Thank you so much for your lovely videos ❤️ I am hearing impaired and appreciate not struggling to understand a voice explaining over hideous TH-cam music. You are refreshing and a talented teacher. I appreciate your lovely work!🌷🌷🌷
2 1/2 years later and I am still referring back to your video. This time because while choosing a Hot Wheels truck for my nephew at a 99¢ Store, there was about a dozen packages of triangular tailor's chalk amongst the toys and I remembered your blue chalk. Lol Anyone for a game of hopscotch? 🍄🍄
There’s nothing ‘merely’ about a self taught seamstress, there’s nothing ‘merely’ about a self taught anything, you are always learning from your own mistakes and I tend to think that’s harder and takes more time. You’re doing great, I love to watch your video’s, they are so peaceful! I love watching skilled craftspeople doing their stuff and you are definitely a skilled crafts person, like other commentators I’ll save this for future reference, oh and that awl is lovely, it looks antique ? 👏👏👏✌🏻🌹🏴. Just one more thing, any chance of a glimpse of some of the lovely things you made earlier, a small, intimate fashion show for your followers would be lovely- if that doesn’t sound totally weird - which it totally does - it’s definitely not meant to be ! These boards are a bugger to try and express yourself clearly on ! ☺️
Thank you, it is nice to think of myself as a skilled craftsperson and it's just sometimes I wonder if I'm doing things weirdly because I had no formal training. I'm not sure about the costume showcase though: actually dressing up and filming the finished garment is always my least favourite part! I always feel like I'm sweating through all the layers and being awkward on film posing and trying to show off the outfit best. I end up having to bin 95% of the footage because I'm making desperate faces at the camera :P
Juul Thijssen 😂😂😂😂It would be my least favourite part too! How about dressing up a body form and doing a slide show? It would take a horrible amount of time but it’s just a thought ✌🏻🌹🏴
What an enchanting video, I love your filming style... Even though I was already familiar with those methods, I had to keep watching because of how relaxing this was!! I'm so glad to have found you
Those were lovely tutorials on those three fastenings. I can definitely see me coming back to this video again and again as I need a reminder on how to do them properly. Thank you so much for sharing, and please give Wegie a little scritch around the ears for me. 😊
I love your videos so much! Everything is so pretty. 😍 Love your sewing diary and the sewing nook, the antique dolls, the colors, it's just pure eye candy. 🥰 Extra points for the lack of annoying cutesy tunes in the background. ✨ Edit: Haha, the hearing aid joke! I have to walk with a really ugly cane, I feel you. 👩🦯
Lula I agree ....I love your videos! The camera work is excellent. Your instructions are easy to follow and fun to re-wind and watch again...but the best of all is the sounds of silence....! It’s comforting to hear the needle and thread going through the cloth. Thank you for the peace.
I had never thought about alternating the knots on thread loops! I will have to try that, since your result is much neater looking than mine and Ive been frustrated by it twisting. Thank you for the video!
Lovely QC inspector. Norwegian Forest Cat? I do appreciate your videos. I've not used them in many years and need a reminder that handwork is well worth the time it takes.
@@JuulThijssen we have a tabby/Main coon mix. He's 16 lbs. Big for a tabby; small for a Main coon. He reminds me to take frequent breaks (pet cat) when I hand sew. Thank you for your tutorials.♥️
I saved this video because I knew I'd need it for a buttonhole tutorial, and I finally got the opportunity to use it tonight! My very first hand-sewn buttonholes turned out awesome, so thanks for the super clear instructions :)
I love your peaceful videos! They are very comforting and great instructions. I really feel as if I can actually do the things you teach. Thank you for the magic.
Excellent, this video might save a pair of well loved jeans. I am inspired to experiment :D And on the topic of well loved clothing, a video about mending clothes would be really interesting, too.
Ah, alternating! Thats why my knots are all over the place...I learn so many things that are obvious in hindsight. This is why self taught seamstresses need to watch you and Bernadette an Noel!
