Victorian Dress Patterns and Designs to print out and use. PDF Book ~ Instant Digital Download - Download it direct to your iPad, tablet or computer for reading. Victorian era circa 1886 Period Garment Patterns. An illustrated text book on How To Cut and Make Ladies’ Garments By CHAS. HECKLINGER Over 125 illustrations, a valuable reference resource for anyone interested in recreating authentic Victorian period clothing for theatre, costume parties or someone who wants to study the dressmaking methods and fashion trends of the Victorian era. If you have any interest in Dress Designing or Period Costumes then this is a great pattern book to have in your collection. The original edition of this Rare Pattern Book was printed in 1886 ****====================================================**** This book is also available in one of our 5 x Book Discount Collection Sets Here: Victorian Dress Pattern Books Collection #1 https://www.etsy.com/listing/239276619/special-collection-of-5-x-victorian ****====================================================**** My Personal 100% Guarantee To You If you Buy this Book and after reading it, You feel that You did not get Your Money's worth from it, Message me and I will cancel your purchase and Refund Your Money. And You Can Keep The Book as My Personal Gift To You. ****====================================================**** CONTENTS The Measures To Draft a Waist to Measure Low Neck Dress Waists The Basque The Sleeve Basting and Trying on the Waist Inside of High Waist Basque Inside of Low Neck Waist Plain and Train Skirts Draping and Trimming Dresse Directions for Making a Plain Skirt Draping the Overskirt Finishing the Jacket Button-Holes Trimmings PREFACE. Having in the years past had very extensive experience in teaching tailors and dressmakers how to cut ladies' garments, and our students having met with such good success, we have decided to publish our System in a condensed form and at a popular price, in order that dressmakers may simplify their methods of cutting and making up, and even mothers who desire to design and construct their own dresses or garments for their children, can have a guide by which they are enabled to do so. The method is easily learned—any miss of sixteen can acquire it in a few hours, and the result in fit and style will be satisfactory. To the dressmaker it will present a way of producing a pattern of a dress or jacket which is far superior to any known method she may be acquainted with, as it is purely and simply a Tailor System, and the success which tailors have in making the modern tailor-made dresses, can just as well be acquired by the dressmaker by conforming to its use. The correct results which our System give, place it at the head of any and all Systems for cutting ladies' garments. The Author. ====================================== This scarce antiquarian book is included in our special Rare Books Recycled Series. In the interest of creating a more extensive selection of rare historical books, we have chosen to Digitize this title even though it may possibly have occasional imperfections such as missing and blurred pages, missing text, poor pictures, markings, dark backgrounds and other Digitizing issues beyond our control. Because this work is culturally important, we have made it available as a part of our commitment to protecting, preserving and promoting the world's rare works of literature that would not normally be available. ====================================== This Book is intended for education and informational purposes only. Our modification and restoration process of this book, has resulted in our creating a new work (restored or annotated or improved work), that gives us a clear and novated copyright to this modified version. ====================================== Please note. This ebook is in PDF. file format. You can read it on your iPad or Tablet with iBooks. You can read it on your computer with Adobe Acrobat Reader If you do not have Adobe Acrobat Reader installed in your computer, you can download it from Adobe. It's completely FREE. ====================================== Shipping is FREE via Instant Digital Delivery: This is a digital item. Once Payment is received, your book will be available in your etsy purchases to download directly to your iPad, Tablet or computer.
Renaissance victorian fantasy cosplay dress pattern Sleeve Maxi Flare Skirt Dress available as an instant download (pdf) sewing pattern bundle with a range of size options, including plus sizes ; ⭐US Sizes: 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20, 22, 24, 26, 28, 30 ⭐Standard Sizes: XS, S, M, L, XL, 2XL, 3XL, 4XL ⭐These patterns are suitable for A4, A0, and US Letter size papers. ⭐Once your payment is processed, you will automatically receive download links for the pattern files. Please note that you can only download the files from a computer; they will not work on a phone or iPad. ⭐This is a digital product. You will receive zip files containing the patterns and sewing instructions. ⭐Due to the nature of digital downloads, no refund, return, or exchange of the files is possible. However, if you experience any problems with the files, please contact us, and we will assist in resolving the issue.
You are buying 1/2 yard peonies fabric sufficient to make 1 dress + the PDF pattern to make this dress. * The peonies fabric is our original design fabric available only from our Carpatina store or website. * The pattern is also our original creation and it is multi-sized. - For 18" Slim dolls like Carpatina Dolls™ or Magic Attic or BJD 13 - For 18" American Girl Dolls The Fabric will be mailed to you. The pattern will be sent by email as a PDF electronic pattern that you will download and print. Inspired from the Peonies Dressage Dress worn by Claire in Paris in season 2 of Outlander, we designed a customized fabric with painted peonies scaled for 18 inch doll clothes. You will need only 1/2 yard to make 1 outfit for either American girl or Carpatina of any other 18" doll. If you need fabric for more dresses or just the fabric, just send me an email an I will create a special listing for you. To see more Doll Fabrics designed by Carpatina and scaled for 18" dolls, visit our Etsy shop Fabrics section.
