Healthy Benefits of Taking Up Sewing as a Hobby

Sewing as a creative outlet for expressing your concepts and ideas is also a good way of keeping your mental health well-oiled and in a balanced state. The great thing about sewing as a hobby is that it can be tailored to suit a person’s skill level and the attention that an individual can devote to work on a project.

As people age, the cells of the brain can deteriorate if allowed to stay idle most of the time. Working on a sewing project as a hobby involves the use of patterns and sewing steps to follow. Their uses serve as exercises for the brain and mental workouts that keep your brain active and productive. Making the brain remember the steps and follow a pattern enhances its ability to generate new cells. Keeping the mind constantly active is one protection against the development of dementia during old age.

Healthy Benefits of Taking on Sewing as a Hobby

Sewing projects can serve as outlets for artistic skills and even enhance one’s problem-solving abilities. It gives a person ideas on how to create costumes or devise props for school presentations.

Sewing skills are of great use in upcycling clothes by updating the style with the current fashion trend. Upcycling garments is widely encouraged, because it is also good for the environment. Instead of throwing away unwanted or discarded clothes, upcycling them can help reduce the amount of wastes being dumped in landfills.

Constant use and flexing of hands and fingers when sewing can help maintain nimbleness. Chiefly because continuous movements can soften the joints over time.

Placket Sewing : Important Pointers to Keep in Mind

Plackets are one of those sewing tasks that gives a piece of garment a nice touch, whether as a functional or decorative addition in finishing a garment opening. It’s actually a method of holding together the fabric after it was cut to make an opening in a blouse or dress that has no facing. Many who are new to sewing can do well to learn the right steps in sewing a placket, which if not properly done could ruin the quality of a home-sewn dress.

Important Pointers to Consider When Sewing a Placket

Plackets should be placed in an area where they would be easy to access when fastening and unfastening an opening; except when a blouse or dress has no front opening.

Bear in mind that there is a standing rule for placket positioning, which distinguishes girls’ from boys’ clothing. The plackets of a girl’s blouse has the right side of the placket overlapping the left side. The opposite is true for boys’ polo shirts, in which the left side overlaps the right side of the placket.

Inasmuch as plackets bear a lot of strain during fastening and unfastening, it’s important to always interface the placket area. However, this is the part which many newbie dressmakers encounter difficulty in keeping the placket straight, smooth and well-seamed

Nevertheless, there are several YouTube video tutorials that illustrate sewing techniques and step by step instructions on ho to sew plackets for different types of openings.

Resonance Textile Firm Goes All Out to Revive Garment Manufacturing in the U.S.

Resonance built the world’s first end-to-end facility where designers can create clothing and sustainably grow garment businesses regardless of economic scale.

Out to prove that the fashion industry does not have to destroy the planet to sustainably create and sell the next product that will become in demand worldwide, the textile company built a first of its kind, creation-to-customer-closet platform. It’s a 300 square-foot, 12-station sewing facility that stands at Pier 59 in Chelsea Piers, right next to Resonance’s headquarters.

Resonance is a textile manufacturing company that produces organic and environmentally certified fabrics using digital printing. Resonance’s proprietary technology provides a fully automated process to use in efficiently and sustainably designing, selling, and making hundreds of garments, in real time, per week.

How Resonance Plans to Fulfill Its Commitment

Chairman and Co-Founder of Resonance, Lawrence Lenihan said the company is deeply committed to bring garment manufacturing back to New York City. NYC’s thriving textile manufacturing industry went on a decline after companies opted to go overseas in order to lower production costs. This led to the loss of over one million garment manufacturing jobs in the last 50 years.

Chairman Lenihan believes that through Resonance’s innovative manufacturing systems and advanced machine learning, new entrepreneurs can take orders through the platform and build a new fashion value chain that will add thousands of living wage jobs throughout the country.