Oh Saturday night and it's time to sit down watch the latest Juul Video yippee, whilst I wait for my bread to bake in the oven. Good tip about alternating the loops on your button loop, never thought to do that. And Quality Controllers are so important to have in a seamstress studio. Mine is excellent at enforcing food and snuggle break times.
Thank you so much for the up close video. Very easy to follow. I am a beginner and you are a very good teacher. Love your beautiful cat! Such a good helper.
Another lovely sewing video with appropriate QC intervention. (LOL!) Kitty is magnificent! When I started sewing, I used to have to sew all my own buttonholes because I used my grandmothers machine (which I still have). I thought my modern sewing machine with automatic buttonholer was the bees knees when I got it. I have to admit tho' as I return to slow sewing and hand making I am rediscovering the skill and am appreciating it. Thank you for highlighting it :-) I am going off to practice my threadloops :-) Looking forward to more when you get to them.👍👍👍
I always wondered how that loop style was made!! My grandmother put one onto a bat stuffed animal I got as a kid so that I could hang him like a real bat! I still have him hanging in my room!
Everything you do is beautiful. This is going in my sewing reference notion as I am about to attempt my first ever buttonhole (at the age of twenty-eight-not sure how I escaped this long without it!).
My, those closure are so neat and tidy! I especially like the technique for the eyelet and the buttonhole, I'm not formally trained either so I never seen them sewn like that.. This video will be very helpful when I'll need to sew my first buttonholes in my next project! Thank you for sharing it with us!
I LOVED making the eyelets for my corset mock up. I made the full corset to just...practice the techniques before I even worried about fit as I was using stash materials.
Thank you. I have no real training either and am looking to make garments as well as I can. This was the most informative on buttonholes I've watched. I'm practicing handmade buttonholes so that dmine don't look horrible. This helped me. It was relaxing to watch and better without speaking.
Buttonholes can be super tricky, I never get them right by machine and still have trouble with getting the back to look good, but this is really my favourite technique to make them.
It's so interesting to see and learn these techniques. I have never done buttonholes but I will be trying them now. The buttons I put on doll dresses are quite tiny, I usually sew them on top of a snap but this demonstration makes me want to try. Thanks so much for the silence...it is priceless ! I always get out my sewing to work along , though I have different projects.
Nu je het zegt! Ik had het verband niet gezien omdat ik frivolité met zo'n 'schuitje' gewend ben in plaats van een naald, maar het is precies hetzelfde ja!
I am so thankful to have found your videos, love everything about them, from you, watching you, your machine, bits and bobs, your background (home?) and especially the learning. All that and and a calming effect few things afford you anymore, Bless you for taking the time and trouble, to make these videos. I just recently bought a treadle sewing machine and soon as we get the belts and installed I'll be trying it out. Hopefully I'll master it and it will be useful and not just decorative.
At 5:33 your comment about HA HAs for HB made me think of my grandmother threatening my grandfather to get him a trumpet for his ear when he would say "Huh?" all the time. Then I fell into a rabbit hole searching for more information about these non-tech contraptions and learned that they are often reported to work better than the modern hearing aid. It could be possible to find one in an antique store or online for your history bounding adventures.
I knew I should have watched this video sooner !! My eyelets would have turned nearly as beautiful as yours but no they look like shi......a big messy bunch of threads x) can't wait for your next vid I'm in love haha
@@JuulThijssen That is what I thought, they were my first ever so I'm still happy but I'm gonna use your technique now, the result is so neat. Oh and the rolled hem stitch I've discorvered from your other video is my new favorite hand stitch now haha. And I have a question...is your cat a Maine coon or just a big fluffy ball of concentrated cuteness ?
Beautiful work. I love those closures too. Admittedly I seriously need to work on hand button holes as I do them by machine but know how to and doing lovely handworked one is good to know. Thank you got such a wonderful video. Have a great day.
Great video and selection of closures to demonstrate. Wegie is an awesome kitty and I always think of my beloved Puppy Cat. Same breed, and he was a most loyal (and bossy) friend.
