This is the MOST helpful dart video I've ever come across, it's very well done. As someone fairly new to sewing, darts have been a really daunting thing to me-- I've tried really hard to find something that thoroughly explains which darts do what and why-- weirdly hard to find. Thank you so much for taking the time to make this.
You are very welcome. I'm glad you found it useful. This is information I use constantly in pattern drafting and sewing darts. I don't know why more people don't talk about it.
Incredibly helpful. Including the computer model juxtaposed with the flat dart types clarified a lot for me. Also thanks for the great tip about how to pull darts together.
Lori, the demo of your dart technique at 13:15 is fantastic. This is the way my great-grandmother would prep her darts and I had completely forgotten about this great technique. Thanks!
+venicerollerstar I was shocked when I found the technique. It's so simple and effective. I'm glad the video helped you to remember it. My grandmother was an accomplished seamstress, too. Even though she's no longer with me, she's been my inspiration.
Thank you so much. You see tutorials about darts on pattern paper but you never actually see someone explain how to get them sewn in properly. That little trick will definitely help me as i'm always struggling to get my darts aligned well. I wish i could like your video more than once.
Totally amazing. I"m just starting out with sewing. I have been designing a long sleeve Tee Shirt with Poplin. I don't have any Muslin. A lovely lady at sewing club gave me some really useful tips to getting a really nice fit, and it involves darts. When she explained it a lot of it went over my head, but as she said we are 3d not 2d. We have mass, and to get the fabric to drop nicely involves shaping with the darts. I thought I was very close to having the top done, but now I have a lot more to do. Take care and thanks. Great video
That was nice of your sewing club lady to help. The third dimension is so important, but also so difficult to understand. It sounds like you're getting the hang of it though. Thanks for watching.
Thankyou for the wonderful video, about very clear and lucid explanations about dart manipulation.One can feel the passion of an artist in the beautiful narrative about stitching.
This is what I've been looking for, something that shows the darts and what they do and when is a good time to use them. Wow and back from 2013, thank you so much for making this informative video. It has been a big help!
thank you for posting this video. This has been one of the most helpful videos in terms of explaining different darts, their uses and how they will effect the drape of the garment. As a new sewer, this is very valuable information to learn.
Using an extended ladder stitch is absolute genius!!! I had a wow, no kidding moment, when I think of all the dart methods I have tried. Thank you, this makes so much sense. I am going to review all your videos, as I am back into sewing after many years and somewhat intimidated as it isn't as easy to fit patterns now - as opposed to when I started sewing at 13 =) and sewing for my kids. I am going to take a pattern I want to change and use these methods to have some fun! Excellent tutorial.
Excellent video Lori and clearly you have great techniques to share. Been sewing since I was a child and never learnt the "draw string" dart tacking method, thanks!! I also have an excellent dart tip for you. When you get to the end of a dart, no matter what method you've chosen to use, take the next stitch just off of the fabric and sew about 7-8 stitches more without any fabric under the needle. Draw the fabric out of the machine and you should see a short chain of stitches. Trim the threads about 1" past the little chain that was created... and leave it alone. This is an industry technique that works extremely well and removes the need for knotting the threads. The little chain stays surprisingly good and the small amount of thread will either not show or if you leave it longer can be slipped through the seam threads inside. Cheers! And thanks again for your great videos!
I watched your tutorial before sewing darts for the 1st time on a purse pattern. fantastic!! thank you for sharing the great prepping technique! my darts came out great!!
Fabulous...so wonderfully put together...easy to understand and Most of all we can see how various darts offer shape ....so one can select what suits themand the fabric
Thank you so much! As an aspiring Fashion designer who can't yet go to fashion school, this has been really helpful to me and on my journey to make patterns for clothes.
Thank You for this video it helped me enormously! My problem is a curvature in my spine inwards and and small waist to bust and hip ratio ..I always have too much fabric in the back of my clothes unless they are. Made of very stretchy fabric. Nobody seams to alter my clothes the way I want them to..this video so helps me with this task. I feel more confident, and that sewing the dart and pulling it together is the key Step i needed...also how to finish off the tip of my darts... i am so very grateful!