Actually, the company is also working to build a network of US-based garment manufacturing firms that will utilize the Resonance platform. The goal is to renew stateside garment manufacturing by enabling the new generation of manufacturers to compete on costs by being closer to end-users. Doing so will also allow for transparency over the garment manufacturing firms’ social and environmental value and impact on the communities being served.

Staystitching – A Traditional Technique to Keep Fabrics Smooth While Sewing

Staystitching is a sewing technique that new generations of hobby dressmakers haven’t heard of before; or not aware of its importance in keeping fabrics smooth.

Why is Staystitching Important?

First off, know that staystitching is simply a straight stitch sewn near the edge and along the curve of a single layer of fabric that has been cut. Staystitching is a technique applied to the curves of necklines, sleeve holes and even along the shoulder portion of cut fabric, as a way to prevent each layer of fabric from becoming distorted.

Distortions occur during the sewing process, as the pulling and stretching actions on the fabric can change the curves. The reason for this is that curved cuts slash across the bias, which refers to any grain in which the vertical and horizontal threads of a fabric meet.

A bias cut tends to increase the stretchability of a woven fabric, which denotes that as we pull and stretch when sewing, the curve cut will distort. Since the shoulder portions are cut with a slight slant or slight bias, it’s important to staystitch them as well.

How to Staystitch Properly

Staystitch should be done immediately after cutting a fabric using stitches that are 1.5 in length because smaller stitches tend to create a stronger hold.

Determine the seam allowance at the curved or biased areas so you can space the stay stitch away from the seam line.
When staystitching the curves of necklines and sleeve holes, start stitching from one end going to the center, which means restarting from the other end toward the center. The purpose of which is to keep the width of the staystiches even from end to end.

Hand-Sewing: Outmoded but Not Forsaken as a Sewing Method

Despite the many technological advancements incorporated in sewing machines, hand-sewing is a traditional method that will never be forsaken by expert sewers.

Industrial sewing machines are best used for mass produced garments, because the faster rate of turning raw materials into finished product is of the essence. Yet if in terms of achieving results for a single piece of garment, expert sewers can pretty much achieve the same results; or even better. Mainly because some designs or patterns require meticulous attention and precision that can be achieved only by way of hand-sewing.

Take note of the excellent beadwork on formal evening wears created by topnotch designers. Each crystal bead must be hand-sewn carefully and correctly so as not to ruin the delicate and expensive fabric. Even for sewing on buttons or hemlines, most designers prefer them to be hand-sewn to ensure their integrity.

There are still dressmakers in our midst who are into hand-sewing not as a profession but as a hobby. Some others hand-sew for economic reasons but can produce garments that they proudly wear as their hand-sewn creations. Actually, if one is to ask these dressmakers why they still prefer hand-sewing to using sewing machines, they can cite several benefits of this traditional method that many consider as tedious and time-consuming.

Benefits of Hand-Sewing

Sewing by hand allows stitching with greater precision, especially when adding embroidery or decorative stitches. Here, the sewer can accomplish her work while taking a relaxed and comfortable seating position. When using a sewing machine, a sewer needs to stay seated next to the equipment to be able to keep the fabric in place when carrying on with the sewing process.

Hand-stitching allows sewers to bring their sewing projects anywhere, in case they need something to do to pass the time away.

While there are small portable sewing machines that are small enough to lug along, users still need to set them up properly. Although there are small hand-held sewing contraptions, they still require batteries to be operational.

The most important benefit of hand stitching for many sewing hobbyists, is its contemplative and calming effect. While the act of stitching is repetitive, hand-sewers can let their mind wander off and think of other things for the time being and still be in control of the sewing process.

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Modern Sewing Machines : Improvements in Machine Performance and Productivity

While sewing machines and stitch generation principles haven’t changed much since their invention, significant improvements have enhanced machine performance. Through the years, advancements in machine technology made sewing machines a primary equipment not only in the clothing industry but in other manufacturing processes as well.

Innovations in construction materials and electronic systems have significantly improved the speed, stitch-regulation, needle-timing and looping systems of modern-day sewing machines. Moreover, high-tech sewing machines nowadays are lightweight, highly efficient, and comfortable to use, especially if they are computer controlled.