Hi Juul. I've been trying to see how you make your knots on the thread so easily, but I can't quite master it. Would you do a slow-mo clip on how you achieve such a quick and tidy knot? Thank-you!
Loved this video. Have saved it for future reference both for the closures but also the terminology. I’m from Denmark so often I don’t know the exact terms used in English. E.g. Now I know what an awl is 😃👍
It's always so intriguing to see how techniques have changed over time yet retain the same name. Did you know there are historians who actually specialise in studying and cataloguing the precise ways eyelets and buttonholes were made in different time periods? I'd love to know the time period for the way you do eyelets. I only know how how they were done in the 18th century for staymaking and gown bodice lacing strips, which is so very different from this. And I've been trying to learn 18th century doing buttonholes, which is confusingly similar to early 19th century buttonholes but again not quite the same, and yours is another way again. I know you're an expert in vintage methods so would love what garments these methods were used and when.
I'm not much of an expert on anything, I'm afraid! All I know is that these look pretty and that I haven't seen them on any historical items (I usually see the more basic overcast method, if I'm correct). The different types of buttonholes also amaze me, and I wonder how these methods were learnt or spread and how people decided what type of buttonhole was useful or suitable. Interesting stuff, even if I don't know a whole lot about it!
@@JuulThijssen Oh, we were in the same boat then! I think it's especially interesting because of course modern machine sewn buttonholes look much the same, which lulls us into thinking "oh, yeah, a buttonhole is a buttonhole is a buttonhole, ho hum" and then you start looking at hand made buttonholes and they're all so different. I'm practicing 18th century menswear buttonholes the way the Colonial Williamsburg tailors do them - Neal Hurst teaches five types seen in menswear on his TH-cam channel. (Bernadette teaches a method that results in the same look as one of Neal's but she works it at an angle rotated 90 degrees so it looks quite different!) I took an online class a few years ago with James Williams, a 19th century specialist historic tailor, and learned yet another way. And I've seen blogs about 14th century buttonholes, and the list goes on... it's a bit mind boggling!
Lovely work and very useful techniques. Thank you for sharing this. Also, your cat is beautiful. 😺 My only suggestion is for your captions: is there any way to make them white with a dark outline? They would show on any background that way.
Yuul, I love your quiet videos and all your information, but sometimes your written inserts go by too fast for me to read without rewinding. But it would help me if they stayed onscreen for just a few seconds longer. Thanks so much for all the stuff you did for CoCoVid, and for your work on inclusiveness in the creating world. You are great!
I love hearing the birds in the background of your videos but I do wonder, can you hear them too? I know my mother doesn't hear bird unless they're very loud and obnoxious
As-salam alaykom, Exquisite sewing and silence much appreciated. Thank you for not using printed fabrics. What does it take to sew this well? "One must apply ones whole self (heart, mind and soul) to the task if one truly wants it to be worthy." (i can hear you say).
Yes, take all of yourself and apply it to your task! What you learn in one area of life, might come in useful in another. And be patient and kind to yourself while you are learning, to allow yourself to improve instead to demanding it from yourself. Thanks for watching my videos and leaving such lovely comments!
@@paulinecastle9805 I was just surprised when I saw Juul use hers that way, my Mama and Grannie taught me to use the middle finger for my thimble....I guess whatever works for a person is fine!!!
Thank you so much for your lovely videos ❤️ I am hearing impaired and appreciate not struggling to understand a voice explaining over hideous TH-cam music. You are refreshing and a talented teacher. I appreciate your lovely work!🌷🌷🌷
Thank you, that means a lot to me
and thank you for using large print for the less visual crowd
Oooh another TH-cam music hater! I thought I'm the only one. 😂
Lula 🤣😂🤣
It is truls horrible.
