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Rachel
01 December 2008 @ 09:13 pm
12-01-08 (Monday)

Let's see. Updatiness:

Fartling is doing well in school.

Work has been crazy busy. CRAZY busy. 16 hour days, etc, etc. But the Christmas season is up and running now, so it's steady and not crazy now. Work-related eye candy:

Cut because I'm a dingbat )
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Rachel
05 September 2008 @ 12:19 am
So, a lot of stuff is going on in my little world. The highlights:

~My son just had his first week of school last week. *sniff* He's such a big boy!! Yes, I did have a tearful moment the day before. But he's doing well and having a blast. I hope all his school years go so well!

~I'm going to have to move. Yeeps. Money concerns there.

~Work is busy. We're in major production for the Halloween season. I've spent the past few days making a 19th century suit for Frankenstien. It's shaping up well!

~Just finished the neverending corset: a blue/white dragon brocade overbust. Random shots:

Pics: full frontal corsetry )
 
 
Rachel
17 June 2008 @ 12:49 pm
LITERATURE ABUSE: AMERICA'S HIDDEN PROBLEM
SELF-TEST FOR LITERATURE ABUSERS

How many of these apply to you?

1. I have read fiction when I was depressed, or to cheer myself up.
2. I have gone on reading binges of an entire book or more in a day.
3. I read rapidly, often 'gulping' chapters.
4. I have sometimes read early in the morning or before work.
5. I have hidden books in different places to sneak a chapter without being seen.
6. Sometimes I avoid friends or family obligations in order to read novels.
7. Sometimes I re-write film or television dialog as the characters speak.
8. I am unable to enjoy myself with others unless there is a book nearby.
9. At a party, I will often slip off unnoticed to read.
10. Reading has made me seek haunts and companions which I would otherwise avoid.
11. I have neglected personal hygiene or household chores until I have finished a novel.
12. I have spent money meant for necessities on books instead.
13. I have attempted to check out more library books than permitted.
14. Most of my friends are heavy fiction readers.
15. I have sometimes passed out from a night of heavy reading.
16. I have suffered 'blackouts' or memory loss from a bout of reading.
17. I have wept, become angry or irrational because of something I read.
18. I have sometimes wished I did not read so much.
19. Sometimes I think my reading is out of control.

If you answered 'yes' to three or more of these questions, you may be a literature abuser. Affirmative responses to five or more indicates a serious problem.

Once a relatively rare disorder, Literature Abuse, or LA, has risen to new levels due to the accessibility of higher education and increased college enrollment since the end of the Second World War. The Number of literature abusers is currently at record levels.

SOCIAL COSTS OF LITERARY ABUSE
Abusers become withdrawn, uninterested in society or normal relationships. They fantasize, creating alternative worlds to occupy, to the neglect of friends and family. In severe cases they develop bad posture from reading in awkward positions or carrying heavy book bags. In the worst instances, they
become cranky reference librarians in small towns. Excessive reading during pregnancy is perhaps the number one cause of moral deformity among the children of Librarians, English professors, Creative Writing teachers and Literacy and ESL tutors. Known as Fetal Fiction Syndrome, this disease also leaves its victims prone to a lifetime of nearsightedness, daydreaming and emotional instability.

HEREDITY

Recent Harvard studies have established that heredity plays a considerable role in determining whether a person will become an abuser of literature. Most abusers have at least one parent who abused literature, often beginning at an early age and progressing into adulthood. Many spouses of an
abuser become abusers themselves.

OTHER PREDISPOSING FACTORS

Fathers or mothers who are English teachers, librarians, professors, or heavy fiction readers; parents who do not encourage children to play games, participate in healthy sports, or watch television in the evening.

PREVENTION

Pre-marital screening and counseling, referral to adoption agencies in order to break the chain of abuse. Librarians and English teachers in particular should seek partners active in other fields. Children should be encouraged to seek physical activity and to avoid isolation and morbid introspection.

