with buckram, and some to
boning them here and there, but not to a special support undergarment.
Hope this helps.
Fran
Lavolta Press
New book on 1820s clothing!
http://www.lavoltapress.com
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I didn't find any references to making corded stays from the 1820s,
which I found curious; only bones and wire elastics.
Fran
Lavolta Press
New book on 1820s clothing!
http://www.lavoltapress.com
Aylwen Garden wrote:
Although can I add the stays are for 1830 and 1840, but are just as
suitable
, and various put-them-on-by-yourself
stays. Every single one of them has shoulder straps.
Fran
Lavolta Press
New book on 1820s clothing!
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Where does anyone find the time to do all this? I'm exhausted just
trying to keep up with h-costume, and dropping in to read the archives
of a handful of Yahoo groups on the web every couple of months.
Fran
Lavolta Press
New book on 1820s clothing!
http://www.lavoltapress.com
Kimiko Small
also learn to skim and only read the posts that
interest you, and skip the rest.
Kimiko
- Original Message
From: Lavolta Press f...@lavoltapress.com
Where does anyone find the time to do all this? I'm exhausted just trying to
keep up with h-costume, and dropping in to read
them), I've
contemplated just throwing these onto the recycle pile. I almost never
throw anything away, but probably I should do it once in awhile.
5. Your mileage may vary, do whatever is most convenient for you.
Fran
Lavolta Press
New book on 1820s clothing!
http://www.lavoltapress.com
of copyrighted works is currently being investigated by the
Justice Department, hopefully they will not get away with it.
Fran
Lavolta Press
New book on 1820s clothing!
http://www.lavoltapress.com
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for a tasteful
list of the modern publisher's other books in the back) but apparently a
lot of people don't object, or Google thinks they won't.
The breathtakingly massive scanning of copyrighted works is another
issue altogether. I'm rooting for the Justice Department.
Lavolta Press
New book on 1820s
applies to _every copyright holder
in every country that signed the Berne agreement_. Not just those in the
US. I gather there have been some protests from countries in the EU but
I don't know a lot about that.
Again, I'm rooting for the Justice Department.
Fran
Lavolta Press
New book
, but this kind of thing is not
for me.
Fran
Lavolta Press
http://www.lavoltapress.com
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. There's a lot of stuff, but it's
unedited, unorganized stuff of all levels of quality. People seem to
feel the need to just say _something_, anything, all the time. And to
post pictures of it.
Best,
Fran
Lavolta Press
http://www.lavoltpress.com
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is it to the historian?
My sister-in-law got a PhD in textile technology and then spent years
as a successful manager in modern factories. She knows absolutely zip
about period processes. She doesn't even understand how home sewers do
things, just how factories do them.
Fran
Lavolta Press
New
for a job after graduation; and that the courses they take should be
chosen with that goal in mind.
Fran
Lavolta Press
New book on 1820s clothing!
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is fun and personal learning rather than a paying career.
I am not, by any means, saying it is wrong to get a degree merely for
personal learning and enjoyment. I'm just saying that it is a luxury the
student should carefully consider from a career standpoint.
Fran
Lavolta Press
New book on 1820s
.
Thanks,
Fran
Lavolta Press
Books on making historic clothing
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Sharon Collier wrote:
If you use something like silk chiffon, it stretches enough to give some
leeway. Can you remove what's left of your shade to use as a pattern?
One of the panels is more or less intact, so yes. The pattern is not
really the issue, but getting the material onto the
chiffon. I think they glued the layers
together before sewing them on, because they're still stuck together
even at the silk splits. For all I know, the glue is what is making the
silk shatter, though it could well be 20 years of exposure to heat.
Thanks,
Fran
Lavolta Press
Books on making
of the frame curve in and out (are concave and convex,
tulip petal shape). I think the person who made this shade glued the
layers of material together in places to keep the layers together at the
concave indents. Am I right, and was this necessary?
Thanks a lot,
Fran
Lavolta Press
http
have considered is a deep household-linens type crocheted
edging, dyed to coordinate with the shade and put on fairly flat, not
ruffled to death.
Fran
Lavolta Press
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Thanks for all your help!
This looks like a good way to use up remnants from projects.
I have some devore velvet around that I am currently thinking of using,
with beaded fringe.
