Re: [h-cost] Query re: website

2010-05-18 Thread Franchesca
Do not let that it may not appear to cover your period push you away. If you
want to see it, ask for it. She is very flexible and s sweet to
communicate with. It is a breath of fresh air!

I too have been with them since the beginning. I too take all month to read
all through the material. It is the only reason I have not subbed to the
offshoot mag they have.

It is a British site with a British style of writing. I like the ad they
have on Facebook, not cheeky at all.

Franchesca 
http://www.glove.org/

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Re: [h-cost] Query re: website

2010-05-18 Thread Beteena Paradise
I think Marion just works there. The owner is Catherine Hay. Here is her 
livejournal which has quite a lot about the website:  
http://harmanhay.livejournal.com/





From: Penny Ladnier penn...@costumegallery.com
To: Historical Costume h-cost...@indra.com
Sent: Tue, May 18, 2010 4:50:28 AM
Subject: Re: [h-cost] Query re: website

The owner is Marion McNealy.  It is shown on the contact page of the website.  
The business is Harman Hay Publications, Nottingham, UK.

Penny Ladnier
Owner, The Costume Gallery Websites
www.costumegallery.com
14 websites of fashion, textiles,  costume history
- Original Message - From: Marjorie Wilser the3t...@gmail.com
To: Historical Costume h-cost...@indra.com
Sent: Monday, May 17, 2010 11:32 PM
Subject: [h-cost] Query re: website 

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Re: [h-cost] Query re: website

2010-05-18 Thread Zuzana Kraemerova
Yep, the founder and leader of this whole thing is Cathy Hay. I like this 
website, I find there really are good articles that are not so easy to find 
elsewhere and it is really fun to read all this stuff when costuming is your 
hobby. 

I am a subscriber and although I am an advanced sewer and drafter, I still find 
some good tips there. Cathy has a gift for writing and I really like all her 
posts and articles. Only the pattern drafting classes are, in my opinion, kind 
of very simplified and not like the real drafting thing that will work on all 
figures.

I strongly suggest to any of you to try this site (and foundationsrevealed.com) 
just for a month - it's only a small amount of money and you can download ALL 
the articles and everything. Then you can unsubscribe (otherwise it will 
automatically draw money from your paypal account each month).
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www.sartor.cz 





--- On Tue, 5/18/10, Beteena Paradise bete...@mostlymedieval.com wrote:

 From: Beteena Paradise bete...@mostlymedieval.com
 Subject: Re: [h-cost] Query re: website
 To: Historical Costume h-cost...@indra.com
 Date: Tuesday, May 18, 2010, 11:51 AM
 I think Marion just works there. The
 owner is Catherine Hay. Here is her livejournal which has
 quite a lot about the website:  http://harmanhay.livejournal.com/
 
 
 
 
 
 From: Penny Ladnier penn...@costumegallery.com
 To: Historical Costume h-cost...@indra.com
 Sent: Tue, May 18, 2010 4:50:28 AM
 Subject: Re: [h-cost] Query re: website
 
 The owner is Marion McNealy.  It is shown on the contact
 page of the website.  The business is Harman Hay
 Publications, Nottingham, UK.
 
 Penny Ladnier
 Owner, The Costume Gallery Websites
 www.costumegallery.com
 14 websites of fashion, textiles,  costume history
 - Original Message - From: Marjorie Wilser the3t...@gmail.com
 To: Historical Costume h-cost...@indra.com
 Sent: Monday, May 17, 2010 11:32 PM
 Subject: [h-cost] Query re: website 
 
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Re: [h-cost] Query re: website

2010-05-18 Thread Marion McNealy


Hi, I've been a long time lurker here on h-cost so I thought I'd chime in. I'm 
the editor of Your Wardrobe Unlock'd and Foundations Revealed, Cathy Hay is the 
owner and publisher of both the sites.  She's based in the UK and I'm in the US.

While the magazines focus on a variety of time periods, each year we have 
reader chosen focus periods that are part of a year long competition that ends 
in February. This year we're doing a Double Period Project (DPP) where the 
focus is on the Revolutionary era 1770-1789 and the Natural Form Era 1876-1882.

The magazines can seem a bit pricey, but pick up a specialty print magazine at 
the grocery store and you'll see that the cost is similar.  I just paid $9 for 
a quarterly gluten-free magazine the other day, and 60% was advertising!  With 
the print magazine you just get that one issue, with our magazines, you get the 
current issue, and all the issues that have been published before.

If you'd like to try out the magazine, we've just launched a new 48 hour trial 
period for $0.99 so you can see if you think its worth the subscription price.

We don't have advertising because Cathy and I find it annoying. We do pay our 
authors and current payment rates are  UK£60 (currently US$100) per article. 

