I appreciate your materials improvisation. We who do historical dress live in a world of wanting exactly the right thing, which might not be readily available because of budget or time constraints, and looking over our shoulders at the mountain of crap we already have. Thanks for the helpful video!
Thank you for this video. Because a friend pointed me here, I am able and have now made, my first ever cloth covered button (with a wooden bead insert).
Thank you for a lovely video! I am familiar with Dorset buttons, where one uses a hollow ring as a base, with oodles of buttonhole stitches to form 'wheels' with 'spokes.' This is a nifty variation.
I appreciate your materials improvisation. We who do historical dress live in a world of wanting exactly the right thing, which might not be readily available because of budget or time constraints, and looking over our shoulders at the mountain of crap we already have. Thanks for the helpful video!
Thanks very much for this video!
Thank you again for pointing me in the right direction
Thank you for this video. Because a friend pointed me here, I am able and have now made, my first ever cloth covered button (with a wooden bead insert).
Thank you for a lovely video! I am familiar with Dorset buttons, where one uses a hollow ring as a base, with oodles of buttonhole stitches to form 'wheels' with 'spokes.' This is a nifty variation.
Thanks!
Would this work for Ottoman Turkish and Safavid Persian garb as well? And did you ever find period examples of visible rib buttons?
So thr Wraps are not a feature in this style?
Why not put a hole through it?