DECLINE AND FALL: THE ENGLISH MAJOR

Within the sordid world of literature abuse, the lowest circle belongs to those sufferers who have thrown their lives and hopes away to study literature in our colleges. Parents should look for signs that their children are taking the wrong path--don't expect your teenager to approach you and say, "I can't stop reading Spenser." By the time you visit his dorm room and find the secret stash of the Paris Review, it may already be too late. What to do if you suspect your child is becoming an English major:


1. Talk to your child in a loving way. Show your concern. Let her know you won't abandon her--but that you aren't spending a hundred grand to put her through Stanford so she can clerk at Waldenbooks, either. But remember that she may not be able to make a decision without help; perhaps she has just
finished Madame Bovary and is dying of arsenic poisoning.

2. Face the issue: Tell her what you know, and how: "I found this book in your purse. How long has this been going on?" Ask the hard question—Who is this Count Vronsky?

3. Show her another way. Move the television set into her room. Introduce her to frat boys.

4. Do what you have to do. Tear up her library card. Make her stop signing her letters as 'Emma.' Force her to take a math class, or minor in Spanish. Transfer her to a Florida college.

You may be dealing with a life-threatening problem if one or more of the following applies:

* She can tell you how and when Thomas Chatterton died.
* She names one or more of her cats after a Romantic poet.
* Next to her bed is a picture of: Lord Byron, Virginia Woolf, Faulkner or any scene from the Lake District.

Most importantly, remember, you are not alone. To seek help for yourself or someone you love, contact the nearest chapter of the American Literature Abuse Society, or look under ALAS in your telephone directory.
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Rachel
04 June 2008 @ 03:02 am
So, Pops lent me the use of his nifty digital camera, and my niece and I had fun playing model and photographer.

I couldn't get the lacing quite right by myself, and my niece was no help with her toothpick sized digits. I just love the detail the camera was able to capture! I'm in lust with that camera!! It's only a $1,000 piece of equiptment!

Big pics )
 
 
Rachel
04 June 2008 @ 01:17 am
I LIVE!!! Mwah-hah-hah!!

No, really. I'm still alive. I've been busy as hell, but I had today off, and tomorrow, too.

I just wanted to note that I just discovered that the Infamous Joyce belongs to another forum at which I live. I became a member there in 2004; she joined in 2006.

Man, it's a small world!
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Rachel
04 April 2008 @ 11:22 pm
The BF likes to watch HBO's Oz, which I have never seen. He was talking me through one episode as I watched it at his place, and I could not get this scene out of my head:



I've been a Law & Order: SVU and Criminal Intent fan for years, and have always enjoyed B.D. Wong, but now I just think he's freaking fantastic! Any man who can tackle a Tori Amos song has my respect, and if they can rock it like he did, my awe!

And as for Oz: near as I can figure out, it's like a male soap opera? Guys in prison, love, sex, betrayal, murder, drugs, political factions, violence. It seems like it could be pretty interesting. But I don't get HBO. :shrug:
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Current Mood: tired
 
 
Rachel
20 March 2008 @ 11:36 pm
Have spent all afternoon/evening tweaking this mockup. Really, it wasn't that bad, but I wanted the pattern * perfect * before I cut the “real” fabric. The pattern's still not perfect. I decided to play with one of my other machines, and stitched it up on the Kenmore, without paying too much attention to the settings on the machine. So my stitching lines weren't * exactly * where they should be, but instead were at max. 1/8” into the seam allowances, making each panel approx./max. ¼” larger. So that makes the whole thing nearly two inches larger! :hatchet: Bah. I'm about to try it on, and as long as anything doesn't look seriously whack, it'll just get made without further tweaking.

I'm still debating on fabric. I really want shiny. I want PVC. I just don't want to work with it. Would doing the body in black taffeta and external boning and binding in PVC be total cop-out, do you think? Would it still read as edgy/fetishy, like PVC? I really want to get this done by Saturday afternoon, which can be done, provided nothing gets majorly screwed up.