Fran
Lavolta Press
http://www.lavoltapress.com
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I think the first questions are, what is your specific purpose/goal in
setting up this website, blog, whatever? How big do you want it to be?
How often do you plan to revise it? Do you want participation from other
people, and if so what kind?
Fran
Lavolta Press
Books of historic clothing
Lavolta Press
Books of historic clothing patterns
http://www.lavoltapress.com
Regina Voorhes wrote:
I am looking for a pattern, available in plus sizes, for a military-looking
Steampunk outfit. I plan to do a sporting-type suit,
snip
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Lorina,
Didn't you have a new book on textile definitions coming out?
Fran
Lavolta Press
Books of historic clothing patterns
http://www.lavoltapress.com
Five Rivers Chapmanry wrote:
While you're looking for gifts for the costumer, researcher or lover
of trivia on your list,
snip
Why bother with dye remover? Personally, I'd just dye the fabric some
color darker than the spots. Burgundy or purple sounds ideal.
Fran
Lavolta Press
Books on historic costuming
http://www.lavoltapress.com
Elena House wrote:
Well, this is a first for me... I washed some brand new natural
the flawed fabric with one guaranteed not break
out in spots?
Fran
Lavolta Press
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Is the pattern available on paper?
I like the shoe bag.
It's nice to see products manufactured in the US for a change. The
economy could use it.
Fran
Lavolta Press
Books on historic costume--suitable for Christmas gifts!
http://www.lavoltapress.com
Martha Kelly wrote:
The Shippensburg
When we have some of these patterns ready to put on the website, you KNOW
I'll be telling you about it!
Great, I look forward to it!
Fran
Lavolta Press
http://www.lavoltapress.com
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I get emails with subjects like that every day . . . only it's not
interfacings they want to sell me. The spammers have figured out that
certain words are triggers so they try for the obscurely worded but
identifiable meaning.
Fran
Lavolta Press
Books on making historic clothing
http
).
Fran
Lavolta Press
Books on historic clothing
http://www.lavoltapress.com
susan...@juno.com wrote:
That is wonderful! I have Costume in Detail checked out from the library right
now and it is definitely on my want list. My hubby gave me the Madeleine
Vionnet book by Betty Kirke. I, too, am
I think that honor belongs to Mark Twain (A Connecticut Yankee in King
Arthur's Court).
Fran
Lavolta Press
New book on 1820s clothing!
http://www.lavoltapress.com
On 12/27/2009 6:03 PM, Chiara Francesca wrote:
Having read SH books I still firmly believe that Sir Arthur Conan Doyle is one
List members may find this interesting:
http://www.anthus.com/Colors/NBS.html
It doesn't have every historical color, and the swatches of course
depend to some extent on your monitor. Still, it contains some useful
information.
Fran
Lavolta Press
Books on making historic clothing
http
the edition of the
Pantone book or fan.
Fran
Lavolta Press
Books on making historic clothing
http://www.lavoltapress.com
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of their site. If you want a website
specifically oriented toward colors for fabric printing, or historic
costume, I'd advise you to search the web for it and post a link. I'm
sure we'll all be glad to see it.
Fran
Lavolta Press
Books on making historic clothing
http://www.lavoltapress.com
, I'm not in the mood to play one-upmanship games.
Fran
Lavolta Press
http://www.lavoltapress.com
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Fine with me. I have two books to lay out and proof. I was just throwing
out a URL I ran across when I was researching something.
Fran
Lavolta Press
http://www.lavoltapress.com
On 1/2/2010 11:05 AM, Kimiko Small wrote:
Then may I suggest we drop this topic asap? Please?
Kimiko
Sounds like a fine resolution for the new year. You're the one who said
my comments were erroneous and that people should go elsewhere for
information. Maybe it's Mercury Retrograde having a go at us, because I
thought it was possible to have a discussion on the topic.
I merely posted a
I think I know what this means, but can anyone point me to an official
definition? I've already been through umpteen textile dictionaries,
including ones produced by various mills.
Fran
Lavolta Press
http://www.lavoltapress.com
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Right now I am looking at this one:
http://www.decorativesilk.com/scripts/prodList.asp?idCategory=45
Fran
Lavolta Press
http://www.lavoltapress.com
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fabrics are ugly, though.