Luckily I don’t hear much of it as I’m very hard of hearing.😉
@@karinbaird2499 hehe! 😊
2 1/2 years later and I am still referring back to your video. This time because while choosing a Hot Wheels truck for my nephew at a 99¢ Store, there was about a dozen packages of triangular tailor's chalk amongst the toys and I remembered your blue chalk. Lol
Anyone for a game of hopscotch? 🍄🍄
Your Quality Control Inspector has once again ensured delivery of a top notch video. Such a floofy beastie 😍
I enjoy the quiet serenity of your music-free videos. It is almost a meditation. Thank you.
this is great!!! don't ever put yourself "down" about being self-taught....your work is wonderful!!!
There’s nothing ‘merely’ about a self taught seamstress, there’s nothing ‘merely’ about a self taught anything, you are always learning from your own mistakes and I tend to think that’s harder and takes more time. You’re doing great, I love to watch your video’s, they are so peaceful! I love watching skilled craftspeople doing their stuff and you are definitely a skilled crafts person, like other commentators I’ll save this for future reference, oh and that awl is lovely, it looks antique ? 👏👏👏✌🏻🌹🏴. Just one more thing, any chance of a glimpse of some of the lovely things you made earlier, a small, intimate fashion show for your followers would be lovely- if that doesn’t sound totally weird - which it totally does - it’s definitely not meant to be ! These boards are a bugger to try and express yourself clearly on ! ☺️
Thank you, it is nice to think of myself as a skilled craftsperson and it's just sometimes I wonder if I'm doing things weirdly because I had no formal training. I'm not sure about the costume showcase though: actually dressing up and filming the finished garment is always my least favourite part! I always feel like I'm sweating through all the layers and being awkward on film posing and trying to show off the outfit best. I end up having to bin 95% of the footage because I'm making desperate faces at the camera :P
Juul Thijssen 😂😂😂😂It would be my least favourite part too! How about dressing up a body form and doing a slide show? It would take a horrible amount of time but it’s just a thought ✌🏻🌹🏴
You maybe had no formal training but that's some of the best handstitching I've seen in a while (and I'm formaly trained).
What an enchanting video, I love your filming style... Even though I was already familiar with those methods, I had to keep watching because of how relaxing this was!! I'm so glad to have found you
Those were lovely tutorials on those three fastenings. I can definitely see me coming back to this video again and again as I need a reminder on how to do them properly. Thank you so much for sharing, and please give Wegie a little scritch around the ears for me. 😊
Will do! And thanks :)
I love your videos so much! Everything is so pretty. 😍 Love your sewing diary and the sewing nook, the antique dolls, the colors, it's just pure eye candy. 🥰
Extra points for the lack of annoying cutesy tunes in the background. ✨
Edit:
Haha, the hearing aid joke! I have to walk with a really ugly cane, I feel you. 👩🦯
Lula I agree ....I love your videos! The camera work is excellent. Your instructions are easy to follow and fun to re-wind and watch again...but the best of all is the sounds of silence....! It’s comforting to hear the needle and thread going through the cloth. Thank you for the peace.
I had never thought about alternating the knots on thread loops! I will have to try that, since your result is much neater looking than mine and Ive been frustrated by it twisting. Thank you for the video!
Beautiful. Quality, skill, patience. True mindfulness in a world where there is so much fast paced ‘tat’. Beautiful. Thank you.
Lovely QC inspector. Norwegian Forest Cat? I do appreciate your videos. I've not used them in many years and need a reminder that handwork is well worth the time it takes.
Yes, he's a Norwegian forestcat!
@@JuulThijssen we have a tabby/Main coon mix. He's 16 lbs. Big for a tabby; small for a Main coon. He reminds me to take frequent breaks (pet cat) when I hand sew. Thank you for your tutorials.♥️
Drat: Watching you do the buttonhole, I now remember how my mom told me how to do them. Thank you thank you. Phaedra
I saved this video because I knew I'd need it for a buttonhole tutorial, and I finally got the opportunity to use it tonight! My very first hand-sewn buttonholes turned out awesome, so thanks for the super clear instructions :)
I love your peaceful videos! They are very comforting and great instructions. I really feel as if I can actually do the things you teach. Thank you for the magic.