I'm just scared to bite off more than I can chew, drive myself crazy and break my machine. :nailbiting:

ETA: Oh, hell. The mock-up looks like crap. Bah! I'm going to have to rip out each seam and re-stitch it on my Pfaff. I really hope that careful adherence to the correct stitching lines will fix it. I think that's a job for tomorrow. I should turn in. I repeatedly tell myself that it doesn't do me all that much good to stay up late to do anything; I always feel it the next day. Fartling will be up early. I'll just have to tackle it with some coffee. Man, that sounds nice to me right now.
 
 
Rachel
20 March 2008 @ 12:35 am
Working on another mockup--for this weekend. It's a modification of my last pattern, coming up over the bust, with better hip shaping. It's looking beautiful! I'm tweaking the bottom right now, but I really like the shape it's taken. It was kind of a stab in the dark--I chopped up two of the panels and extended it both top and bottom, so I knew it would take fine-tuning. It does, but I'm liking it a lot!

Hope my business cards are in by Saturday.
 
 
Rachel
18 March 2008 @ 03:06 pm
I got the job!!

I'm not thrilled about the wage, but what can I expect at an amusement park? It's better than not having a job at all, and I'll get to work with costumes. So it'll be cool! Hopefully I can stay on and work through the off-season on builds, and make more. And I can still do services.
 
 
Rachel
15 March 2008 @ 11:45 am
I have an interview with the costume dept. of the amusement park on monday. w00t. It is kind of odd to me that I'm interviewing with a girl who went to school with me, who was my junior. At least she's not THAT much my junior! LOL. I'm to bring myself, a resume/portfolio, etc. I asked if I could just bring a few corsets. My resume is crap, considering that since I graduated I've been working in law offices, so there's nothing there that's relevant to this application to work in costumes. The corsets are much more recent, and I've always thought that for something like this, where you're producing a physical product, it's best to show what you can truly do. Anyway, wish me luck or broken legs, whichever you feel most comfortable with!

This means I should spend this weekend working on corsets. Oh, yes.
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Current Mood: excited
 
 
Rachel
09 March 2008 @ 03:11 am
By George, I think I've got it! (knock wood) The S-curve mock-up, that is. It's pretty tweaked as a single-layer, boneless mockup. I know, I know: bone my mockup.

Reason not to sew at 3 a.m.: you sew things on backwards.

So, TOMORROW, I'll cut some more panels and make this a TWO layer mockup. And then sandwich the bones between the layers. OR: grade all the seams like mad and attempt boning tape/casing/piggies in blankets. Ack. I is skeered. 0_o

Cut for babble & mock-up pics )
 
 
Rachel
07 March 2008 @ 07:45 pm
Hmmm. LHC is back up, but now I need to figure out how to navigate it all. I'm techno-tarded, so it might be awhile before anyone knows of my presence back over there. Anyone know if the journals were resurrected? I gotta go wade around there; I'm sure the answers to my questions have already been posted.

Hair ETA: Trimmed an inch. Yay.

In other news, Band Chick bailed on the fitting today. It's reset to tomorrow. The upside is that my house is all clean and presentable, and I have an extra day to enjoy it that way. Yay! Maybe the trick is to always be expecting some one--then I'll have to keep my house orderly out of shame! LOL.

Worked on a mock-up of the S-curve corset out of both Waisted Efforts and Corsets and Crinolines. I had added 3/8" to each panel to make it my size, as I'm sick of having mock-ups lying around waiting for a body that would fit them. I have three mock-ups waiting for bodies to come by for fittings. *Sigh* The mock-up doesn't look half bad. I need to take in the hip/butt panels, since I have no butt and they kind of just kind of lie there, flat, sad and empty; but otherwise, it's serviceable. I need to get boning into it, though.

That is all for now.

Today's LOLcat )
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Rachel
06 March 2008 @ 01:31 pm
--The Pfaff doctor is so cool. When I left my machine at the shop, I also brought in some scrap panels of the corset I started on and scrapped because the canvas/duck/whatever would not, no matter how pressed and washed, fuse flatly with the satin. So I had several panels of flatlined and fused satin/cotton, and had showed the Dr. how I had to be able to run a perfect line of topstiching through the folded over panels, effectively stitching through 8-16 layers of fabric. I also brought in a completed corset so that he could be certain what I was talking about, and that the machine in question had done it. So I opened up the box, and besides its smelling wonderfully of machine oil (ahhhh), he had also used my scrap panels as the stitch testing fabric. How considerate! I like it. Now to test the machine.

