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Executive Summary for thornberry.blog
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THORNBERRY – Things I make and holidays we take
Firstly – I sewed this a year ago. I took some photos, looked at them and was very unhappy with how the hems were sitting. So it sat, for months, until I fixed the problem. Then it sat again, for months, until I finally got around to taking these photos!It’s the Tessuti Oslo coat, sewn in wool/cashmere coating from Super Cheap Fabrics, bought a few years ago. It’s actually teal in colour; my phone can never get this shade correct in photos.From the pattern page: The Oslo Coat is a fully lined, double-breasted style with a shawl collar, full length raglan sleeves and side pockets. This classic style has a straight fit and sits on or just above the knee.I have just discovered a link on that pattern page to a tutorial for catching the lining hems together! If only I’d realised this tutorial existed before I sewed the coat! It would have helped quite a bit with all that angst, and the many months of leaving the coat to sit. Ah well, now I know for future reference, and hopefully now you know as well if you want to make it!This is a lined coat, which makes it warm and cosy, but also means that you need to know how to finish the hems properly in order for everything to sit nicely. I eventually catch-stitched the entire facing and the sleeve hems to the main fabric, and used loads of steam and a clapper to press all the edges into submission without anything hanging weirdly or pulling.I used vintage Liberty silk (!!!) that was in my stash for the lining. I’m generally not likely to wear that type of floral, but it’s super pretty and makes such a special lining. I added a hanging loop to the centre back, and my label. The colour in the above photo is fairly accurate. I also used the Liberty for the pocket bags.I did add some raglan shoulders pads to help the coat to have a little more structure. The collar does tend to ‘collapse’ a little, but that’s not surprising when you consider that other than interfacing, it doesn’t have much tailoring.I decided to not both with a button; it’s meant to be slightly double breasted, with one feature button and another hidden on the inside. I really didn’t want to make a mess of the buttonhole through the layers of coating, didn’t want to do a bound buttonhole, and didn’t really know where I could take it to get a professional buttonhole made. So I took the lazy route and just didn’t bother! I might still get a professional buttonhole made at a later stage, but in Melbourne’s relatively mild winters (relative to the Colorado winter we recently experienced!) it should be fine without a closure. However, no closure means that the inside staystitching below the roll line is visible.I didn’t shorten the coat, so rather than being above or on the knee, on my 158cm frame it’s longer. Now that I’ve finally started wearing it, I am really enjoying it! It’s very warm and cosy, and I love the rich teal colour.;Network & Infrastructure
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Analyzed thornberry.blog with 4 technologies detected across 6 categories
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