Fran
Lavolta Press
Books on historic clothing
http://www.lavoltapress.com
What lovely fabrics! What are you planning to make?
Joan Jurancich
joa...@surewest.net
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http
but not nails.
For a really neat site on historic and other measurements, check out
mathematician Russ Rowlett's Dictionary of Units of Measurement:
http://www.unc.edu/~rowlett/units/
which even defines things like gnat's eye.
Fran
Books on historic clothing
Including _The Lady's
I ran across this page when looking for embroidered silks (which these
are not).
http://www.anjooriansilks.com/gallery/detail.asp?iCat=154iPic=5313
If you have any questions about the fiber, etc., please contact the
website owners (not me).
Fran
Lavolta Press
Books on historic clothing
If they will sell it to you white so you can dye it yourself, I have no
problem with doing that.
Fran
Lavolta Press
Books on making historic clothing
http://www.lavoltapress.com
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you
need to research the names of organizations.
Fran
Lavolta Press
Books on historic clothing
http://www.lavoltapress.com
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this in a contract both of you sign before
you pay them anything.
Otherwise, you will probably not get exactly what you want, they'll
refuse you a refund, you'll think they're rude, and everyone will be
dissatisfied.
Fran
Lavolta Press
Books on historic clothing
http://www.lavoltapress.com
it for, and it wouldn't
require tons of yardage.
Fran
Lavolta Press
Books on historic clothing
http://www.lavoltapress.com
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You mean these guys?
http://www.goldendor.com/retail_store.html
Fran
Lavolta Press
http://www.lavoltapress.com
On 1/17/2010 5:11 PM, Chiara Francesca wrote:
Silk d'Or has a private bridal shop that they put out the overflow into that
little back room that has minimal lighting sometimes
http://www.srfabrics.com/cottons/velvet.htm
http://www.ginnysfinefabrics.com/Fabrics/CordandCotton/CottonVelvet.html
You could also ask for swatches from
http://www.britexfabrics.com
Britex used to have a good selection of 100% cotton velvet, though I
have not been there in a awhile. The
I'm quite taken with the olive green embossed velveteen. Anyone know how
heavy it is?
Fran
Lavolta Press
http://www.lavoltapress.com
On 1/19/2010 12:25 PM, cw15147-hcos...@yahoo.com wrote:
Renaissance Fabrics (online only) regularly carries cotton velveteen:
http://www.renaissancefabrics.net
?
Fran
Lavolta Press
http://www.lavoltapress.com
On 1/19/2010 12:41 PM, cw15147-hcos...@yahoo.com wrote:
I've handled that fabric. It's medium-ish, not super heavy. I don't think it
was meant for, say, drapes, at least not without a backing.
Claudine
- Original Message
From: Lavolta
I'd suggest a net search for linen velvet. You will find it. But it is
incredibly expensive. It makes 100% silk velvet look cheap.
Fran
Lavolta Press
http://www.lavoltapress.com
On 1/19/2010 1:18 PM, cw15147-hcos...@yahoo.com wrote:
Ditto. I've never heard of such a thing. Even if it's couch
?
Fran
Lavolta Press
http://www.lavoltapress.com
What's bothering me here is, why should these headdresses be associated
with roosters? Roosters are male, and these are female fashions. Yes, I
know a cock has a comb on its head but still, this seems to be a
stretch. Even if it's an insult, it seems
and
Edwardians used trimming to cover bad material, they made sure to
arrange the material where trimming could logically be located. The
hippies put the trimming anywhere.
Fran
Lavolta Press
Books on historic clothing
http://www.lavoltapress
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http://www.et-tu.com/whp/nonfiction.htm
Fran
Lavolta Press
Books on historic clothing
http://www.lavoltapress.com
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Thompson's is an apportioning scale system (not an inch measure system).
I have a set of their scales and a stack of their publications. Their
strategy was to give you some fashion plates and some diagrams of basic
components, and let you decide how to put the outfit together.
Fran
Lavolta
. However, Jane Austen does
interestingly say in _Northanger Abbey_ that Catherine and her friend
Isabella called each other by their Christian name, were always arm in
arm when they walked, pinned up each other's train for the dance, and
were not to be divided in the set.