--Tabouli/tabooli/tabouleh whatever: it's addictive. I accidentally grabbed a bunch of corriander/cilantro instead of two bunches of plain parsley, but I chopped it up and threw it in anyway. I also sometimes add just a bit of fresh jalapeno, and let it all sit overnight, but the cilantro added such a kick that it was delicious freshly made. For those interested:

Recipe )

Today's LOLcat )
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Rachel
05 March 2008 @ 06:23 pm
You know, I think process serving is a lot like playing cards or something similar. You just have to *feel* what's in the air, and take a stab if you're feeling lucky. And some days, no matter how hard you try or how long you work, you're still, literally, just "spinning your wheels." I've learned that if there's a day when I feel energetic and think it would be a good day to do services, I just need to go and do them. Those are the days when I catch people. If I'm apathetic or tired or frustrated, it's just a waste of gas.

Got my Pfaff back from the Pfaff doctor. It was ready yesterday afternoon, the day after I'd taken it in. The Dr. (that's what I'm going to call him!) had told me Friday at the earliest, and it was done Tuesday. How cool. I think I intrigued him. I wonder how many other people who take their sewing machines in for service/repair use them for corsetmaking? LOL. I also wonder how many take their machines in who are in my age bracket? I'm the only person my age I know who sews regularly.

Stayed out too late last night. It was fun, but now it's not even 6:30 p.m. and I'm tuckered out. Bah.

And that's the extent of news here.

Today's LOLcat: again, an LHC repeat )
 
 
Current Mood: sleepy
 
 
Rachel
01 March 2008 @ 12:34 am
Well, [info]thebatsmeow was right: Waisted Efforts IS more useful that Corsets and Crinolines. I wanted to have both, especially since I can't read a full paragraph of Waisted Efforts without wanting to bang my head against the wall, but it is more useful pattern-wise. Corsets and Crinolines is much easier to read, and the patterns are a little more clear, but I've only found one, maybe two, patterns that aren't in Waisted Efforts, and Waisted Efforts has more patterns on the whole. Additionally, the patterns in Waisted Efforts that are re-drawn from the Waugh book are helpfully drawn gridded, which, with my low-tech upscaling skills, is very useful to me.

So, now I plan to draft up the S-curve corset featured in both books. I'll mock it up in two layers, and play with new construction methods. Or maybe I'll play with new construction methods on the pattern that I just scaled up and drew out today, which doesn't have any funky triangular/gore-shaped pieces. Never dealt with gores, or triangular panels.

Anyway, more blather to follow, I'm sure.
 
 
Rachel
29 February 2008 @ 12:52 pm
Just got a call that my Corsets & Crinolines has arrived. Whoo-hoo! Gonna pick it up tonight.

Anyone got any tips for scaling up patterns from books? I don't have any mad computer skilz, no programs, and don't have a scanner or printer besides. I'm mega-low-tech. I spent yesterday puzzling out and upscaling (LOL: "upscaling") a pattern from Waisted Efforts which was a PITA, since the patterns were printed as a "curiosity" or somesuch, and the closest scale I could attain was 3/8"=1". I'm sure there were much easier ways of scaling it up, but you know me: I'm not learning if I'm not pounding my head against the wall.

So I'm grading the pattern for a larger size right now (it's printed for a 20" waist, approx., which I left behind at maybe age 7!) and adding seam allowances so I can mock it up. Lessee what happens!

Just for grins, here's a quick pick of my busty friend's mockup )

Today's LOLcritter. He cracks me up! )
 
 
Rachel
27 February 2008 @ 11:00 pm
Okay. My mock-ups are done! I need to call and see if these chickies are ready for fittings.

Question, in particular directed at my US friends: know where I can get yards of shoe lace? For the white trash corset, I'm thinking yards of shoe laces will help this look. Black, maybe drab green, depending on the fabric the customer chooses. If the lacing is untipped, that's fine, I'll tip it myself somehow. The local Lowes and Home Depot has some good string I can use, but it only comes in white. I don't know how it would take dye, since it's made of nylon.
 
