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authorElena ``of Valhalla'' Grandi <valhalla@trueelena.org>2022-02-14 21:47:28 +0100
committerElena ``of Valhalla'' Grandi <valhalla@trueelena.org>2022-02-14 21:47:28 +0100
commitf601b25d79c230c8ca2aac6941fa68ddd7913115 (patch)
tree67d8ded2b5f8b43c942fdb91eae27d70e95c07ee
parent1a4529bf061319beee97f51c20a75b35f98510b2 (diff)
typoes
-rw-r--r--source/historical_menswear/shirts/1880_shirt/index.rst4
1 files changed, 2 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/source/historical_menswear/shirts/1880_shirt/index.rst b/source/historical_menswear/shirts/1880_shirt/index.rst
index 53e8245..71c4852 100644
--- a/source/historical_menswear/shirts/1880_shirt/index.rst
+++ b/source/historical_menswear/shirts/1880_shirt/index.rst
@@ -13,7 +13,7 @@ This pattern is probably good for a relatively wide range of dates: I've
seen on the internet grainy scans of ads from the 1860 that seem to use
a pattern like this one, and it should work up to the Edwardian era, but
you will have to do some research on the appropriate shapes of the front
-opening and especially collar and cuffs for earch era.
+opening and especially collar and cuffs for each era.
I believe that the original instructions assumed that this shirt would
be hand sewn in the home, but by the 1880s sewing machines in the home
@@ -164,7 +164,7 @@ Cut the full rectangles for the front and back.
:align: center
If the fabric is non-directional and has no right and wrong side, the
-best way to cut it is as described on the book fold the rectangle in
+best way to cut it is as described on the book: fold the rectangle in
such a way that the sides will meet precisely in the center and bast
them together, then fold them in such a way that the distance a – g and
h – g is the desired width at the cuff, and cut all layers of fabric