I'm in the CG field and I'm required to know as much as possible to accomplish my task. I was so relieved to see your MD explanation. This greatly helped and I will definitely be subbing. : )
This was such an interesting and informative Tutorial on Darts and far more than I even expected to learn. I had no idea it could be done in so many ways. I think seeing Darts on how it works on Men's Shirt and the various ways it could also be done would be great just like this awesome tutorial for a female figure. I learned far more from this video than i was expecting .
I came a cross of your teaching about the darts I was very pleased ,I still learning about patterns making and sewing. My question is : what is a width of each dart?
Hay, thanks for the helpful technique of drawing up the dart. I am a newbie and am getting ready to do my first pair of pants. You don't know how much I was sweating the darts. I now feel like I am ready to take the project on. I am subscribing. Thanks so much.
The only method I know is to fill in the area between the dart legs with paper (if it has been cut out already) and extend the paper beyond the cut line all across the dart area. Create a slash line somewhere else, at the side for a waist dart for example. Cut the slash then rotate your original dart closed, leg to leg. Make sure the excess paper in the dart extension is folded to the correct side (this is usually the center of the body). Now cut across your original cut line. When you rotate your new slash closed, you have the correct center extension for cutting. I hope that makes sense. It is hard to explain.
+Sam Huynh You can make the darts in the lining, just like you do for the outer fabric. The only difference is that the right side of the lining is facing the body, so the dart seam allowance will be between the lining and the outer fabric. Thanks for watching.
First video where I understood something about darts. However I'm still a little confused about some things as I'm new to sewing and haf no idea about darts. 1) do I draw this on a normal bodice pattern? 2) did you draw the lines randomly? 3) what should the size of the dart be? The dart that was cut near the waist, how do we determine what size the dart should be? I heard in a video that the size of a dart depends on the size of the human. So how do I determine the length and width (of the widest part)? 4) I wanted to do a princess seam from shoulder with bust and waist darts. Is it possible with how you showed doing two darts from the waist cut? 5) What's the next step? I'm so confused, please help
Thank you for your educational video. I'm just wondering why darts are triangular. Our bodies are curved, so why aren't darts curved as well? You briefly mentioned shaped darts. I wish you explained what they were.
Darts are just a method to remove material. A larger bust and small waist requires that the waist be made smaller and that's what darts do. You can curve the dart legs a bit, but not much. It is too difficult to match them up for sewing and if the fabric has any type of pattern to it, it is going to look very strange because nothing will line up.
hi thanks for that great knowledge and how to measure the dart size i.e whether i have to go with 1 inch or 1 1/2 inch(width wise) ?is there any formula to calculate it?
+pushpavardhana m I'm afraid I can't help you with this. I draft everything from a full set of measurements, so there are many things that determine the final dart. You could do a muslin and pin fit the bust to see what is best for you.
I need help please I understand how to make tailor tacks. but I'm still not sure what they're really used for. I know that you can make your mark on the fabric, even layers of fabric. what are you marking?
I have a question, I'm making doll clothes and I made a shirt pattern. It has shoulder and bust darts but when I put it on her it's baggy in the arm pits. Should I put another dart there or should I do something else.
I would like to know that if we do the pivoting method dart, is it a MUST to have have two darts i e waist dart and bust dart closed on the quarter scale to get a new dart?
You can have as many or as few darts as you wish. You can move one dart to any of the locations shown, or you can split the width and turn one dart into two darts placed in different areas. There aren't any hard rules on this. Do whatever your design dictates will look best.
Do you have another video that shows how to make the adjustment to the back when a dart is added to the front side seam. I notice the front on my bodice doesnt align with the side seams on the back that has no dart?
When I put a dart into the side seam on the a front panel for the bust, I find that it doesnt up with the side of the back panel. I dont know how to add that dart measurement to the back without making a dart in the back panel
+MAXCore I know nothing of G code. You can't export patterns out of MD, if that's what you're hoping to do. Sorry, I know lots of people would like to do that, but they don't allow it.
hoo, thanks very much for the information :) , do you know other program that can export the patterns out of the program? and preferably that it can simulate or manage the clothes in a similar way that Marvelous do
This is the MOST helpful dart video I've ever come across, it's very well done. As someone fairly new to sewing, darts have been a really daunting thing to me-- I've tried really hard to find something that thoroughly explains which darts do what and why-- weirdly hard to find. Thank you so much for taking the time to make this.
You are very welcome. I'm glad you found it useful. This is information I use constantly in pattern drafting and sewing darts. I don't know why more people don't talk about it.
