Okay, hang on, it's not as bad as it looks. I mean, it fits as badly as it looks like it does, but this was the mockup. And one of the risks of making a functional mockup is that you sometimes end up with a finished corset that doesn't actually fit.
I'm trying to work out a system for sizing corsets when there's only one pattern given (as is usually the case when the pattern was taken from an extant item). I used that method here, and clearly got things wrong. Looking at my pattern vs. the "real" pattern may help me figure out *what* went wrong, but unfortunately, this project has been sitting around for two-ish years, and I don't actually REMEMBER what I was thinking when I drafted my pattern. So it's not even useful as a learning experience.
Well, okay, it still is. The lesson is not to let experiments sit for two years without documentation.
Good news: I have more of the fabric.
Further good news: I have many friends, surely this will fit one of them.
Onward.
Hey, another corset done. This one just needed binding. Bam. Done.
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Look at that miter! Perfect! One day, I'll do a tutorial. Today is not that day. |
Right.
Next!
Linen 14th Century man's cote, for the spouse. This time last year, this cote only needed hems (fronts, bottom, cuffs) and buttonholes and buttons. Now it's just cuffs and buttons/holes.
Making progress, one project at a time. Or sometimes two.
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