Fran
Lavolta Press
Books
Victorian bodices often have baleen stays. You can probably buy a really
damaged one off eBay and take out the bones. The bones I have, have all
become brittle with age, but if you want baleen, it's pretty easy to
find that way.
Fran
Lavolta Press
Books on Historic Clothing
http
For those who want an inexpensive Pantone type guide to communicate with
dyers, custom dressmakers, etc.:
http://galaxygauge.com/p_col_clz.html
http://galaxygauge.com/p_col_cmp.html
Fran
Lavolta Press
Books on historic clothing
www.lavoltapress.com
?_encoding=UTF8m=ATVPDKIKX0DERv=glance
Fran
Lavolta Press
Books on historic clothing
www.lavoltapress.com
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Has goth (clothing and events) basically evolved into steampunk?
Fran
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if Fred has any left (his website is
www.rlshep.com), but if not, this book may be available from other sources.
Fran
Lavolta Press
Books on historic clothing, including
The Lady's Stratagem: A Repository of 1820s Directions for the Toilet,
Mantua-Making, Stay-Making, Millinery Etiquette
for teenagers and also for beginning sewers. Of
course there's nothing wrong with being either a teenager or a beginning
sewer. But, are many adults who are experienced sewers doing arty
recycling? Or are they just altering garments in a conservative way or
just for size?
Fran
Lavolta Press
Interesting, but I was thinking of something more along the wearable
than the conceptual art line.
Rebecca: How do you keep the sweaters from just unraveling?
Fran
Lavolta Press
www.lavoltapress.com
On 4/21/2010 4:42 PM, Käthe Barrows wrote:
I'm wondering: How many adults are doing arty
That's classy!
Fran
On 4/22/2010 7:32 AM, AVCHASE wrote:
Grandmother taught me that to change knits machine sew a grossgrain ribbon of
the desired length on the line to be cut. Cut below the line. Sew on the
outside if a rounded finish is desired, turn and hand hem on the ribs. Sew on
the
I was wondering if you felted them, which seems to be the technique du
jour for cutting up sweaters to use as fabric.
Fran
Lavolta Press
www.lavoltapress.com
On 4/22/2010 4:55 AM, R Lloyd Mitchell wrote:
I use a ziz-zag (two rows) and cut the line between for sweaters or other
knitted items
of that jacket, though I admit the colors, like
many men's suit colors, are too neutral for my taste. Good idea though,
as men's suits are often discarded when they are still in very good shape.
Fran
Lavolta Press
www.lavoltapress.com
On 4/22/2010 12:12 PM, Käthe Barrows wrote:
For one of my classes
Lots of examples of too-arty-to-be-wearable.
Fran
Lavolta Press
www.lavoltapress.com
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the hairstyle. You just attach
them. Sure, with long hair you may need one fewer hair piece for a
style, but having or not having long hair is mostly a matter for your
modern daily lifestyle.
Fran
Lavolta Press
Books on historic clothing
www.lavoltapress.com
for that period.
Fran
Lavolta Press
Books on historic clothing
www.lavoltapress.com
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in the book.
Fran
Lavolta Press
Books on Historic Clothing
www.lavoltapress.com
I recently purchased an 1868
Harper's with step-by-step directions for a ladies' hairstyle. This was
accomplished with the ladies' own long hair. It doesn't look difficult
to do.
Since the film, The Young Victoria
bathroom is uncomfortable for a few minutes.
Shower baths were considered more uncomfortable (though bracing) but
they seem to have been taken cold.
Fran
Lavolta Press
www.lavoltapress.com
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Once again, piracy and a parasitic attitude triumph!
Fran
On 5/12/2010 11:32 AM, Hanna Zickermann wrote:
It was my first book on Medieval clothing, and I still like it a lot
after seven years, so I think it was a good buy. I sent the scan to you
privately.
Hanna
At 19:36 12.05.2010, you
But is pirating the author's material exactly what he needed? Was his
permission gained before giving you material of his that you did not
want to pay for?
Fran
On 5/12/2010 12:17 PM, Zuzana Kraemerova wrote:
Thank you so much!
That is exactly what I needed.
Really a beautiful pattern... I
if
they gave permission and giving them the emails of the people involved.
Which I just did.
