It’s now the end of my first week of sewing an 1890s evening gown, and I’ve been challenged in many different ways! I started off the first day by printing out all of my patterns, it took much longer than I had expected(almost an hour!) and used much more paper than I thought it would. After that, I had to cut each piece of paper to the correct size before even being able to tape them all together. I had expected to face many hardships during my project, but I didn’t think that the most difficult part of my project so far would be cutting up paper for hours on end. I was in an area in the basement of the theater where I couldn’t see any windows and the lighting was quite dark, so sitting in the dark with no outside light was extremely difficult for me. I almost didn’t complete this part of the project and I actually had to pull up a youtube video of birds outside and blast my music so loud my ears rang to distract me from how depressing it was to sit in the dark and do the worst repe
The skirt looks amazing!! And nice job fixing the broken needle (twiceπ). Don't get frustrated, but I suspect that the needles aren't strong enough for the fabric so you may break more. Keep on going and you can do this!
ReplyDeleteAmazing!!! Way to overcome the setbacks, you are rocking it and the dress looks beautiful ❤️. Double check but I think you have through Tuesday with the presentation on Wednesday. If not don't stress, you have accomplished so much, your project even just to this point is a brilliant success ❤️❤️❤️. Stay πͺπͺπͺπͺ
ReplyDeleteWoo hoo!!! You’re getting to the fun part. Good job persevering through sewing machine issues! Show the machine you’re the boss. πͺπΌπͺπΌπͺπΌ
ReplyDelete