Voilà, c'est presque terminé. J'ai fait un essayage avant-hier... Il faut que j'élargisse les emmanchures pour un petit peu plus de confort, sinon le reste me semble plutôt bien. Seul truc qui m'enquiquine: dois-je rajouter un gousset sur le devant? J'ai l'impression que le volume est trop concentré vers le milieu pour l'époque... C'est un changement de dernière minute et j'ai peur de tout ruiner, mais je me dis qu'il y a peu de chances pour que ça ne m'aille plus après rajoute d'un gousset supplémentaire de chaque côté. Avis bienvenus! Here we are, almost done. I've made a fitting the day before yesterday. I need to enlarge the armholes a bit, but everything else looks fine. I just wonder if I have to add new gussets.. All the volume is in the center, which is not very good for the era. This is a last minute change, and I don't want to destroy everything, but I guess that adding 2 gussets won't make the brassiere suddenly unwearable.. what do you think? Should I take the risk?
[Note: the following has been pasted directly from livejournal, and is an amalgamation of several entries] July 4th, 2012: So I was thinking today about the zone-front gown I want to make and the 1780s/1790s stays I will need to make to go underneath it. However, I'm not allowed to start a new corset until my current one is done. So I finally-finally-finally ordered boning for my dark red 1890s corset. Of course, the fabric for the boning channels is still in Halifax, and I am in Toronto until september, but that's beside the point. I wasn't sure what type of boning to use for the channels on the side, which have the sharpest curves. The original 1890s corset mine is patterned from is boned with extra-wide flat steels, and it has a very sharp bust-waist-hips ratio. So, in theory at least, I could achieve the same sharp waist with flats. However, lots of people find that modern flat steels don't bend sharply enough to achieve the type of waist reduction this corset is made for. So I ordered more boning than I will actually need. I ordered enough boning to fill every channel with an 8mm x .4mm flat steel, which is thinner and therefore springier than a regular 6mm x .6mm flat. I also ordered spiral steels for the three channels with the sharpest bends in them (the ones at the sides and side-fronts). Spirals bend really easily and sharply, to the point where they can get permanent kinks in them if you don't store them correctly. But I don't think they're going to give me the really clean, smooth look on the outside of the corset that makes the original so beautiful. We'll see =D So here is the first part of the corset diary. First of all, here is a picture of the original corset: The pattern is from the book "Corsets: Historical Patterns and Techniques" by Jill Salen. I was inspired by these corsets: The one on the left is from the 1880s; I'm not sure who currently has it. The one on the right is a Royal Worcester corset from 1876, currently held in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. I started by taking my exact measurements and then comparing them with the measurements of the pattern. I compared the b-w-h ratio of the original corset with my own and decided how much waist reduction I wanted and what the final measurements of the corset needed to be. I altered the pattern and then made a muslin, which ended up looking like this: And then like this: As you can see, it stretched. It stretched more than 3 inches. That's because every panel is cut on the bias, and my mock-up is made of factory cotton and a thick cotton twill, which stretches a looooot more than the coutil of the final corset. But the mock-up still gave me a chance to see if there were alterations needed to the fit or the shape. I added about an inch and a half to the top at center front and gave it a slight sweetheart neckline, and added about half an inch to the bottom all the way around. Since the pieces are cut on the bias, I took a little more off the waist of the corset to achieve the waist reduction I want, which is about 5". At the same time, I gave myself a little more room through the rib cage (by a little I mean about a 1/4" per side). My final corset is made of white herringbone coutil with an outer layer of a really nice dark red cotton. These two fabrics were cut and sewn as if they are one layer. I started by stay-stitching all of the panels, since they are on the bias, and inserted the busk. I then corded the tops of the four center-front panels with a thick wool yarn of the same colour as the outer fabric. I used a beading hook to pull the yarn through the pre-sewn channels. Pre-sewing the cording channels prevents the fabric from warping - otherwise you end up with a top piece that is considerably smaller than the bottom piece because it has been zig-zagged up and down over the cording. Here are the four CF panels after cording. Also, note the backwards busk. Oops. Not sure how I did that, but it doesn't make much of a difference and it's too late to take it out now. Next, I put the corset together, flat-felling the seams to about 1/4". The boning channels will cover these seams on the outside, but I still want them to look nice on the inside, and flat-felling makes for a very strong seam. I then attached the waist tape. The seams that hold the waist tape down will be covered by the bone casings. Here is the inside of the corset before the waist tape was sewn down: With the waist tape sewn down: Here's the outside: And here's a close-up of the cording at the top: There are actually lacing grommets in it now, too, but I haven't taken any photos of it since I put them in. They're silver, and grommety, and 1" apart. I'm sure you can imagine them. ;) So there it is! Can't wait to finish it and start flossing and embroidering it! May 6, 2013, after losing weight and opening the whole thing up again for alterations: Put grommets in today, so the main parts of the alteration are finished =D Yay! Now I just have to re-bind the edges and re-floss the channels. Took some photos in the costume studio. July 27, 2013: Good shot of the flossing and cording at the top of the corset, which is unfortunately hidden by the jacket. Excuse the derpy face and my plate - added this shot because you can really see the shape of the corset. Better photos to come. February 2015: (Since I promised better photos, here's the portfolio page - a page like this for each costume can be found under the 'portfolio' tab of this blog.)
