I NEVER FREAKING KNEW THAT'S WHAT A TRACING WHEEL WAS FOR. You have opened my eyes to the weird cowboy-spur thingie sitting untouched in my sewing drawer.
I'm glad you found them helpful! I'm going to continue making them, and we can eventually move on to skirt, pants, etc. Thanks for keeping up with my videos!
@@TheAwlNighter1 measuring the body and create a bodice to custom fit. Like why some waist dart intakes are bigger/smaller than others and same with bust.
@@tara_nguyen Usually a larger dart on a bodice means that there's a bigger difference between the bust. You can see this easiest when you look at your body when turned sideways. I have a video on drafting a custom bodice (it's split into 2 videos). I do need to remake it in the future so you can see how to measure on a real person. I'll move it further up the list, though! Thank you so much for the suggestion!!!
The arrows are for the dart intake. So while it seems like it's going the opposite direction because the dart leg is folded the opposite way, you can see at 2:15 that all that excess is being folded towards center front. It's definitely not necessary, though! You can design your darts to fold any way you like!
I NEVER FREAKING KNEW THAT'S WHAT A TRACING WHEEL WAS FOR.
You have opened my eyes to the weird cowboy-spur thingie sitting untouched in my sewing drawer.
Hi Rachel!! Wonderful vlog.. This series as been great....
💜💜💜🧵🧵🧵
I'm glad you found them helpful! I'm going to continue making them, and we can eventually move on to skirt, pants, etc. Thanks for keeping up with my videos!
Thank you so much for making and sharing these videos!!
I'd like to know about Grading, increase and decrease sizes. I hope you talk about Grading in your future videos. 👍👍👍
Thanks, I'll add it to my list! I've never worked specifically as a grader, but I'm happy to teach what I do know!
Can you show us how to measure and draw darts? Bust and/with waist.
Can you explain more what you mean? Do you mean how to transfer darts to fabric?
@@TheAwlNighter1 measuring the body and create a bodice to custom fit. Like why some waist dart intakes are bigger/smaller than others and same with bust.
@@tara_nguyen Usually a larger dart on a bodice means that there's a bigger difference between the bust. You can see this easiest when you look at your body when turned sideways. I have a video on drafting a custom bodice (it's split into 2 videos). I do need to remake it in the future so you can see how to measure on a real person. I'll move it further up the list, though! Thank you so much for the suggestion!!!
@@TheAwlNighter1 thank you so much!!
Really great work thx mam
Is it the same for skirt... The dart intake should be towards the centre front for both front and back skirt?
Yes, center front and center back! Though rules can always be broken for your designs. This is just the norm.
It seems You moved it the wrong direction. I.e, as against your arrow direction. Just a question.
The arrows are for the dart intake. So while it seems like it's going the opposite direction because the dart leg is folded the opposite way, you can see at 2:15 that all that excess is being folded towards center front. It's definitely not necessary, though! You can design your darts to fold any way you like!
🙏🙏🙏👌👌👌👌♥️♥️♥️💐💐💐💐