Muslin vs lining.

Muslin is really handy for mockups because it's cheap and easy to work with - the butcher paper of the sewing world.

But it lies. It doesn't drape well. It wrinkles in weird ways. It bunches. It tries to tell me the draft isn't right even when I've triple checked all my numbers and can feel the fit for myself.

Trusting my math and experience enough to actually cut the fashion fabric is always a leap of faith.

#18thCenturyFashion #HistoricDress

The moment when the real garment fits without any of the muslin's issues is like that moment when all the tests pass after hours of debugging. It's the moment when I get a much-needed reminder that I am actually pretty good at this.

Sleeves need another ironing, but they're basted in place and fit is still good. I'll extend the dart points a little cause they're a bit pointy right now.

I'll ease the sleeves in as much as I can when I stitch them, but it doesn't matter a ton for the lining. For the wool, I will try to steam them into shape before I do the final stitches.

#Sewing #Costuming #HistoricalDress #18thCentury

Peplum is in place and lining is attached at center front. Still to do: sleeves and collar, and whip stitching the lining over the peplum seam. Then it's over to @maco for finishing (buttonholes and stitching sleeve lining to sleeve facing) while I work on Maco's saque. We still have hopes of being done by Saturday.

#18thcentury #18thCenturyCostume #HistoricalDress #RidingHabit

@Annalee @maco Wow! Can't wait to see more photos, this is looking great