Tough QC inspector, but you're doing okay LoL 😂
Thank you for another great video 💛🌻😻
Excellent, this video might save a pair of well loved jeans. I am inspired to experiment :D
And on the topic of well loved clothing, a video about mending clothes would be really interesting, too.
I find it very hard to believe you are self taught.Amazing skill you have ! X
Thanks for another great video Juul!
Smooches and snuggles for your Quality Control Floof
Of course!
Ah, alternating! Thats why my knots are all over the place...I learn so many things that are obvious in hindsight. This is why self taught seamstresses need to watch you and Bernadette an Noel!
I love your stitch demonstrations. And your cat is fantastic!
Oh Saturday night and it's time to sit down watch the latest Juul Video yippee, whilst I wait for my bread to bake in the oven.
Good tip about alternating the loops on your button loop, never thought to do that.
And Quality Controllers are so important to have in a seamstress studio. Mine is excellent at enforcing food and snuggle break times.
Thanks for the video. And I love your old Singer. Seeing that brings back memories of my granma. I actually learned to sew with very old Singer x)
Thank you so much for the up close video. Very easy to follow. I am a beginner and you are a very good teacher. Love your beautiful cat! Such a good helper.
Another lovely sewing video with appropriate QC intervention. (LOL!) Kitty is magnificent! When I started sewing, I used to have to sew all my own buttonholes because I used my grandmothers machine (which I still have). I thought my modern sewing machine with automatic buttonholer was the bees knees when I got it. I have to admit tho' as I return to slow sewing and hand making I am rediscovering the skill and am appreciating it. Thank you for highlighting it :-) I am going off to practice my threadloops :-) Looking forward to more when you get to them.👍👍👍
I always wondered how that loop style was made!! My grandmother put one onto a bat stuffed animal I got as a kid so that I could hang him like a real bat! I still have him hanging in my room!
Everything you do is beautiful. This is going in my sewing reference notion as I am about to attempt my first ever buttonhole (at the age of twenty-eight-not sure how I escaped this long without it!).
Helpful to have written instructions along with the visual. Thank you.🧵
Beautiful handwork, and that Quality Control Supervisor is so beautiful!
My, those closure are so neat and tidy! I especially like the technique for the eyelet and the buttonhole, I'm not formally trained either so I never seen them sewn like that.. This video will be very helpful when I'll need to sew my first buttonholes in my next project! Thank you for sharing it with us!
I just made my prettiest thread loop ever, thank you!❤
This is so helpful! However, i really want to see a dedicated episode that highlights your book. I'm totally fascinated by your wonderful book.
I LOVED making the eyelets for my corset mock up. I made the full corset to just...practice the techniques before I even worried about fit as I was using stash materials.
Thank you girl ! You are very clear ! 🙋♀️
Oh, nice trick about altering the knots to make the loop more stable.
Thank you. I have no real training either and am looking to make garments as well as I can. This was the most informative on buttonholes I've watched. I'm practicing handmade buttonholes so that dmine don't look horrible. This helped me. It was relaxing to watch and better without speaking.
Buttonholes can be super tricky, I never get them right by machine and still have trouble with getting the back to look good, but this is really my favourite technique to make them.
Just in time, as i am about to make my first pair of stays
Ah, good luck with your stays!!
It's so interesting to see and learn these techniques. I have never done buttonholes but I will be trying them now. The buttons I put on doll dresses are quite tiny, I usually sew them on top of a snap but this demonstration makes me want to try.
Thanks so much for the silence...it is priceless ! I always get out my sewing to work along , though I have different projects.
Смотрела как захватывающий фильм, не отрываясь! Браво!!👏👏👏
Thank you!
Saving this for future reference, Thanks!
What would we do without the inspector? Such a handsome beast!
Its such a delight to watch your videos. Thank you so much for sharing. Your work is beautiful.
Your eyelets are beautiful.