Some Examples of Latest Advancements in Sewing Machine Technology

Automation is now staple as a modern feature, which is also common in the latest models of high-tech sewing machines.

Automated Sewing Machines

Smart sewing machines can accurately stitch trace the details of a pattern or pictures for embroidery, as stitches run with the aid of a camera-computer interface that captures 1,000 frames per second. Automation functions include identifying the individual threads to be used and counting the number of stitches needed to accurately embroider a particular image.

Automatic Hemming Units

Designed to improve consistency of lap seams and increase productivity, automatic hemming machines lessen the sewing workload. An operator needs only to load the fabric on the machine guide, and the unit will automatically hem the edges where hemming is needed.

Automatic Buttonholing Machine

Buttonholing is one of the tedious processes of sewing as it requires meticulous attention. Now there are machines that can create buttonholes up to a maximum length of 68mm, with options to creating buttonholes with a cross tack, with or without an eye, or without a round tack.

Sewing Machines with Dry Oil Pan System

Where externally lubricating the machine parts with oil could result to staining the fabric being worked on, there are now sewing machines that need less lubrication. Sewing contraptions with dry oil feature, typically have anti-friction bearings, while the oil pan is integrated with the sewing machine bed, as opposed to external application of oil machines. That way, any excess oil stays in the pan to keep the machine surface oil-free; eliminating the possibility of the fabric getting stained by oil leaks.

Purpose of Finished Garment Measurements in Sewing

Finished Garment Measurements are often found at the back of pattern envelopes; but not a few understand the purpose of these measurements in creating garments. While it is often explained as a way to achieve a perfect fit when sewing a garment, the FGM concept is still not widely understood.

As a standard sewing practice, body measurements of the bust, waist and hips are taken to determine the size of the person who will wear the finished garment.

The Finished Garment Measurements (FGM) that are usually provided as info of a commercially-produced pattern, indicate the actual size of a garment after undergoing sewing processes. FGM also comprise bust, waist and hip measurements to which allowances are added when applied in creating different sizes for a single commercial dress pattern.

Why are Body Measurements and FGMs Different?

The differences between FGMs and body measurements (BMs) are largely dependent on the type of garment to be sewn or the kind of fabric that will be used to sew the garment. When sewing a fitted dress, the FGM and BM measurements will more or less be the same. Yet if a body-contouring garment, let’s say for a pair of leggings that makes use of a stretchable fabric, the FGM will likely have smaller waist and hip measurements when compared to the BM.

In the same way, if the commercially made pattern is for a voluminous dress, the FGM indicated at the back of the pattern envelope will be larger than actual body measurements. Mainly because there will be a dramatic measure of ease added to the pattern size, usually on the waist and hip measurements but only slightly different for bust measurements. .

Such examples illustrate the application of Finished Garment Measurements when creating one’s own pattern. In having a finished garment measurement guideline for a specific type of apparel, measuring the sewn garment and comparing it to the FMG will indicate where necessary adjustments will be made to ensure that the finished or sewn garment achieves a perfect fit.

Pressing Seams : Making Home-Sewn Dresses Look Professionally Crafted

Expert seamstresses agree that one important step to making a home-sewn garment look professionally constructed is to press a seam after sewing the fabric.

The rationale behind pressing the seam, especially for garments that involve complicated sewing processes, is to make certain that seams are laid flat; especially at points where seams meet or cross. A seam that is laid flat when oversewn reduces bulkiness or will not pucker.

Traditional 2-Step Process of Pressing Seams

Traditional sewing involves a two-way process of pressing a seam. The first is to press the seam flat with a flatiron, as a means of setting or blending the stitches with the fabric. The steaming and flattening will allow the thread to meld with the textile to make the stitches disappear.