Incredibly helpful. Including the computer model juxtaposed with the flat dart types clarified a lot for me. Also thanks for the great tip about how to pull darts together.
I'm glad you found it helpful. Thanks for watching and taking the time to comment.
Lori, the demo of your dart technique at 13:15 is fantastic. This is the way my great-grandmother would prep her darts and I had completely forgotten about this great technique. Thanks!
+venicerollerstar I was shocked when I found the technique. It's so simple and effective. I'm glad the video helped you to remember it. My grandmother was an accomplished seamstress, too. Even though she's no longer with me, she's been my inspiration.
Thank you Lori. After so many years, i'm just discovering your channel. Amazing!
Thank you so much. You see tutorials about darts on pattern paper but you never actually see someone explain how to get them sewn in properly. That little trick will definitely help me as i'm always struggling to get my darts aligned well. I wish i could like your video more than once.
Thank you, that's very kind. I love that little trick and use it all the time myself.
The technique for forming the dart before sewing is BRILLIANT! So glad I found this video. I'll be watching more of your videos. Thanks!
I'm glad you like it. It is a handy trick.
Subscribed! Newbie to sewing. Best video I've watched of anything! I feel so grateful for the internet!! Thank you for sharing top notch content!
You're welcome and thank you for the kind words.
Totally amazing. I"m just starting out with sewing. I have been designing a long sleeve Tee Shirt with Poplin. I don't have any Muslin. A lovely lady at sewing club gave me some really useful tips to getting a really nice fit, and it involves darts. When she explained it a lot of it went over my head, but as she said we are 3d not 2d. We have mass, and to get the fabric to drop nicely involves shaping with the darts. I thought I was very close to having the top done, but now I have a lot more to do.
Take care and thanks. Great video
That was nice of your sewing club lady to help. The third dimension is so important, but also so difficult to understand. It sounds like you're getting the hang of it though. Thanks for watching.
Thankyou for the wonderful video, about very clear and lucid explanations about dart manipulation.One can feel the passion of an artist in the beautiful narrative about stitching.
This is what I've been looking for, something that shows the darts and what they do and when is a good time to use them. Wow and back from 2013, thank you so much for making this informative video. It has been a big help!
thank you for posting this video. This has been one of the most helpful videos in terms of explaining different darts, their uses and how they will effect the drape of the garment. As a new sewer, this is very valuable information to learn.
Stay tuned. I am releasing an entire website with instructions on sewing and free patterns. Thanks for watching.
Using an extended ladder stitch is absolute genius!!! I had a wow, no kidding moment, when I think of all the dart methods I have tried. Thank you, this makes so much sense. I am going to review all your videos, as I am back into sewing after many years and somewhat intimidated as it isn't as easy to fit patterns now - as opposed to when I started sewing at 13 =) and sewing for my kids. I am going to take a pattern I want to change and use these methods to have some fun! Excellent tutorial.
Please check out Patternmaker Pro for free sewing patterns. Thanks for commenting.
@@LoriGriffiths p
Excellent video Lori and clearly you have great techniques to share. Been sewing since I was a child and never learnt the "draw string" dart tacking method, thanks!! I also have an excellent dart tip for you. When you get to the end of a dart, no matter what method you've chosen to use, take the next stitch just off of the fabric and sew about 7-8 stitches more without any fabric under the needle. Draw the fabric out of the machine and you should see a short chain of stitches. Trim the threads about 1" past the little chain that was created... and leave it alone. This is an industry technique that works extremely well and removes the need for knotting the threads. The little chain stays surprisingly good and the small amount of thread will either not show or if you leave it longer can be slipped through the seam threads inside. Cheers! And thanks again for your great videos!
That's a great suggestion that I will try next time. It sounds much easier than the tie-off method.
I watched your tutorial before sewing darts for the 1st time on a purse pattern. fantastic!! thank you for sharing the great prepping technique! my darts came out great!!
+Kara Smith That's great! I'm glad it helped. Thanks for sharing your success.
Ladder stitching the dart together is the best thing I've seen! Thank you so much!
It is a nifty trick! Thanks for watching.
Fabulous...so wonderfully put together...easy to understand and
Most of all we can see how various darts offer shape ....so one can select what suits themand the fabric
Thank you so much! As an aspiring Fashion designer who can't yet go to fashion school, this has been really helpful to me and on my journey to make patterns for clothes.
