Crafts
Related: About this forumRe-inventing the wheel again
I'm almost finished with my next top - an oatmeal shawl-neck long-sleeved t-shirt. The fabric is probably 75% cotton with the rest Spandex, so it's fairly stretchy and doesn't seem to ravel. It's a rib knit in very thin fiber, not much thicker than sewing thread, and the rib is probably close to knit 6. purl 2. The rib gives it a thermal quality without too much bulk. I went from "Mmm, not sure" to "I'd really like a whole bolt of this". Of course, that's not happening.
The problem has been that I have no pattern at all for an inset shawl collar. Can't find one on the internet. The rest of the design is loosely based on a Kwik Sew tee - I've used this for years as the basis for anything from casual to formal, loose to close, every other neckline you can imagine. This is the way I sew; I have a rough guideline pattern (usually Kwik Sew) for fit, and either Frankenpattern elements from other patterns, or just make something up. But this has
been...complicated.
I can't believe I don't have a pattern. I have a bookshelf of patterns, including the more interesting from my mother's collection. She bought things she was never going to make. (A tennis outfit? Really?) More 50's and 60's undergarments than you can imagine, and patterns for sewn sweaters for golfers. Dad didn't play golf. Many of these are from old Minneapolis companies, like Kwik (which is now out of business, too. Rats!)
I finally worked the collar out. I swear I made it in my brain a dozen times before I dared take a scissors to the neckline. Each time I imagined it, I found some new problem to solve that would have totally screwed up the project if I hadn't found it. This did not inspire confidence. I lost sleep.
But it did work. The collar is the focus of the whole shirt. I'm even hemming the bottom and sleeves by hand, invisibly, to keep from distracting the eye (and also because I'm frickin' nuts!).
Once I've finished the sleeves, it's done. I'll whip off a quick thermal tank undershirt with what's left of the fabric, and move on.
Hermit-The-Prog
(36,599 posts)littlemissmartypants
(25,599 posts)Hermit-The-Prog
(36,599 posts)I don't know if the results contain anything helpful, but some seemed to resemble what you described. My mother taught me to do some simple crochet when I was little -- it's all been gone from my head for many years. Never knew anything about knitting.
littlemissmartypants
(25,599 posts)Hermit-The-Prog
(36,599 posts)It reported that the system version of "WebView" (whatever the hell that is) caused duckduckgo (the app that was tested) to crash.
Works fine on my laptop; didn't work on the phone. I have no clue why. It's a valid URL.
I don't like it when a browser exhibits unexplained behavior.
Edit to add:
Wife tested it on her iPad; worked perfectly.
Tested on a Samsung tablet (android); crashed.
It appears to be an android problem.
littlemissmartypants
(25,599 posts)Hermit-The-Prog
(36,599 posts)littlemissmartypants
(25,599 posts)littlemissmartypants
(25,599 posts)Found this one there. Looks beautiful!
http://rhondabuss.blogspot.com/2015/09/sewing-indie-monthpattern-hacking_25.html?m=1
Before
During
After
littlemissmartypants
(25,599 posts)I'm glad you worked it out! I hope you'll share pictures when you're ready.
❤️
littlemissmartypants
(25,599 posts)That's going to keep me occupied a while.
❤️