The second step is to carefully open the seam by “finger pressing” or by running the tip of the flatiron to open the seam. Pressing will be on both sides, with the wrong side first before tackling the right side. However, when iron pressing the seam, take care not to pull hard or stretch the fabric. Iron with up and down movements instead of vigorous back and forth strokes.

Some contend that sewing experts can avoid puckering without having to press seams. That may be okay with ordinary textile but not with expensive fabrics like silk or finely woven cotton. Still, with most commercial dress patterns, instructions for sewing include certain seam-pressing instructions such as: press as sewn, press seam open or press darts.

Special Pressing Tools to Use for Complicated Sewing Steps

In some cases, when the garment involves complicated sewing steps, or if the fabric is a delicate material, a special pressing equipment can make the process easier while achieving the best results. Some examples of special pressing tools include but are not limited to the following:

Pressing Cloth – The use of a pressing cloth will ensure that the fabric is protected from high heat or will not develop a shine or scales after heat has been applied.

Pressing Ham – A pressing ham can create a smooth finish when needing to press curved seams of any shape or size; e.g. sleeve caps, necklines, armholes or hip seams.

Sleeve Roll This device works best not only on sleeves but also on skinny jeans, or for small curved seams, especially on delicate fabrics.

COVID-19 Lockdown : A Crisis that Brought Back the “Maker Movement”

The COVID-19 lockdown imposed on many households had brought back the “maker movement” at the height of the novel coronavirus health-crisis. Aside from being a great diversion in whiling away the day-long hours spent at home, reviving a forgotten sewing hobby or learning how to sew, had proved useful in addressing the face mask shortage.

When clinically-prescribed face masks became an important protective gear against infection, there was lack of their availability to the general public. Mainly because the frontline medical responders and workers had greater need for them as personal protective equipment.

Nonetheless, sewing skills and sewing machines came in handy, allowing even non-professional seamstresses to create cloth face masks for themselves, for family members and even for neighbors.

In other countries where sewing is a popular cottage industry, families were able to earn the much needed income by producing and supplying affordable face masks to local governments, who in turn, distributed them to their respective community residents.

The “Maker Movement” is Bound to Stay as Countries are About to Enter a Period of Recession

The fashion industry is making adjustments in light of the indefinite suspension of fashion shows; coming out with designer masks either with matching lounge wear, or accessories like bandanas, scarves, sashes and even slip-ons.

Yet in a country that is about to enter, or is already in a period of recession, many cannot afford to be extravagant when it comes to wearables. Most especially when there is uncertainty on how long it will take for economies to recover.

The lockdown trend that brought back the sew-it-yourself or the “maker movement” is expected to continue. Mainly because people are still afraid to go out and shop in boutiques and department stores.

Besides, buying at online stores is the new norm and there is an abundance of affordably-priced fashionable face masks and work-at-home wearables being supplied by home-based enterprising and creative sewists.

The return of sewing as a basic skill is expected to last for an indefinite time, with social media platforms providing not only useful resources but also great encouragement and support during these trying times.

Classic Blue : Suggests Simplicity in 2020

Pantone has chosen Classic Blue as the color for the year 2020. This is the blue that can best describe the color of the sky and sea at dusk, when the weather is at its finest. Moments that remind the older generation of times when life was simple and more calm than it is today. It represents the kind of climate condition that the present generation of environmental activists are fighting for; by pushing for reforms that will address climate change.

Perhaps, the Pantone people had those in mind when they chose Classic Blue as this year’s color; knowing that colors can be powerful tools. Fashion and brand designers, as well as event organizers are into choosing a color motif that aims to elicit a kind of emotion and behavior from their target audience.

Known Psychological Effects of Blue and Its Variations

Numerous psychological studies have revealed that some colors can be deeply rooted in our brain when associations are made with our biological surroundings and our cultural development.

The variations of the blue hue are often associated with the color of the sky, which at the same time is reflected by bodies of water. The classic daytime blue is the most assuring hue because based on experiences, the weather will be calm and peaceful. As opposed to dark indigo blue skies that usually serve as warning of heavy rains and related disconcerting occurrences that make us anxious and unsettled.