I'm glad you found it helpful. I have more content coming that you might be interested in. Thanks for watching.
I had no idea there were so many darts and so simple to change the dart location. You do a great job of explaining these techniques, thank you!
You're welcome. I'm glad you found this useful. Thank you for watching.
Best dart tutorial I've ever seen! Thanks, Lori!
You're welcome. Glad you found it useful.
Thank You for this video it helped me enormously! My problem is a curvature in my spine inwards and and small waist to bust and hip ratio ..I always have too much fabric in the back of my clothes unless they are. Made of very stretchy fabric. Nobody seams to alter my clothes the way I want them to..this video so helps me with this task. I feel more confident, and that sewing the dart and pulling it together is the key Step i needed...also how to finish off the tip of my darts... i am so very grateful!
+rosevincent Vincent I'm glad the techniques helped you find a solution to your fitting problem. Thanks for watching.
Lori, your demonstration was extremely helpful. Excellent job explaining. Thank you for your patience and time.
I'm very glad you found it useful. Thank you for the kind words.
This is one of the best tips I have ever seen. Thanks.
You're welcome. Thanks for watching.
This is a gift. You are a gift. Thank you!
That's very kind of you. Thanks for watching.
Lori, this is the best dart tutorial in the whole wide world!!! Thanks sooooo much!
I'm glad you found it useful. Thanks for watching and taking the time to comment.
Well this is something I never thought I'd learn about! Crafts people of any craft are so fascinating to watch.
+Mat Broomfield People rarely think about how clothes are made. It is interesting and it can get quite complex. Thanks for watching.
+Lori Griffiths Yes, just this tiny glance was quite eye-opening. I came here from your Marvelous Designer tutorial - very useful BTW.
I'm in the CG field and I'm required to know as much as possible to accomplish my task. I was so relieved to see your MD explanation. This greatly helped and I will definitely be subbing. : )
LumenLumen I so glad it helped. Thanks for watching and taking the time to comment.
Great explanation of dart locations and how to stitch.
Thank you for watching.
Dede Storer 1qàq1aqæ1qqqa1111111
Dede Storer I
This was such an interesting and informative Tutorial on Darts and far more than I even expected to learn. I had no idea it could be done in so many ways. I think seeing Darts on how it works on Men's Shirt and the various ways it could also be done would be great just like this awesome tutorial for a female figure. I learned far more from this video than i was expecting .
Glad it was helpful! Thanks for watching.
WEW FINALLY FOUND A COMPLETE-ISH DART EXPLANATION! Took a whole day. Thank you very much!
Glad it helped!
I came a cross of your teaching about the darts I was very pleased ,I still learning about patterns making and sewing. My question is : what is a width of each dart?
That is what i would like to know. how do you calculate the width of a shoulder, waist and side dart? ANY help would be so appreciated... thanks
I've been looking for an extensive explanation for darts. From a beginner seamstress, thank you! I will be exploring your channel and website as well.
I'm glad it helped. I have some amazing things coming up for people who sew. Stay tuned!
The best video I've found on darts. Thank you so much, this is a lifesaver ;)
You're welcome. Thanks for watching.
BrillIant explanation Lori. You have taken away my fear of darts! Thank you!
You're welcome and thank you for watching and taking the time to comment.
Oh wow, thank you so much. This was so helpful. I actually understand clearly now. Thank you again 😊
that trick for the darts is magic thanks for sharing! !!
+alanna.murdoch MURDOCH You're welcome and thank you for watching.
Hi Lori this is a brilliant technique. Thank you.
it is such a wonderful tutorial with so detailed explanation and samples, you are awesome.
That is very kind. Thank you.
Love your explanation. Thank you for taking effort to make such detail video
You're welcome. Thank you for watching.
Thank youuuu very much
You explain in the way that everything looks so easy to understand
I'm glad it makes sense. Thanks for watching.
When you hand sew the dart and pull it closed = genius!
I know, it's like magic! Thanks for watching.
thanks so much this is super helpful
You're welcome. Thank you for watching and commenting.
Thank you so much. You would believe how helpful it is.
Hay, thanks for the helpful technique of drawing up the dart. I am a newbie and am getting ready to do my first pair of pants. You don't know how much I was sweating the darts. I now feel like I am ready to take the project on. I am subscribing. Thanks so much.
