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See, by using these direction instead of buying a commercial pattern, you got a custom fitted piece and you saved anywhere between 5$ and 45$. If you send me some of that, I can afford the time to work in this site, instead of working on paying gigs. And we all win.
People have nicely shared costumes made with the help of these instructions:
Hmmm.... Well, this isn't much of a list.
If you'd like to share work you've done here, please contact me. I'd love to feature your work!
For those of you out there who do Rev or Civ war stuff, this might come in handy. It's basic, but it get's the look. You'll probably want to make the stitches smaller than I've shown. The following instructions assume that you have already made your Basic Brim Patterns. If you have not, you'll want to follow the link and do so.
Note: These directions do not teach a modern Milliery approach to hat-making. I've completely eliminated the use of standard hat sizes and head-size ovals, because I'm assuming that most of the people reading this are *not* trying to set up a hat-making shop. The method I've worked out below works, but doesn not produce standardized patterns sizes unless you are one of the lucky few who actually possesses a standard size head.
The Large Crown Pattern |
These crowns start with your Basic Brim Pattern without Seam Allowances. You will also need a piece of fabric (the size depends on, or may determine, the size of the crown you make), a ruler, a marking device (chalk is preferable to the sharpie I use in this demo!), sewing machine, scissors, thread, and three hand needles and strong buttonhole thread (these last two are for the cartridge pleated hat only). |
Place the brim pattern on the fabric. We're going to enlarge
it by marking out from it with a ruler. I generally enlarge by no more
than twice the width of my brim. In this case, my brim is 2", so
I am adding 4.5" (2x2" + 1/2" seam allowance). |
When you finish marking, you'll have a great big oval. Using your ruler, transfer the Side and Front/Back marks to the outside edge of the oval you just marked. Cut this oval out. |
For the Cartridge Pleated Crown |
Turn up the seam allowance around the oval and machine stitch it down at 1/4". You will use this stitch line as a guide for your cartridge pleat stitches. I find it easiest to work all three lines of stitch simultaneously. Thread three needles each with a long doubled piece of buttonhole thread. Starting at the outer edge of the crown, sew large running stitches (about 3/4" long) for 10" or so along the stitching line. Start the second needle 1/2" in from the first, matching the stitches up with the first line. Here's the tricky bit: these stitches will be a hair shorter than the first row. Since we're working with an oval, think of these stitches like they're hitting on the edges of thin little pieces of pie -- the closer they are to the center, the shorter they are. Start the 3rd needle 1/2" in from the second. Repeat in 10" segments around the crown. |
After sewing, pull up the threads to bring the crown into a standing shape, instead of a big flat oval. Use the Basic Brim Pattern without Seam Allowances to check the size. When you've got it, knot the gathering threads securely inside the hat. |
You should end up with something that looks a little like a popover. |
Bonus hat: This is also a basic pleated mob cap pattern. |
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