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No, I don’t want to be a Naughty ______. :P

I follow a number of blogs, podcasts, and YouTube channels dedicated to sewing, and more generally, crafting. I started after getting the sewing bug earlier this year, and wanted to acquire some resources on beginner-friendly sewing projects and the like. Among my entertainment acquisitions was a likable but troubled network which had a blog, podcast, AND YouTube channel, called Threadbanger. In iTunes, the word “threadbanger” brings up a number of defunct podcast feeds that still have watchable content in them. Their YouTube Channel is more recently updated.

I called it “troubled”, because I came to it just as it was entering one of its dormant phases. It’s gone through a number of them, where the people who produced the well-made series simply stopped updating, or abruptly changed the format, or some of their guest crafters wandered in or wandered away willy-nilly. It’s difficult for me to recommend this network of crafting sources to anyone because I never know if whatever link I provide is going to be active or dead in a number of weeks.

ANYHOO, the main host just updated the YouTube Channel with a Halloween-themed grouping of videos pertaining to a burlesque costume. The presentation is a bit messy, but I was able to glean this gem out of it:


DIY Costume Corset, CRAFTOVISION

If you’ll notice from the above link, it looks like the host is using yet another YouTube Channel, Craftovision. See what I mean about continuity errors? Anyhoo…

As I was just getting into the sewing thing earlier this year, I bought a bunch of cheap patterns off of eBay with the intention of trying my hand at making something, specifically medieval-looking garb for casual use at SCA events and the like. Unfortunately, I require fabric in order to start and that seems to be the most expensive part of this hobby I want to get into. Also, I am unused to most of the terminology used in the art of sewing. And I’m dreadfully afraid of breaking a sewing machine if I touch one.

I was happy to find a video about making a corset. NOOO, I don’t want to be a naughty pirate/nurse/wench/witch/whatever. But I would like to figure out how to make one for aforementioned historical playacting. I can’t decide on a Halloween costume, though I have been browsing a number of Goodwills specifically for ideas. I’ll probably wear my already existing “pirate” garb because it’s been a long number of years since I had occasion to wear any such thing. I purchased a “cincher” (a under-boob corset) online, which ended up being way, WAY too small even though I ordered twice my normal size. I wouldn’t mind owning one silly corset-bodice thingie that actually fits…

We’ll see.

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Sewing Notions

I’m weird, that’s the only excuse I have. You see, I want to acquire an old fashioned sewing machine, one that worked with a treadle pedal rather than electricity, one that doesn’t have any bells or whistles more complicated than a needle and one or two types of stitching. The thought of using heirloom technology makes me squee.

I found out just the other day that low-tech things are still being manufactured to this day. A sewing machine made by Janome, for instance, was created for the Amish, who are not above using modern technology, if the use of it is acceptable in their society. I want one very much.

That’s all I wanted to share on the topic, really. The existence of the aforelinked sewing machine was very surprising for me, but pleasantly so. I thought it might be of interest of others, also.

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Thoughts on Podcasts and Crafting

I was sad to see one of my favorite podcasters update her projects with a final word of thanks. I know her through her husband and I’ve enjoyed getting to know her through her broadcasts, even though I don’t knit myself, I was never diagnosed with ADHD (though I’m way too mercurial even for a Gemini), and my balcony will never get enough sunlight for green things to grow. Her humor always tickled me, and she spoke so carefully that I imagine she could make a career of podcasting if it struck her to do so.

Listening to the two-minute missive, I was reminded of my own podcast, which has been growing cobwebs since the last episode I did back in May. I was going for a weekly broadcast and while there’s no shortage of themed things for that show, there are so many other things I want to do too, and I don’t have the privacy and quiet that I require to pump out an episode on such a short timescale. I’ve been waiting for my muse to nudge me that way again, and instead she’s been dragging me everywhere else. I do think about it often and I’m always finding still more content that I mean to share with my listeners, but sitting down to compile it all is slow in coming. I definitely want to keep it going. But I suppose it won’t until I make the silly thing, eh.

I decided to spend the evening looking for other crafting audio and video podcasts, and while I listened to a few about sewing, I thought about doing one myself. I’m always doing creative things when not at the computer, I am never very idle. I think I’d go for a video format, though most of my other podcasting work has been with audio–I purchased a cheap HD Flip earlier this year and am happy to find a use for it. I’m going to need a tripod before too long.

But what would the theme be? I keep asking myself, having different thoughts and scenarios to play with in my head. “The Sewing Newb”? “Blog and Stuff”? I’d already decided I’d have a lackadaisical schedule for it, updating it haphazardly rather than consecutive weeks in episodic fashion. I like to keep things informal, and as much fun as an episode is to look forward to, that’s a bit too structured and predictable for me. In the D&D personality quiz vernacular, I’d come up with chaotic much more than lawful.

There are distinctly specific crafts that I do and don’t want to do. Sewing is a definite “do”. My list of “don’ts” include needlepoint, crochet, and knitting. Though, I might like to learn how to make simple slippers, perhaps, something useful and utilitarian. A blanket? Yeah, there are some possibilities there, but I do have at least a minimum of experience with handsewing, and I do not (yet) with knitting and the like. Whatever. There’s the rest of my life to learn to do stuff if the impetus comes. Scrapbooking is an “oh HELL no”, because I just don’t see much interesting about a book of photos and flat keepsakes that have other extraneous clutter glued to the pages. It’s cute and all, but I fail to see the function of it.

There’s a phrase I came across a couple of weeks ago that I keep turning over and over in my head fondly: heirloom technology. I daydream of building a sewing machine (or apparatus that has the same functionality) that is as low-tech and simple as possible, that preferably runs on human- rather than electric power, that can perhaps be manufactured on a grander scale than can be achieved in my apartment living room. You see, I love the idea of the handheld sewing machine, and the portable sewing machine, but not only are these two items cheap, they’re made of cheap materials, not made for heavy use, and break way too easily. There is no machine out there that is compact or relatively low-tech, that does not have bad reviews. I don’t care how much such an item costs, but I would very much like having the peace of mind that it’s not going to be broken after two hours of use. I have two mental images regarding all of this, I suppose, owning or making an old-fashioned machine that has a large metal pedal you rock with your foot to run; and I would like to own or make a compact machine that does stuff and does it well.

The construction of the modern day sewing machine, aside from electronics, is very confusing. Why is there only knobs and dials to differenciate between styles and sizes of stitchings? You need to examine (and understand, something I have the dumb about) the little pictures on the sticker on the side of the machine to figure out how to set it to do what you want.

The whole thing has me running to hand-stitching, which I do quite well, but my hands won’t always have the functionality that they do now. I have very poor finger and wrist strength, and I’m already feeling the faintest twinges of arthritis when the weather changes dramatically. And theoretically, if you know what you’re doing, the machine is quicker. I only succeed in jamming up the thing.

Anyway, I have crafting (and daydreams) on the brain.

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