We particularly welcome:
- Patternmaking, drafting, adjustment, and scaling to your size (esp plus sizes)
- Fitting 
- Sleeves
- Finding appropriate and affordable fabrics and supplies
- Studies of extant garments in personal collections (like Sunny's and 
Katherine's)
- Complete beginning-to-end projects 
- Period authentic techniques explained for modern readers, eg authentic 
closures, fiddly stuff, buttonholes through the ages
- Trims, embellishments - more advanced examples
- Period embroidery techniques
- Accessories and head wear

Content should be at the advanced level, but accessible and well explained. It 
must have references to period sources, eg archive.org, museum examples, etc. 
The articles must concentrate on ultra-practical how-tos. It needs to be 
advanced: 33% of readers have over 20 yrs experience, half describe themselves 
as pretty advanced. 

If you're interested in writing for us, please contact me at marion.mcnealy AT 
gmail Dot com, I'd love to hear from you.

Sincerely, Marion McNealy
Editor, Your Wardrobe Unlock'd and Foundations Revealed
http://yourwardrobeunlockd.com/
http://www.foundationsrevealed.com/
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Re: [h-cost] Query re: website

2010-05-18 Thread Lavolta Press




The marketing prose strikes me as pretty tame and tasteful as print or
Internet marketing go.  Of course, everyone's mileage will vary on that sort
of thing.


I think I'm reacting to the fact that the marketing is so targeted to a 
beginning audience. However, much of the website is targeted to a 
beginning audience, so that marketing is actually appropriate. I am 
aware that there is no standard as to what is considered beginning, 
intermediate, or advanced costuming, and that people place themselves 
into these categories depending on their own goals and so on. But to me, 
Your Wardrobe Unlock'd is a beginner site, the corset site somewhat less 
so. In other words, I didn't find a lot of new information there but it 
will be different for other people.


Fran
Lavolta Press
www.lavoltapress.com





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Re: [h-cost] Your Wardrobe Unlock'd

2010-05-18 Thread K. Gillies
I subscribed early on when it first started.  I really enjoyed the content.  I 
ended up ending my subscription because, at the time the articles were not 
downloadable as pdf's (I don't know if they are now or not) and for the money, 
I'd like to be able to reference the content offline.  If I pay $15 an issue 
for a magazine, I have the volumes with articles-- I don't lose the issues I've 
paid for when the subscription ends.
It was the structure or nature of the sub that was my chief problem.  The 
content was quality.
Kathy
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Re: [h-cost] Your Wardrobe Unlock'd

2010-05-18 Thread Franchesca
I remember that the pdf icon was always somewhere either at the top or the
bottom early on. I was always able to download what I needed.

Now maybe they light gray color would make folks think that it was not
downloadable but if you hover over them they show that they are clickable
for downloading.

Only once did I run into an article that I wanted that I could not find a
pdf button for but a week later the button was there.

Franchesca 
http://www.glove.org/

 -Original Message-
 From: h-costume-boun...@indra.com [mailto:h-costume-boun...@indra.com]
 On Behalf Of K. Gillies
 Sent: Tuesday, May 18, 2010 6:44 PM
 To: h-costume@mail.indra.com
 Subject: Re: [h-cost] Your Wardrobe Unlock'd
 
 I subscribed early on when it first started.  I really enjoyed the
 content.  I ended up ending my subscription because, at the time the
 articles were not downloadable as pdf's (I don't know if they are now
 or not) and for the money, I'd like to be able to reference the content
 offline.  If I pay $15 an issue for a magazine, I have the volumes with
 articles-- I don't lose the issues I've paid for when the subscription
 ends.
 It was the structure or nature of the sub that was my chief problem.
  The content was quality.
 Kathy
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Re: [h-cost] Query re: website

2010-05-18 Thread Catherine Olanich Raymond
On Tuesday 18 May 2010 8:55:36 pm Lavolta Press wrote:
  The marketing prose strikes me as pretty tame and tasteful as print or
  Internet marketing go.  Of course, everyone's mileage will vary on that
  sort of thing.
 
 I think I'm reacting to the fact that the marketing is so targeted to a
 beginning audience. However, much of the website is targeted to a
 beginning audience, so that marketing is actually appropriate. I am
 aware that there is no standard as to what is considered beginning,
 intermediate, or advanced costuming, and that people place themselves
 into these categories depending on their own goals and so on. But to me,
 Your Wardrobe Unlock'd is a beginner site, the corset site somewhat less
 so.

My impression is somewhat different--but then, so may my definition of 
beginner.  To me, a beginner is still learning to sew, let alone apply 
that knowledge to historic clothing.


 In other words, I didn't find a lot of new information there but it
 will be different for other people.

That means only that you're not really part of the market segment they're 
targeting, and that's fine.

-- 

Cathy Raymond ca...@thyrsus.com

No one can make as disastrous a bad choice as a smart person, because they 
sell it to themselves really well.--Tobias Buckell

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Re: [h-cost] Query re: website

2010-05-18 Thread Lavolta Press



My impression is somewhat different--but then, so may my definition of
beginner.  To me, a beginner is still learning to sew, let alone apply
that knowledge to historic clothing.


I'd say beginning costumer. I think they are right in focusing the 
site on costuming and not on sewing basics per se--too much competition 
from established sewing magazines. I'm not really in their market, but 
obviously they need to do what they think will sell the largest number 
of subscriptions.


Fran
Lavolta Press
www.lavoltapress.com
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