sew_through_time | Edwardian S-bend corset using a FREE pattern! @sewthroughtime | Uploaded December 2021 | Updated October 2024, 8 hours ago.
in this video I make an Edwardian s-bend corset or like the Edwardian's called them a straight front or military front corset. Since I'm using a graded pattern with several sizes I show you how to change the proportions of a corset by drawing from one size to the other so that the finished corset stays in the correct shape. This same technique can be used on any ready-made corset pattern and can be very useful in making a modern commercial pattern more historic by making them curvier.
The pattern I'm using is a free one, originally published in 1906 called the new simple cut, and can be found here:
mistress-of-disguise.blogspot.com/p/1900s-de-gracieuse-corset-patterns.html?m=1
I used the version that @AraneaBlack has graded to many different sizes and kindly gives out for free! But if you can buy her a coffee to thank her for her incredible work and time she put into making this available for us all to enjoy. here is the pattern:
araneablack.com/antique-edwardian-corset-pattern-tulip
and here is her ko-fi link if you'd like to support her work.
ko-fi.com/araneablack
in this video I make an Edwardian s-bend corset or like the Edwardian's called them a straight front or military front corset. Since I'm using a graded pattern with several sizes I show you how to change the proportions of a corset by drawing from one size to the other so that the finished corset stays in the correct shape. This same technique can be used on any ready-made corset pattern and can be very useful in making a modern commercial pattern more historic by making them curvier.
The pattern I'm using is a free one, originally published in 1906 called the new simple cut, and can be found here:
mistress-of-disguise.blogspot.com/p/1900s-de-gracieuse-corset-patterns.html?m=1
I used the version that @AraneaBlack has graded to many different sizes and kindly gives out for free! But if you can buy her a coffee to thank her for her incredible work and time she put into making this available for us all to enjoy. here is the pattern:
araneablack.com/antique-edwardian-corset-pattern-tulip
and here is her ko-fi link if you'd like to support her work.
ko-fi.com/araneablack