This box is absolutely exquisite! Beautifully wrapped as well! Thank you for putting all these teachings and materials available for us who can’t afford Savile Row quality education. I am looking to forward to be able to buy this box asap and get to work!
Wonderful, so clear and your explaination as to why the weft is wrapped around the body is really clear, thank you Reza 🙏 I will be donating to your inspirational fund ❤
After many videos that got me lost and quite annoyed (tons of music that cover the speaker and is distracting, filler unrelated life stories etc), this is genuinely the best video I’ve found that helped me understand these terms very clearly. Thank you ever so much
Thank you. I'm very happy that you found it useful and are subscribing. We are building a library of free resources on our website to help individuals like yourself to improve the ease and efficiency of their sewing work. I've included a link for you below: www.internationalschooloftailoring.com/resources Reza
I just note that for couture dresses that are cut on the bias, there often is an undergarment with a vertical warp that helps keep the full weight of the outer garment from hanging from shoulder to floor hem.
been sewing for 60 years and never knew that. I sewed from patterns and assume they were directing the layout w/ that in mind .....not that I always used their recommended layout...Now, I sew with my own patterns for 84yr old no figure body. So, for simple box like tops, laying out the "patterns" so the stretch is horizontal means I get some molding to the body. in the place of darts.
The thing that helped me get a feel for warp versus weft is images of really old weaving setups like the one on the ancient Greek vase visible at th-cam.com/video/c3MNx_Q_SmA/w-d-xo.html . You can see the warp threads hanging straight down, pulled down by heavy weights tied to their bottoms, while the weavers zigzag the weft threads sideways through them.
tailoring in the world will never be the same after your work. thanks, Reza and all the team!!!
Thank you Kaio! It's our pleasure. We hope that this initiative will help many talented individuals like yourself :)
Reza
This box is absolutely exquisite! Beautifully wrapped as well! Thank you for putting all these teachings and materials available for us who can’t afford Savile Row quality education. I am looking to forward to be able to buy this box asap and get to work!
You are so welcome Markus :)
I look forward to see your progress.
Reza
Wonderful, so clear and your explaination as to why the weft is wrapped around the body is really clear, thank you Reza 🙏 I will be donating to your inspirational fund ❤
After many videos that got me lost and quite annoyed (tons of music that cover the speaker and is distracting, filler unrelated life stories etc), this is genuinely the best video I’ve found that helped me understand these terms very clearly. Thank you ever so much
Very happy to read this. You're welcome :)
Reza
Danke!
Thank you Chris! 😃
Reza
@@OFFICIALISOT Of course! We can`t get everything for free. 😀 Even small amounts add up.
@@chriswest353 I appreciate that.
Reza
good Teaching Method .Thank You.
You're welcome :)
Reza
so clear! thank you very much!
Thanks for this
Pleasure is all mine!
Reza
Wow! That was an excellent, clear and understandable explanation of warp and weft. I'm subscribing and looking for more of your instruction!
Thank you. I'm very happy that you found it useful and are subscribing. We are building a library of free resources on our website to help individuals like yourself to improve the ease and efficiency of their sewing work. I've included a link for you below:
www.internationalschooloftailoring.com/resources
Reza
Thanks.
You're welcome :)
Reza
I just note that for couture dresses that are cut on the bias, there often is an undergarment with a vertical warp that helps keep the full weight of the outer garment from hanging from shoulder to floor hem.
Excellent note! Thank you.
Reza
been sewing for 60 years and never knew that. I sewed from patterns and assume they were directing the layout w/ that in mind .....not that I always used their recommended layout...Now, I sew with my own patterns for 84yr old no figure body. So, for simple box like tops, laying out the "patterns" so the stretch is horizontal means I get some molding to the body. in the place of darts.
👏👏👏 thank you
The thing that helped me get a feel for warp versus weft is images of really old weaving setups like the one on the ancient Greek vase visible at th-cam.com/video/c3MNx_Q_SmA/w-d-xo.html . You can see the warp threads hanging straight down, pulled down by heavy weights tied to their bottoms, while the weavers zigzag the weft threads sideways through them.