seam allowances for boning channels
There's one thing I don't understand. Had you sewn the channels to the lining before quilting, wouldn't the quilting lines have gone through the channels and rendered them unusable ?
I've just been trying to figure that out myself!!
Me too. I think it might be a case of doing it the right way for a good reason and then forgetting that good reason later. I do that in life sometimes myself.
I don't really sew, I just enjoy watching these videos... but my head really ached figuring out how the heck you would sew the quilting lines without messing up the boneing channels. LMAO. I should've checked the comments first.
Not if she put the boning into the channels THEN quilted over those.
Ericat would that not just brake your needle?
It's a beautiful costume your skills never fail to impress. I do have one small query. You say you would have sewn the channels onto the panels before doing anything else which confuses me slightly as surely if they are sew on first would the quilting process not render them unusable or have I got the wrong end of the stick?
I mentioned this in the description, because you're right it really wasn't clear! I would have made an additional layer from cotton that housed the boning and sewn it to the other layers just before adding the binding. I'm not sure why I phrased it that way in the video
Check the description, she has a more detailed description there! :)
Angela Clayton Thank you that makes alot more sense :) x
wow this blue dress is so beautiful
Beautiful outfit. You have patience to hand sew.... WOW
this channel is just peak of the mountain :) watching your instagram I'm beyond words for how talented You are...
Hay Angela, Really really beautiful, I would love to own one, colors are great. Thank you for sharing. XX
Have you tried a bias binding maker? Its a little metal tool that you put your bias strip through and it folds the outside edges into the centre and you iron it as you pull it out. It just makes binding so much easier. You wouldn't have to pin from the front turn the edge under and pin again because the turn under is already ironed in for you. They come in lots of different widths.
Are these dresses conformable to wear for you? ive always wanted them to come back into style
I've made a very similar clothing to the one above, and they are really comfortable to wear in my opinion :)
Me too! It's so beautiful! But since they don't, I would love to try to make a similar version of it, but "adapt" it to modern day to be more practical. So, shorter, less puffy skirt, smaller bodice, no apron, etc... it would still be very pretty...
Im a guy so id have to figure out what men wore.
that could be a nightmare
Yes, for men it would be a little bit more complicated. I'm imagining a guy walking down the street looking like Gaston from "Beauty and the Beast" lol. But hey, you could pull of a pirate look! lol
Plz yes. I would love that
this is so interesting 😍
I really want to try to made this costume it's so beautiful, but I've almost never sewn anything so I guess I should start with something easier 😅💕
Beautiful! I love print of the waist garment it reminds me my grandmother's China blue tea set that she has displayed in a hutch.
YAY! Love when you post ,we miss you!
I would love to see a tutorial on how to get a pattern from those books to real life size I have the American duchess book but am stumped to get the pattern correct.
fernlintner65 Morgan Donner has a fantastic video about this exact thing on her channel...very instructional imo 🤓
I love these colours!
I love your work! So much talent!
great tutorial your work is amazing I wish my stuff ended up looking that beautiful 😊☺👍
So brilliant a work of art
I love this and I can't wait to see the rest of this series.
That is flipping gorgeous
I love when you upload videos!! Thank you!! :D :D
I wish I knew how to sew and I wish I could understand what is going on. It looks like so much work! I wonder how long this would have taken you. Can you go to schools especially for making historical garments? I would love to properly learn how.
It looks gorgeous, you're so talented and patient!
I love the period of clothes of the 18th century
Beautiful work.
(This was a comment about the boning channels but I see multiple other commenters have that covered-- redacted to avoid redundancy.) love this costume as always, can't wait to see the rest!
On your next project like this....I would recommend doing quilting with top & bottom material first... then cut pattern. It would have made your garment easier after. 😉
I love that country blue top!
You make a wonderful Belle 💜
This video was so relaxing to watch. 0.0
This is like extremely kool!!!! Oml i feel so inspired lol
This was beautiful.
This is soooooo pretty. I really want to try it, when I have the time
It is so beautiful that i wanna cry
this is so amazing . love it . U are very talented
This is beautiful!
this garment is beautiful! I love the colors and pattern! I love that you did a historically accurate princess.
With the batting, is it super warm?
When I saw the lady stood by the wooden fence, I thought these were the jumps she was referring too (ie showjumps) lol
I’d really love to see you do historically accurate dresses based on other Disney dresses as well!
I feel very sorry for the seemstesses of the 18th century, imagine doing all that work by hand
I imagine how expensive the royalty clothing were back then.
God Bless RUclips Comments imagine how damn long it would take just to make a dress for one day. (Maybe more but I'm not sure. I hope so though)
I imagine they would have had apprentices to help with much of the grunt work. Also back then many children worked, often for little more than food and board.
gabi braule 🙀
And without Netflix, no less
Beautiful interpretation!
This is absolutely lovely!! Once you had the pattern completed and start pinning it to the fabric for cutting, how long did it take you to complete? You are an experienced seamstress, but I'm certain it is still quite a long process, right?
you are a SEWING GENIOUS!
Just great. Thanks a lot gorgeous lady
So, I’m late to the party by about 3 years, but I do have a question. You said you wished you’d added the bonding channels to the lining before doing anything else, but wouldn’t that either leave the boning channels showing through to the front through missing quilting stitching or stitch the channels closed as you quilt across them?
I make what you make, but for girl for all time dolls, and sell them on etsy! I love the 1800s clothes.
so cool! I'm curious when you mentioned you should have sewed the boning channels in before the quilting- is it possible without the quilting going through the channels and making them unusable? i really want to make some, thanks for the inspiration!!!!
For hand sewing you have to keep good tension of the thread, you must pull it so it is tight but doesn't bunch the fabric! And when sewing by hand pinning the work to a tailor's ham and pulling the fabric away from yourself and the ham to keep everything looking nice.
make an in depth video about how to hand-sew those eyelets! I want to know how you do those!
amazing! wish i had your talent!
As a thought, if you have used the machine to stitch the boning channels, you could work embroidery or maybe stitch down some ribbon to conceal the thread
I love this garment! One question though, you say that you would have sewn the boning channels to the lining earlier in the process but what about the quilting then? Wouldn't the quilting lines have to cross the boning if you do that?
i love it...is so beautiful😍😍😍😍
Always wondered where the term "jumper" came from! Now I know!