1880 Shirt ========== .. figure:: gri_33125012088023-773.svg :align: center A gentleman's shirt based on the instructions on `Beeton's housewife's treasury of domestic information `_ from 1880. 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 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 were most definitely a thing. If you want to use a machine, your options are to sew by machine everywhere the instructions say to backstitch and handsew everything else, or to sew by machine the backstitched seams and topstitch every time the instructions say to hemstitch something; buttonholes should probably still be done by hand, however. Materials --------- Fabric ^^^^^^ * About 2 m of linen or cotton shirting fabric. Notions ^^^^^^^ * sewing thread to match the fabric; * buttonhole thread to match the fabric; Pattern ------- Measurements ^^^^^^^^^^^^ You need to take the following measurements: ``height_neck_back_to_knee`` (A18) ; ``neck_circ`` (G02) ; ``bust_circ`` (G04) ; ``neck_front_to_waist_f`` (H01) ; ``neck_side_to_waist_f`` (H05) ; ``neck_back_to_waist_b`` (H19) ; ``shoulder_length`` (I01) ; ``shoulder_tip_to_shoulder_tip_b`` (I07) ; ``arm_shoulder_tip_to_wrist_bent`` (L01) ; ``arm_wrist_circ`` (L15) ; the file :download:`shirt.vit` is used by default by the pattern file and has the list of needed measurements. Pattern ^^^^^^^ Get the valentina file for the pattern, :download:`1880_shirt.val`. You also need to decide the following measurements and set them in the table of variables in Valentina; most defaults in the file are sensible, but you probably want to change the ``shirt_width`` so that it fits nicely on your fabric with as little waste as possible: ``shirt_length_back`` usually equals ``height_neck_back_to_knee``; ``shirt_length_front`` a bit shorter (8-10 cm) than the back; ``shirt_width`` the flat width of the shirt: historically this would have been the width of the fabric (something like 90 - 100 cm would be typical); ``front_slit_length`` the length of the slit (and pleated part) in front: this can easily be as long as the ``neck_front_to_waist_f`` measurement ``button_placket_width`` the finished width of the button placket; 2.5 cm or to taste; ``ease`` the total ease around the chest, used to calculate the following two variables; ``front_slit_width`` the width that is cut in the front for the slit: this should be at least 15 cm wide for a 2.5 cm button placket and the rest will be pleated; ``front_gathers_width`` the final width to which the material in the front slit is gathered: at least the width of the button placket; ``front_band_height`` the band that covers the pleats and gathers in the front: 4 cm, or to taste; ``yoke_depth`` from the nape of the neck to where the yoke ends, to taste; ``cuff_length`` length of the cuff: 9 cm or to taste; ``sleeve_length`` length of the sleeve: ``arm_shoulder_tip_to_wrist_bent`` minus half the cuff, or to taste according to how puffed you want the sleeve to be; ``sleeve_width`` the basic width of the sleeve, before dealing with the gussets: this is often half the ``shirt_width``; ``sleeve_wrist_circumference`` the desired circumference of the sleeve at the wrist, before gathering it into the cuff; ``sewing_allowance`` the default sewing allowance, as small as you can manage, remembering that many seams are sewn and felled, so the fabric will have to be cut with double this allowance on one side: for hand sewing on thin fabric 4-6 mm, machine sewing and thicker fabric will require a bit more. The valentina file also has a few more intermediate variables that are used to calculate the ``front_slit_width`` and ``front_gathers_width`` from the given ``bust_circ``, ``shirt_width`` and ``ease``: you can ignore them. The file is set up not to print the front, back and sleeves details, as those are mostly big rectangles: you can get their measurements from the Draw mode as follows: back: a rectangle as wide as ``shirt_width`` (A – A2) and as high as ``shirt_length_back`` (A – A1); front: a rectangle as wide as ``shirt_width`` (A – A9) and as high as ``shirt_lenght_front`` (A — A8); sleeves: the final sleeve shape is an isosceles trapezium with and height of ``sleeve_length`` (A – A25), a short base of ``sleeve_wrist_circumference`` (A28 – A29) and a long base that adds to ``sleeve_width`` the same amount that has been taken away by the other base (A30 – A31): the most efficient way however is to cut a rectangle that is as high as ``sleeve_length`` and twice as wide as ``sleeve_width``, and adjust the sides with gussets as explained below. Instructions ------------ Cutting ^^^^^^^ Cut the full rectangles for the front and back. .. figure:: gri_33125012088023-770.svg :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 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 along the fold. .. figure:: sleeve_cutting_pattern.svg :align: center After re-opening the fabric, you will get the shape in figure, and you will have to attach the small gusset to one side of the sleeve to complete the trapezium. Note that because of the sewing allowances this won't be a precise match, but the tolerance in this pattern is enough for it not to be a problem. Cut four of the shoulder pieces, two of the front bands, two of each collar piece and four of each cuff piece. Front ^^^^^ Back ^^^^ Assembly of the body ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Sleeves ^^^^^^^ Finishing ^^^^^^^^^