Hi,
I am new to the forum, and would like some advice from those sewing experts out there.
I am currently sewing a shirt "on the square" based on an 1852 Godey's shirt pattern, which I am modifying for a better fit and to suit my tastes. This pattern has no instructions, however, so I am searching around the internet to find out how it is done. Fortunately, there is a very helpful gentleman on Youtube who has posted several videos showing how to sew a shirt, but the pattern I am using seems different in the shoulder and collar area than his.
My question is, how do I make the "slit" in the body for the neck, and how do I attach the neck gussets? "The Workingwoman's Guide," which has instructions, says this about the subject on page 138:
"When thus folded (with the front of the body one nail shorter than the back), crease it by a thread, and, after leaving the proper distance for the shoulders, proceed to cut the slit for the neck and down for the bosom."
Firstly, does anyone know what is meant by "crease by a thread"? Secondly, this seems to say that the neck-hole is an actual slit, similar to the shirt here, though it is a much earlier pattern: http://teainateacup.wordpress.com/20...aking-a-shirt/ However, the neck openings of the shirts in "EoG: Arms and Equipment of the Confederacy" seem to be actual holes, not merely slits.
I suspect that if the opening is a slit then neck gussets are required, while if it is a hole, nothing more is necessary. Is this the case?
I have one more question, though it is not as pressing. On page 141, "The Workingwoman's Guide" says this about sewing gussets, which I assume would be applicable to the neck gussets:
"These gussets are fixed by sewing them on at the wrong side of the shirt to within a quarter of an inch less than the square, and felling the other side nearly over."
Can someone decipher this statement for me? "A quarter of an inch less than the square"?
Help is much appreciated!
Thomas Langley
I am new to the forum, and would like some advice from those sewing experts out there.
I am currently sewing a shirt "on the square" based on an 1852 Godey's shirt pattern, which I am modifying for a better fit and to suit my tastes. This pattern has no instructions, however, so I am searching around the internet to find out how it is done. Fortunately, there is a very helpful gentleman on Youtube who has posted several videos showing how to sew a shirt, but the pattern I am using seems different in the shoulder and collar area than his.
My question is, how do I make the "slit" in the body for the neck, and how do I attach the neck gussets? "The Workingwoman's Guide," which has instructions, says this about the subject on page 138:
"When thus folded (with the front of the body one nail shorter than the back), crease it by a thread, and, after leaving the proper distance for the shoulders, proceed to cut the slit for the neck and down for the bosom."
Firstly, does anyone know what is meant by "crease by a thread"? Secondly, this seems to say that the neck-hole is an actual slit, similar to the shirt here, though it is a much earlier pattern: http://teainateacup.wordpress.com/20...aking-a-shirt/ However, the neck openings of the shirts in "EoG: Arms and Equipment of the Confederacy" seem to be actual holes, not merely slits.
I suspect that if the opening is a slit then neck gussets are required, while if it is a hole, nothing more is necessary. Is this the case?
I have one more question, though it is not as pressing. On page 141, "The Workingwoman's Guide" says this about sewing gussets, which I assume would be applicable to the neck gussets:
"These gussets are fixed by sewing them on at the wrong side of the shirt to within a quarter of an inch less than the square, and felling the other side nearly over."
Can someone decipher this statement for me? "A quarter of an inch less than the square"?
Help is much appreciated!
Thomas Langley
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