Named after the reign of Queen Victoria (Jun 20, 1837 – Jan 22, 1901), the Victorian era brought styles like corsets, cage crinolines, and bustles into mainstream fashion, while rich and luxurious fabrics like velvet and silk were used in upper-class homes. In the spirit of everything Victorian, we've created a collection, 17 Free Victorian Sewing Patterns. With these amazing sewing projects inspired by old-world royalty, you can time travel back to the late 1800s without leaving your sewing room! Nothing embodies the word 'vintage' more than the styles and decor of the Victorian era, with its lush fabrics, delicate ribbon and lace accents, and feminine silhouettes. While most 1800s fashions would feel very uncomfortable for modern women, we here at AllFreeSewing love vintage-inspired fashion and anything that combines vintage style with a modern edge. These easy sewing patterns and projects are the best way to combine your love of history and sewing and mix details from this era with modern styles. We've included some royal fashion essentials like corsets and shawls, as well as some modern pieces with those accents. If you love antique home decor, then you'll love these quick and easy Victorian-inspired DIY projects, like expensive-looking curtains and beginner embroidery ideas. If you've always had a love of history and fashion, then these sewing projects inspired by the Victorian era are perfect for you! Sign Up For More Free Patterns >>>
Over the years, I have received several requests for how to easily make a ladies' Victorian costume. Usually, the need is for a school play or one-time event such as Halloween, so the budget is very small. The least expensive ready made Victorian dress costumes cost at least $100 or more when you start adding
Dit is een digitaal patroon voor het single-breasted damesgilet uit de 1895 Keystone Guide to Jacket and Dresscutting. Het gilet heeft twee lange figuurnaden aan weerszijden van het middenvoor, waarbij de figuurnaad het dichtst bij de voorkant is uitgebeend. Aan de achterkant zit aan weerszijden een kleine pijl. De revers zijn in het patroon getekend en zijn gekerfd. De taille kan gemakkelijk worden aangepast omdat er in totaal 4 coupenaden aan de voorkant zijn, elk met een breedte van 2 1/8 ". Het wordt aanbevolen om de buste aan te passen via schuine streep en spreiding, terwijl de coupenaden vervolgens worden vastgeknepen om de taille aan te passen om de verhoudingen te behouden. Maat- en patroonnotities Buste: 36" Taille: 25" Geen naadtoeslag inbegrepen; voeg naar wens toe. Je ontvangt: -PDF met het digitale patroonblad -PDF met basisconstructie-instructies en print-/montageschema & instructies. -PDF-gids voor het sorteren/dimensioneren van een patroon
victorian coat
VICTORIAN CONVERTIBLE CYCLE WEAR SEWING PATTERNS
p. cm
Quick note before I start, today… Soulless is an Amazon Daily Deal at $2.99. And now on to your regularly scheduled blog post. So one of my favorite things to happen in How to Marry a Werewolf was not only the way the relationship between Faith & Channing progressed, but also the relationship between Faith […]
This listing is for a PDF Sewing Pattern of a Bathing Costume, comprising of Bathing Suit and Cap, made from an original 1895 La Mode Illustree Pattern, see measurements for details. The PDF Pattern (O50605 82) has been copied exactly as published in 1895 using a CAD program and will print out FULL SIZE pattern pieces as a PDF of 15 A4 or Letter pages using an ordinary printer or 1 A0 page A separate file for the Pattern Instructions in FRENCH (with Internet translation into ENGLISH) as published in 1895 is also supplied. Expert knowledge of sewing garments will be required, as the original pattern does not include seam allowances, and gives only basic instructions for the garment construction. The Bathing Costume Pattern, in an unaltered state, will comfortably fit measurements up to: 36" / 92cm Bust 36" / 92 cm Waist 38" / 97 cm Hips