BillTheSlink You're welcome. Thank you for watching.
THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR THE MODEL EXPLAINATION !! THIS HELPS SO MUCH!
Thanks Lori! This explanation of possibilities was awesome!
I'm glad you like it. Thanks for watching.
I think your dart hack has saved me hours! Thanks!
You're great! I really needed this! Thank you very much :)
I'm glad you found it helpful. You're welcome.
Wow! Thank you very much! I learn a lot and you explained it well!
I'm glad it helped you. Thanks for taking the time to comment.
Really really helpful, great video, explained very very well, thank you.
You are very welcome. Thanks for watching.
WOW. I LOVE your dart basting idea. Very clever! Thanks!
Thanks a lot for the amazing video , can you please make a video to explain how can i omitt the dart completely ? Thanks .
It is easy to omit it, just ignore the cutout. Add a piece of paper to the cutout and draw across the opening at the waist and don't make the dart.
I love the miniature pattern. Is it possible to download it at all? I know it extends to the original size. Also, I like the last Dart better.
Lovely video thanks Lori. Do you have any magical means of trueing dart extensions? It would be so helpful xx
The only method I know is to fill in the area between the dart legs with paper (if it has been cut out already) and extend the paper beyond the cut line all across the dart area. Create a slash line somewhere else, at the side for a waist dart for example. Cut the slash then rotate your original dart closed, leg to leg. Make sure the excess paper in the dart extension is folded to the correct side (this is usually the center of the body). Now cut across your original cut line. When you rotate your new slash closed, you have the correct center extension for cutting. I hope that makes sense. It is hard to explain.
I WAS SO CONFUSED UNTIL NOW ! thanks so much !
You are welcome. Thanks for commenting.
Great video! Thnx for sharing. I would live for you tell me what program you used for this demo?
+whatever7471 I think your referring to Marvelous Designer. I have a ton of videos on it, if you want to check it out. Thanks for watching.
Very nice Mam. Which software use
Very informative and simple. Thank you!
You're welcome. Thanks for watching.
Learned a lot from watching this. Thanks
You're welcome. Thank you for watching.
Nice watching
What an explanation 😉
Thanks for sharing
Though this is a long time ago video, but I learnt a lot watching
The techniques really haven't change for ages. I'm glad it helped you.
@@LoriGriffiths Thank you
I'll try it on my own
Pls do you have a video on contouring?
Like used for tube
Great video, I loved it! Thanks for sharing
+Rita Elisabeth You're welcome and thanks for watching.
Thank you for tutorial. Well explained
You're welcome. Thanks for watching.
Thank you for this helpful tutorial.
I have a question. How do you apply darts to a lined garment, such as blazers, coats, jackets etc.?
+Sam Huynh You can make the darts in the lining, just like you do for the outer fabric. The only difference is that the right side of the lining is facing the body, so the dart seam allowance will be between the lining and the outer fabric. Thanks for watching.
Sam Huynh
Awesome video - thank you sharing your knowledge!!!!!!!!!!
You're welcome. Thanks for watching.
Thanks you so much. Very simple to understand.
Thank you for watching.
This has explained so much! Thank You!
This is SO HELPFUL OMG!!!! THANK YOU, THANK YOU, THANK YOU, AND THANK YOU!!!!!
You're very welcome. Thanks for the feedback.
FABULOUS TUTORIAL. THANK YOU!!!
+Lush Montana You're welcome. I'm glad you found it helpful.
FINALLY. A video that makes me understand darts... I've been breaking my brain over them
I'm glad it helped. Thanks for watching.
Such a great tutorial!
Thank you, thank you. I was so confused about darts.
I'm glad it helped. Thanks for watching.
By the way, new subscriber here from Australia 👋
That's great! Thanks for subscribing.
thank you so much...it is the graet tutorial.. I learnt so many thing from it...
I'm glad you liked it. Thank you for watching.
Thumbs up for the technique at the end! 👍👍
It works really well. I'm glad you liked it.
First video where I understood something about darts. However I'm still a little confused about some things as I'm new to sewing and haf no idea about darts.
1) do I draw this on a normal bodice pattern?
2) did you draw the lines randomly?
3) what should the size of the dart be? The dart that was cut near the waist, how do we determine what size the dart should be? I heard in a video that the size of a dart depends on the size of the human. So how do I determine the length and width (of the widest part)?