I've been looking for a good tutorial for that eyelet stitch! Thank you!
de draadlus die je als eerste maakt is eigenlijk frivolité. Erg mooi. bedankt dat je dit laat zien.
Nu je het zegt! Ik had het verband niet gezien omdat ik frivolité met zo'n 'schuitje' gewend ben in plaats van een naald, maar het is precies hetzelfde ja!
The Weeg is like your own personal Tim Gunn! ❤️
Shari Waals-Atalla YES! I’m glad you got the reference 😂❤️
@@JuulThijssen Let's be honest, we all need a Weeg Gunn in our sewingrooms!
So clear! I like how you alternated the loops on the button loop one. That makes a lot of sense!
I didn't use to before, and my loops were all twisty. Now they stay much more stable!
Beautiful hand sewing. And the quality controller is so lovely!
Annigje Staples thank you!!
I am so thankful to have found your videos, love everything about them, from you, watching you, your machine, bits and bobs, your background (home?) and especially the learning. All that and and a calming effect few things afford you anymore, Bless you for taking the time and trouble, to make these videos. I just recently bought a treadle sewing machine and soon as we get the belts and installed I'll be trying it out. Hopefully I'll master it and it will be useful and not just decorative.
Thanks! I hope your treadle machine will bring you much joy, they are a delight to work with.
Gorgeous! I'm definitely one for the hand sewing myself. I'm a bit twitchy around sewing machines. At least the modern ones.😂
Oh yes, I never succeed in sewing neatly when I use a machine!
At 5:33 your comment about HA HAs for HB made me think of my grandmother threatening my grandfather to get him a trumpet for his ear when he would say "Huh?" all the time. Then I fell into a rabbit hole searching for more information about these non-tech contraptions and learned that they are often reported to work better than the modern hearing aid. It could be possible to find one in an antique store or online for your history bounding adventures.
this was do helpful. thank you. i find your videos so calming.
I love your videos , I'm learning s much
I knew I should have watched this video sooner !! My eyelets would have turned nearly as beautiful as yours but no they look like shi......a big messy bunch of threads x) can't wait for your next vid I'm in love haha
Aww, I'm sorry they didn't turn out the way you wanted! But you did get them done, and that's great!
@@JuulThijssen That is what I thought, they were my first ever so I'm still happy but I'm gonna use your technique now, the result is so neat. Oh and the rolled hem stitch I've discorvered from your other video is my new favorite hand stitch now haha. And I have a question...is your cat a Maine coon or just a big fluffy ball of concentrated cuteness ?
@@anarusegawa I'm so glad you learned new things
Beautiful work. I love those closures too. Admittedly I seriously need to work on hand button holes as I do them by machine but know how to and doing lovely handworked one is good to know. Thank you got such a wonderful video. Have a great day.
My machine buttonholes always come out wonky, I am just bad with sewing machines I think.
Excellent, thank you so much ❤️ elly
It is so good to view another of your tutorial videos. Thanks Lynne
I love your videos ❣
Me encanta tu trabajo, impecable y hermoso.Muchas gracias por compartirlo. Tu gatito es bello..
Elegant. Very elegant.
This is great Thank you ! 😊
Very good demo. Clear and easy to follow. Thank you. I will save and use for sure.
Great video and selection of closures to demonstrate. Wegie is an awesome kitty and I always think of my beloved Puppy Cat. Same breed, and he was a most loyal (and bossy) friend.
I hate sewing by hand. This vid made me want to do it.
Hi Juul. I've been trying to see how you make your knots on the thread so easily, but I can't quite master it. Would you do a slow-mo clip on how you achieve such a quick and tidy knot? Thank-you!
Loved this video. Have saved it for future reference both for the closures but also the terminology. I’m from Denmark so often I don’t know the exact terms used in English. E.g. Now I know what an awl is 😃👍
Thanks! Now can you teach me the Danish word for awl?
Juul Thijssen it is syl, pronounced like sül with very pointy lips but drag the vowel sound just a bit😂
Love this totally saving it.
Thanks 👍
Beautiful work and a very helpful video for us beginners. Thank you!