Yet blue in a lighter shade than the conventional blue of fair weather skies, can have a different symbolism. It is the kind of blue we associate with cold, icy waters of the arctic, which could trigger feelings of anxiety when we are reminded of how global warming is causing the rapid melting of glaciers and icebergs. The melting process as scientists have pointed out results to rise of seawater levels, which in turn lead to stronger typhoons and hurricanes as well as flooding. .

As we see it, Pantone’s choice of the Classic Blue color is a way of underpinning support for the global movements that aim to arrest as soon as possible, the unpleasant effects of climate change. At the same time, reminding us to maintain simple lifestyles that reduce energy use and CO2 emissions.

Home Sewing and Dressmaking : The Motivation Behind the Resurgence of the Maker Movement

Home sewing, particularly dressmaking had seen a resurgence among American women in as early as 1997. Based on a report issued in that year by the American Home Sewing and Craft Association, almost a third of adult women comprising the U.S. population ( then estimated at around 30 million), were already into sewing their own garments.

 

The resurgence came about, despite the removal of home economics as part of school curriculum. Economic reason was initially the main driving factor, because back in those days, only those with less money to spend took to home-sewing. Only the rich can afford to buy clothes off the rack. According to the trade organization’s survey, many of the home sewers had some college education and/or were taught how to sew by their mother or grandmother.

Yet it came to a point when sewing one’s own clothes was not only practical, but also fulfilling, as it gave women control over the style, color and fit of the garments they wore. Years later, making one’s own clothes became the “in” thing even among celebrities.

Researchers Define the Motivation Behind DIY Dressmaking

 

A new research paper published in August 2019 by Addie Martindale, an Assistant Professor of Fashion Merchandising and Apparel Design, at Georgia Southern University’s School of Human Ecology and Ellen McKinney, Associate Professor of Apparel, Events, and Hospitality Management Department of Iowa State University, gave focus on why women are motivated to sew clothes for themselves.

The two researchers developed a model of sewing motivations to illustrate the connection between the emergence of home sewing and its contribution to personal fulfillment among women. It demonstrated that

“Self-fulfillment is a recurring cycle that takes place each time the women created a new garment for themselves.”

UK Women Today Have Started Taking Up Home-Sewing as a Hobby

A 2017 research paper published by the Craft & Hobby Trade Association of UK (CHA-UK), reported that about 7.7 million Britons, mostly women, are now making their own clothes as their hobby. The number is growing since the study showed millios more have taken to home sewing, ever since the BBC launched “The Great British Sewing Bee.” Apparently, the competition, helped rekindle interest in becoming part of the maker movement.

Katharine Poulter, the commercial director of UK’s largest arts and crafts superstore Hobbycraft, said that just as the “Great British Bake-off” boosted the sales of home baking merchandise, retailers of sewing machines, bobbins, dressmaking patterns, shears, tailor’s chalk and threads are now reporting leaps in sales. According to Ms. Poulter, Hobbycraft’s 2016 sales of sewing and knitting patterns soared by 60%, and by almost 30% for sewing machines.

Patrick Grant, the Creative Director of Savile Row who sits as one of the judges in “The Great British Sewing Bee,” remarked that making something with your hands is a very therapeutic experience. Although home sewing and crafting in general went off the radar in the UK for 20 years, Mr. Grant says it is now “cool“ to make your own clothes.

He shared that when he was a kid, there was some kind of stigma to wearing homemade garments. That however, has completely changed because the status quo has been completely reversed.

Craig De Souza, the Executive Director of CHA-UK says “Learning how to do things is different now.

“If a person does not know how to sew and knit, he or she can simply learn from Youtube videos.”

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Choosing the Right Kind of Dressmaking Scissors and Shears

Dressmaking shears or scissors are the second most important must-have tools, next to the sewing machine. Professional dressmakers and serious sewing hobbyists give careful thought before investing in a pair of shears or scissors. After all, the best ones tend to be more expensive but can serve them for a lifetime.

