Yes, our group tries to be as authentic as possible, so it is of silk.

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Sue Clemenger
Sent: Monday, September 04, 2006 2:17 PM
To: Historical Costume
Subject: Re: [h-cost] Hourly Wages


Also depends on cost of materials, I'd think.  Good quality fabrics, beads,
trims could get really expensive, really fast.  I strongly suspect that the
outfit is more along the lines of a couture-level costume, rather than a
cheesy, cotton-broadcloth Elizabethan equivalent of a prom dress from
Hellmart.....<g> If the person who made that 2K outfit were giving
him/herself a base wage of, say, $25/hour, which is probably pretty low for
highly skilled custom sewing (I'm basing this purely on what my old employer
from a couple of decades ago used as a base to figure costs for the custom
sewing jobs I did), that would only be about 80 hours of labor for the
entire outfit, assuming that the raw materials' costs were NOT included in
the 2K.  I've spent that much time just on beading some things, never mind
the 100s of hours one can devote to embroidering something.  I'll have
something like 15 or 16 hundred hours into the embroidered stripes on my
Venetian camicia by the time I'm done. --Sue in Montana, enjoying her rare,
Labor Day vacation ;o)



----- Original Message -----
From: "MaggiRos" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Historical Costume" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Monday, September 04, 2006 11:37 AM
Subject: RE: [h-cost] Hourly Wages


> Clients in my experience want to know in advance how
> much they'll be paying, so I set a per-hour rate in my
> head but quote a flat amount depending on the garment
> and level of ornamentation--with adjustments for
> anticipated aggravation, of course. :-) That way I
> don't have to keep careful watch on the clock, or
> remember that I work more slowly as the day goes on.
>
> Not that I do this for a living, but that's the method
> I developed when I was sewing for other people. Now
> it's just a recommendation.
>
> $2,000 seems quite high, but jewelling and any
> handwork does take a lot of time. (That's why I
> learned to sew, in the end.) I guess it depends on
> what your market will bear.
>
> MaggiRos
>
> --- "Sharon at Collierfam.com" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> wrote:
>
> > A friend of mine had an Elizabethan court dress and
> > hat made, with removable
> > sleeves and separate underskirt. It was beaded and
> > had a good amount of
> > trim. Quite lovely. I believe she paid about
> > $2,000.00 US.


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