Much love!
Thank you
It's always so intriguing to see how techniques have changed over time yet retain the same name. Did you know there are historians who actually specialise in studying and cataloguing the precise ways eyelets and buttonholes were made in different time periods? I'd love to know the time period for the way you do eyelets. I only know how how they were done in the 18th century for staymaking and gown bodice lacing strips, which is so very different from this. And I've been trying to learn 18th century doing buttonholes, which is confusingly similar to early 19th century buttonholes but again not quite the same, and yours is another way again. I know you're an expert in vintage methods so would love what garments these methods were used and when.
I'm not much of an expert on anything, I'm afraid! All I know is that these look pretty and that I haven't seen them on any historical items (I usually see the more basic overcast method, if I'm correct). The different types of buttonholes also amaze me, and I wonder how these methods were learnt or spread and how people decided what type of buttonhole was useful or suitable. Interesting stuff, even if I don't know a whole lot about it!
@@JuulThijssen Oh, we were in the same boat then! I think it's especially interesting because of course modern machine sewn buttonholes look much the same, which lulls us into thinking "oh, yeah, a buttonhole is a buttonhole is a buttonhole, ho hum" and then you start looking at hand made buttonholes and they're all so different. I'm practicing 18th century menswear buttonholes the way the Colonial Williamsburg tailors do them - Neal Hurst teaches five types seen in menswear on his TH-cam channel. (Bernadette teaches a method that results in the same look as one of Neal's but she works it at an angle rotated 90 degrees so it looks quite different!) I took an online class a few years ago with James Williams, a 19th century specialist historic tailor, and learned yet another way. And I've seen blogs about 14th century buttonholes, and the list goes on... it's a bit mind boggling!
Lovely video and super helpful!
Lovely!
Yay I need this one!! ☺️ i love your videos so much 🥰
Me ha encantado Juul
Lovely work and very useful techniques. Thank you for sharing this.
Also, your cat is beautiful. 😺
My only suggestion is for your captions: is there any way to make them white with a dark outline? They would show on any background that way.
Thanks for sharing, I'm loving your videos! :)
Yuul, I love your quiet videos and all your information, but sometimes your written inserts go by too fast for me to read without rewinding. But it would help me if they stayed onscreen for just a few seconds longer. Thanks so much for all the stuff you did for CoCoVid, and for your work on inclusiveness in the creating world. You are great!
Sharon Levine I have since changed my method of commentary, hopefully it is an improvement.
I love hearing the birds in the background of your videos but I do wonder, can you hear them too? I know my mother doesn't hear bird unless they're very loud and obnoxious
I can hear them sometimes if they're loud enough, but usually need confirmation it's birds and not another kind of sound :P
Juul Thijssen - I would think your QCI would be able to independently verify the presence of birds 🦅 🦢 🐦 as he is well-trained. 🤗
As-salam alaykom, Exquisite sewing and silence much appreciated. Thank you for not using printed fabrics. What does it take to sew this well? "One must apply ones whole self (heart, mind and soul) to the task if one truly wants it to be worthy." (i can hear you say).
Yes, take all of yourself and apply it to your task! What you learn in one area of life, might come in useful in another. And be patient and kind to yourself while you are learning, to allow yourself to improve instead to demanding it from yourself. Thanks for watching my videos and leaving such lovely comments!
Lovely workmanship, thank you for sharing. Just wondering why you didn't use gimp thread for the buttonhole?
I like keeping it simple!
@@JuulThijssen Nothing wrong with that 👍😊
I'm surprised you wear your thimble on your third finger...I wear mine on my second finger!!!
I can't remember why I started using it like this, but I'm just used to it! I believe the second finger is the official way to go.
Beverley Clark White I've seen many sewers using thimble on third finger, my mother taught me that waytoo
@@paulinecastle9805 I was just surprised when I saw Juul use hers that way, my Mama and Grannie taught me to use the middle finger for my thimble....I guess whatever works for a person is fine!!!