 
Rachel
27 February 2008 @ 05:02 pm
Absolutely nothing new to report. Still doing services. Looking through the few corsetry books I have in my possession for ideas for new patterns and ways to defeat the "pooch" effect that happens at the bottom of the corset when a body has extra flesh/loose skin/bad posture. Still thinking about playing with seams, style, and the dreaded S-curve corsets of the Edwardian period. Still haven't called an electrician to fix my outlets. Haven't got the money for it at this point. Still have too few services on hand to justify that expense. For now I'll make do with extension cords. Son is outside at the moment playing with the neighborhood kids. I just had a visitor: my second customer. She brought me a little trinket she bought for me, checked out my fabric stash, and we discussed her next corset. I'm loving her enthusiasm and desire for more corsets. Oh, yeah.

What else? Went for a motorcycle ride with the BF this weekend. We were going to check out a biker bar we'd gone to twice before, and got throroughly, pleasantly lost along the banks of a river. We eventually stopped for directions, which included "Go down this road and make a right at the third light." As the BF said, only in Texas can directions like that encompass 30 miles and five small towns. Really. But it was a beautiful day and a fun ride.

Today I went out and did a few services, then came back home when I realized that I was almost empty on gas and had left my wallet at home. So I'm home now and I'm thinking I'm going to spend this time working on mockups.

Found a different conditioner: Cabella. It's for horses, has few -cones, and I'm liking it. It leaves my hair smooth and fine and soft for days. Doesn't dry my hair out after several days between washes like the heavier coney ones.

Well, I suppose that's enough blather for now. Wish me luck. Am still waiting on feedback from the white trash corset girl.

Today's LOLcat )
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Rachel
23 February 2008 @ 10:55 pm
*sigh* Not content to render useless the outlets powering my computer and sewing machines, the electric gremlin, as I've dubbed it, has now incapacitated the outlet powering my iron.

Watch. Next the TV, and then the fridge.

I suppose I must call the electrician. Bah.

It is interesting to wonder how I'd survive without electricity. Do they make walking feet for treadle machines? LOL

OH! In other news, I ordered Corsets & Crinolines. Should be here in a week. Go me.

Is it just me or is everyone going in/out of the hospital right now? My son's best friend, a six-year-old, has been in the hospital for several days now, his asthma aggrivated by pneumonia. While visiting him today, my ex-boyfriend called to inform me that he'd just been admitted to the hospital. Later on this afternoon, a friend whom I've been trying to get ahold of to fit her mockup called and said she was taking care of her parents, who have both been in/out of the hospital this week. Kinda freaky.

I am perpetually thankful for my health, and my son's. I try to never take it for granted.

Todays' LOLcat: me & the BF last night, trying to track down the gremlin )

ETA: Now my outlets are working! Aaaaarrgh! Gremlin! But I think I'd better listen to the BF and not use it, lest I burn down the house. *sigh* again.
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Rachel
23 February 2008 @ 02:14 am
I just spent over an hour ironing fabric. I gave up when I got to the three yards of canvas. It wasn't the same canvas I'd found before, that I'd liked that was smooth. So maybe what I liked that was smooth was drill. :headshake: I wish I could find coutil in this town. For less than $15/yard.

But I did go fabric hunting. I hit the jackpot at Hancocks Fabrics. Much camo. There was even this hideous leopard print—with GLITTER. It was so nasty I would have thought it were perfect. Now, I don't think leopard print is necessarily tacky, but this one was. I think mostly because the pattern was so inconsistent; too few spots over too large an area. And the glitter.

I'm playing with my photobucket account to see if I can make an album available to a guest without granting them access to the rest of my photos. I think I've done it. I took so many photos of fabric today, I would rather shoot this girl a link to all the swatches I snapped instead of trying to send them directly to her phone.

Fabric swatches for the bored )

That is all.

ETA: More fabric. It's an addiction! )
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