Difference between Shears or Scissors

By the way, you may be wondering about the difference between a pair of shears and a pair of scissors. Be in the know that dressmaking shears are those with blades measuring six (6) inches or longer, while their handles come with one finger hole that is much smaller than the other. Moreover, the longer blade is rounded to prevent snagging the large fabric, while the other blade is pointed to ascertain precise snipping.

A pair of scissors on the other hand, have equally sized finger holes in its handles, while the blades measure less than six (6) inches in length. Still, a good pair of scissors is one that can cut cleanly, despite the shorter blades.

Deciding When to Use a Pair of Shears or Scissors

Dressmaker shears are more efficient for cutting larger-sized fabrics, usually when sewing a dress. The longer blades can cut at an angle, with one of the blades having rounded ends to prevent snagging, while the other end is pointed to ensure accurate and clean snipping.

Dressmaker shears are a must have when you need to cut sewing pieces out of larger fabrics. The long, sharp blades can cut at an angle, which makes them much more efficient than the ordinary scissors. Also, the blades’ side bend enables dressmakers to cut a fabric without lifting the material away from the surface of the table, ensuring accuracy; whilst preventing jagged lines.

Most professional dressmakers and sewing hobbyists prefer 8 or 9-inched sized shears because the blades are long enough to give them full control over the entire size of the shears.

The smaller scissors that offer lighter and shorter blades are ideal for less demanding cutting tasks, like quilting projects. In addition, their portability makes them ideal for sewing craft projects.

Buying the Best Dressmaking Shears and/or Scissors

When contemplating options on the kind of dressmaking shears or scissors to buy, is it also important to try them on for size and comfort.

All-metal shears or scissors tend be heavier, so if you are looking for one that is much lighter, there are shears and scissors that come with plastic handles. They are specifically designed as such to put less strain on the wrist and hand.

Another choice to consider are those made from titanium, because this type of metal is much lighter than steel. Shears or scissors with titanium blades are of course, more expensive than the conventional steel-bladed types.

Still, whether your deciding on the plastic-handled or titanium kind, make sure the handles are ergonomically shaped. Make sure that it allows you to cut without the handle pinching or rubbing against the skin of your hand. You may even consider the models that come with padded handles, since the cushioning effect offers additional comfort for larger or more frequent sewing tasks.

Now if you are left-handed, modern technology also took this into consideration. This means buying options for shears and scissors include those specifically designed for left-handed dressmakers, tailors and hobbyists.

Taking Body Measurements Accurately to Make a Pattern

Accuracy of body measurements is essential to a great fit, because measurements are the very foundations by which the block pattern is constructed. On the other hand, it is also important to know how to apply those measurement when making a block pattern, since the latter serves as your basic guide to cutting whatever fabric you intend to sew.

If you are sewing for yourself, it would be best to have someone else take your measurements. Still, it is something you can do yourself by standing in front of a mirror. That way, you will be able to check if the tape measure is in the right position.

Important Pointers to Keep in Mind. When Taking Body Measurements

Whether taking your own body measurements or that of another person, make sure

  • you are making circumferential measurements on a body with as few clothes as possible; either over tight-fit, next-to-skin clothing or undergarments. Taking measurements while wearing thick or bulky clothes makes a big difference. By the way, circumferential measurements are those carried out by wrapping the tape around a particular part of the body, such as the bust, waist, high hip, full hip, neck, biceps or wrist.
  • that when in the process of taking circumferential measurements, you are not pulling the measuring tape too tightly. Neither should the tape be wrapped loosely around the area being measured. A good circumferential measure is one where you place a finger under the tape once you wrapped it snugly around the body. .
  • to keep the tape parallel to the ground when taking circumferential and horizontal measurements.
  • that if you are taking measurements on another person’s body, be on the right side of that person.
  • to measure the bust all around where the breasts are fullest. .
  • to take a waist measure at the area where the body bends, or that area between the rib cage and belly button.
  • to take a hip measure at the fullest area, which is about 3 to 4 inches below the waistline.
  • to start the front to waist measure from the shoulder right beside the base of the neck, down to the waist, whilst passing over the fullest part of the breast.
  • to start the back waist measure from the base of the center down to the waistline.

