Making Pants
I had two students in my Free Range Slacks class yesterday and we had a lot of fun. One student was my friend, Jenny, who is also on the board of the Mountain Brook Homestead Foundation. She has taken several classes from me. The other was the store owner’s daughter, Ashlee—now the operations manager of the store—who is about the same age as DD#2 and a lot of fun. Two students was plenty for the first time teaching that class. Ashlee says we should offer it again in the fall. She is working very hard to attract younger sewists as well as garment sewists, but it’s a process. Most people don’t associate quilt stores with garment fabrics.
Here is Ashlee cutting out her pattern:
She’s very interested in setting up a projector in her personal sewing space to avoid having to deal with paper/tissue patterns. I am old school and need to be able to hold a pattern piece in my hand. I doubt I will ever set up a projector, but I know some sewists love them.
Jenny finished her pants just before the end of class. I suggested both students use muslin rather than fashion fabric in case we needed to make any adjustments. Jenny is about the same height as me, so she’ll need to lengthen her next pair, but her first draft fit perfectly. Ashlee had no previous garment-sewing experience, but she gamely kept up and had assembled her pants by the end of class. She just needed to sew down the casing for the elastic and insert it, which she said she would do at home. She will need to lengthen her next pair as well.
That pattern was a good choice for first-time pants. The elastic waist let us concentrate on construction techniques rather than worrying excessively about fitting.
I need to run up a quick project for the quilt store this morning before getting ready to head to the Lutheran camp. The weather forecast is now calling for a possible 4" of snow as low as 4000' Saturday night. We’re at 3250'. That’s a bit too close for comfort. The husband and I may have to put row cover or tarps out on the plants after all. I don’t want to lose everything.
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I am watching this Michael’s/Joanns “merger”—I don’t know what else to call it—with interest. I suspected that either Hobby Lobby or Michael’s would up its game after Joanns went out of business, if only because some of those larger yarn and fabric producers would be looking for a new national outlet through which to sell their products. I stopped at our Michael’s store a few days ago but the sewing section is still limited to one aisle in the back corner of the store. I think that Deana and I will stop at one of the larger Michael’s stores on our fabric shopping trip in Seattle because I know some of them are carrying fabric.
Hobby Lobby completely skipped the spring/summer fabric season. I see that they are now starting to stock some fall and Christmas fabric but no apparel fabric.