4) I wanted to do a princess seam from shoulder with bust and waist darts. Is it possible with how you showed doing two darts from the waist cut?
5) What's the next step?
I'm so confused, please help
A thing to note is I don't have any access to patterns in my country and I want to learn to do it
You should visit my website at FearlessMakers.com. I have free pattern software and a manual that will help you.
thank you. the best explanation!
Glad it was helpful!
Great video!
Thank you.
great video! thank you.
You're welcome. Thanks for watching.
Very good thank you
You're welcome. Thank you for watching.
Wow! Amazing! Thank you.
You're welcome. Thanks for watching.
Thank you for your educational video. I'm just wondering why darts are triangular. Our bodies are curved, so why aren't darts curved as well?
You briefly mentioned shaped darts. I wish you explained what they were.
Darts are just a method to remove material. A larger bust and small waist requires that the waist be made smaller and that's what darts do. You can curve the dart legs a bit, but not much. It is too difficult to match them up for sewing and if the fabric has any type of pattern to it, it is going to look very strange because nothing will line up.
Lori Griffiths I see. Thank you.
Awesome, thank you.
hi thanks for that great knowledge and how to measure the dart size i.e whether i have to go with 1 inch or 1 1/2 inch(width wise) ?is there any formula to calculate it?
+pushpavardhana m I'm afraid I can't help you with this. I draft everything from a full set of measurements, so there are many things that determine the final dart. You could do a muslin and pin fit the bust to see what is best for you.
That is very helpful thank you so much
Reham Hafez You're welcome. Thank you for watching.
Very good video 👍
Thank you for watching.
Fabulous info thanks 😍
You're welcome. Thanks for watching.
very helpful thank you
HI what's the program you used when you showed us the different darts and their locations?
I'm not sure. Can you give me the time of the video where you saw this? I can use that to find your answer.
marvelous designer 2
Thank you this helped me a lot :)
That's great. Thanks for taking the time to comment.
I need help please I understand how to make tailor tacks. but I'm still not sure what they're really used for. I know that you can make your mark on the fabric, even layers of fabric. what are you marking?
Tailor tacks are just a way to transfer pattern markings to the fabric. Some people prefer them over pencil or pen markings.
Ugh I LOVE YOU! this helped so much!!!!!
I'm glad it helped. Thanks for watching and commenting.
I have a question, I'm making doll clothes and I made a shirt pattern. It has shoulder and bust darts but when I put it on her it's baggy in the arm pits. Should I put another dart there or should I do something else.
This is very common. Yes, you can put a small dart in the armhole to take up the extra fabric if you want a very conforming fit.
you didn't comment on the fact that when u do a shoulder dart. it seems to expose the belly button. not drastically but noticeable.
I would like to know that if we do the pivoting method dart, is it a MUST to have have two darts i e waist dart and bust dart closed on the quarter scale to get a new dart?
You can have as many or as few darts as you wish. You can move one dart to any of the locations shown, or you can split the width and turn one dart into two darts placed in different areas. There aren't any hard rules on this. Do whatever your design dictates will look best.
Thanks mam .For sharing with us
You're welcome. Thank you for watching.
wow how you thread the dart to match up & sew am gonna have to practice this
dorothy davis You don't really need to practice, it's so easy. You'll love the technique. Thanks for watching.
Thank you
Do you have another video that shows how to make the adjustment to the back when a dart is added to the front side seam. I notice the front on my bodice doesnt align with the side seams on the back that has no dart?
Changing the dart in the front shouldn't have any effect on the back. I'm not sure what is happening, so I don't have any advice.
When I put a dart into the side seam on the a front panel for the bust, I find that it doesnt up with the side of the back panel. I dont know how to add that dart measurement to the back without making a dart in the back panel
got it sorted. Thank you
Please mam which software for drafting and pattern making
nice explanation like it
Thanks for watching.
Thank you so much!!!💓✨
You're so welcome!
Hello Lori i Like your videos, do you know how can i convert a pattern to G code? and something to open in autocad and illustrator? c:
+MAXCore I know nothing of G code. You can't export patterns out of MD, if that's what you're hoping to do. Sorry, I know lots of people would like to do that, but they don't allow it.
hoo, thanks very much for the information :) , do you know other program that can export the patterns out of the program? and preferably that it can simulate or manage the clothes in a similar way that Marvelous do