Sewing Tips and Shopping Tips for Your Personalized Wardrobe
1. Analyze Your Colors and Style
2. Analyze Your Closet
Pull dogs— put into doggie bags.
Organize remains, including shoes, bags, jewelry and
other accessories into monochromatic outfits.
Isolate orphans who have no partner with the same
color. (An outfit should always include at least two
items of each color worn.)
Good sources for needed accessory items to complete
your outfits include yard sales, flea markets,
discount stores, sidewalk vendors, store sales. |
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3. Make a Master List.
Using the four-piece go-anywhere outfit concept
[jacket, skirt, pants, shirt/blouse], list what you
need to complete your outfits and to provide
families for your orphans.
Organize by color. Some items may just be used as
accents— organize these into sets of twos.
4. Analyze Your Fabrics
Put fabrics with clothing you already have to see if
they can be used to complete sets—. If so, check on
linings, zippers, notions. Here again, get rid of
dogs. Check patterns and buttons too.
5. Make a Shopping List for the Fabric Store.
Use separate headings such as fabric, linings,
buttons, padding, notions, stiffening. As you
determine sewing needs write them down with the
needed yardage. Attach swatches.
6. If possible, WAIT FOR THE SALES.
Put yourself on mailing lists. Watch for ads in the
papers. While you wait, sew what you already have.
7. Shopping in the Fabric Store
Pull your wits together— you are NOT in heaven—
THINK!
8. Remember these tips:
a. The most expensive items in the store are those
that are the best displayed and the easiest to get.
b. Price does not always determine quality. DIG—
examine the whole store— go into the bargain
basement and examine the bottom of piles. Take your
time— an extra half-hour may yield a ten to twenty
dollar savings.
c. Look through zippers, buttons, old patterns,
junk. Make SURE the fabrics you are buying match
your swatches and clothing you have brought with
you. Take them to the window and check.
d. Pile up the fabric, interfacing, lining and check
the result.
e. Talk to other customers— they are good for
opinions and shopping tips.
f. If you are a student
REMEMBER TO ASK ABOUT YOUR STUDENT DISCOUNT
SEWING TIPS
NEATNESS COUNTS
Keep your supplies and workspace in reasonable
order.
Organize by color - all red threads together, etc.
Throw as you go.
Finish as you go.
PLAN
Organize and shop for your future wardrobe by your
color palette.
Analyze what you need and make that.
Make items that turn garments you already have into
outfits.
Buy enough of most fabrics to make at LEAST
two garments. (It’s OK to make one of the garments
now, and the other two years from now.)
Work in units. Make several garments from the same
pattern while you have your head into that pattern.
Check for shadowing BEFORE cutting your
skirts. Stand outside in the bright sunlight. Hold
the fabric around you. Have your neighbor check
whether you will need to line the skirt.
Use clothing you have already made as the muslins
for your next projects. Pin them differently, see
how a sash might look, experiment with shorter
sleeves, etc. to determine how you can change them
slightly to have something new without doing too
much work.
TAKE YOUR TIME AS YOU SEW
Set your patterns up so all problems are out of them
before you cut and sew the garments. If possible,
cut all pieces before starting to sew.
Concentrate on the garment you are making. Make it
so beautiful you will want to wear it the rest of
your life.
Use the sewing machine as though you were hand
sewing.
Fix as you go.
BE GOOD TO YOURSELF
Take breaks. Drink water. Exercise. A good stretch
can make the rest of the afternoon more pleasurable.
Don’t sew when you are tired.
DON’T DRIVE YOURSELF NUTS
Although anything that can go wrong, will; there is
almost nothing in sewing that can’t be fixed. When
something goes wrong, take a break, think it over,
come up with a solution. The solution may give you a
better garment than you would have had if nothing
had gone wrong.
IF IT WORKS, USE IT. IF IT WORKS, YOU’VE GOT IT
RIGHT. |

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