Most important of all is to make certain you are using an accurate tape measure. You wll be surprised to know that some of the cheapest kind were found to be shorter by ¾ inch on every foot. .

How Clothing, Sewing and Fashion Came About

The idea of clothing came about not out of demureness, but out of a necessity to protect one’s body from the harmful effects of extreme cold temperatures. At first, archaic humans around 60,000 years or so ago, simply wrapped themselves with animal skins or furs. Later they found it more practical to tie the fur wraps with strong vines or strips of animal skin.

In geographical locations where snow and freezing temperatures were more life-threatening, early humans thought of ways on how to make their animal wraps more secure. A secure animal wrap is important when going out to hunt or gather food amidst the biting cold.

The Invention of Awls and Needles

Much later, by around 45,000 BC, someone thought of poking holes on the animal hides, using sharpened pointed sticks or stones. Cords, leather strips or strong twines could run through the holes, then drawn in order to fasten pieces of animal hides or fleeces together. Today, modern people use tools called awls (olls), similar to the the sharpened pointed objects devised by prehistoric people,

Then somebody from the 40,000 BC era, came up with a better idea of putting a hole in a primitive awl. Strings or cords were then inserted through the hole of the awl, which made the process of binding animal hides together, much easier and faster. That primitive invention is what came about as modern day needle.

Next Stages: Spindles, Threads and Fabrics

As groups of people had also learned to trade by barter, the idea of bone needles had spread far and wide in Europe and in North America. Much later, spindles and whorls were invented to make the supply of strings or cords more manageable. Early man’s invention of a crude spindle led to the development of ways to create finer types of fasteners derived from plant fibers. Modern times refined strands into sewing materials we now call threads.

In 9,000 BC in West Asia, the advent of finer types of fibers extracted from plants, led to the development of a process of interlacing strands in order to create lighter, softer and thinner materials. At that point, the early people wove fibers that served as floor mats and blankets used as additional warmers during cold seasons.

Woven materials were expensive as it took some time before a large piece can be completed. Still, as people advanced into becoming civilizations, weaving fabrics became part of a culture. Weavers in different regions devised systems for incorporating artwork, using natural colors of plants as pigments. Fabrics then became a way of determining and distinguishing a race or culture.

Moreover, scholars took to studying ways on how woven fabrics can become much softer and smoother, specifically for the higher members of the echelons; also as a way of distinguishing their rank or level within a civilized society.

Clothing Became a Fascination, which Led to the Birth of Fashion

At first, clothes were mere pieces of soft fabrics sewn together at the sides, had provisions for neck and arm holes and were called tunics. To make them ornate, and look more sophisticated, additional fabrics were either tied, draped, pinned, or sewn on a tunic. As ideas flourished on how to make clothes more attractive, wearers started developing a fascination for clothes, wanting every new creation better than previous piece.

In time, there was no limit or boundaries on how many pieces of fabrics were used, especially if to be worn in colder climates,. Back then, the important thing when making clothes for the elite is to assemble clothing materials into garments that made them look more impressive or better yet, more attractive. If a certain style drew positive attention, then that style was set as the latest fashion.

CARPologyTV – Baiting needle basics in association with RidgeMonkey

A sewing needle, used for hand-sewing, is a long slender tool with a pointed tip at one end and a hole (or eye) at the other. The earliest needles were made of bone or wood; modern needles are manufactured from high carbon steel wire and are nickel – or 18k gold-plated for corrosion resistance. High quality needles are plated with two-thirds platinum and one-third titanium alloy. Traditionally, needles have been kept in needle books or needlecases which have become objects of adornment. Sewing needles may also be kept in an etui, a small box that held needles and other items such as scissors, pencils and tweezers.