Fran
Lavolta Press
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On 5/12/2010 12:51 PM, Schaeffer, Astrida wrote:
Fran,
Your actions assume much and jump to great and unsubstantiated conclusions.
No, actually, as I always do in these circumstances, I very carefully
asked the person I contacted if copyright permission was given and said
if not, they
I also, by the way, do not even remotely feel threatened if people say
they don't read my posts, or that they won't. I don't read many posts
on email lists either.
Fran
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Sure, calling people poisonous is gentle.
Look: If someone says they did not seek permission for work they are
distributing on an email list, website, etc, I raise the possibility
with the publisher, author, or distributor as to whether copyright theft
occurred and give them contact
If nothing illegal occurred under German copyright law, no harm done by
mentioning to the copyright holder.
Fran
On 5/12/2010 2:18 PM, Rachel Sohn wrote:
My understanding is that one or two pages were scanned and sent
privately, to be used in private research.
Under the copyright laws with
I'm forseeing the usual endless gyrations justifying piracy and a
parasitic attitude. I've gotten tired of the justifications for piracy.
I just report everything that seems questionable to me to the copyright
holder and let them determine whether they want that use to be made.
Fran
On
Personally, this civility fight is stupid and both parties are exaggerating!
Gyrations, gyrations.
It is perfectly civil to ask someone if you may copy their work and
perfect civil to facilitate that, if the copying parties do not do it
themselves. If people are afraid the copyright
On 5/12/2010 2:56 PM, Donna Hawk wrote:
you're not going to change her mind, sway her in the least, nor get an
apology.
Correct. My livelihood depends on copyright law. I never see people
apologizing for stealing. So, with two books to get to the printer, as I
say, I just notify the
As I've said, it's very curious that the same people who are so emphatic
about their legal rights to do this or that and about civility, are so
opposed to asking permission to use other people's copyrighted material.
Why is that, I wonder?
Fran
On 5/12/2010 3:43 PM, Beteena Paradise wrote:
On 5/12/2010 4:04 PM, Sharon Collier wrote:
Out of curiosity, how much might a copyright holder charge for permission to
do this?
For this kind of subsidiary use the fee is totally up to whoever is
controlling the rights to that use, ranging from free to whatever they
want to charge. Or
. Which I just did.
Fran
Lavolta Press
www.lavoltapress.com
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h-costume
One of the things we found when photographing in European museums is that
the rules are very strict on who the copyright of the photographed image
belongs to. It definitely isn't the photographer. In some places where there
is a strict no-photography rule (Verulamium, Wallace Collection etc),
Sharon, I'm ignoring the question of fair use of a copied page from a
publication (either physical or digital via the Internet) and speaking only to
intellectual rights:
Is this German copyright law? If the book is copyrighted in Germany,
that is the law that applies. The Berne
and will be deleting future posts
on this.
Another reason I wonn't let you run me around.
Fran
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On 5/13/2010 8:08 AM, R Lloyd Mitchell wrote:
Coming late into this discussion, I have found myself wondering about how
commercial companies
(say Waverly) go about reproducing fabrics from the historical perspective
(say Winterthur or Williamsburg). Permission to copy?? Permission to
It makes me want to heave.
But, as you've noted, the law is what you have to follow when using
other people's work, not your personal standards.
I have not noticed at all that art is being killed. Certainly, in
terms of publications, there is a huge increase in the number of books
On 5/13/2010 11:29 AM, Sharon Collier wrote:
I see the internet/emails/ h-costume list as a group of friends. Someone
says,I have a book with an interesting picture. Someone else wants to
borrow the book to look at the picture. If we were in the same town, the
other person could just come to
they go round,
and round, and round, and round, and round with arguments about why they
personally shouldn't. Sorry, your feelings and your personal
convenience do not govern copyright law.
Fran
On 5/13/2010 11:36 AM, Lavolta Press wrote:
On 5/13/2010 11:29 AM, Sharon Collier wrote:
I see
Again, all I see here is people who don't want to bother paying for
material or asking permission (pirates and parasites), so they go round,
and round, and round, and round, and round with arguments about why they
personally shouldn't. Sorry, your feelings and your personal convenience
do not
No Chris, I am not going to get run around on this one yet again,
diligently looking up stuff for people who say they are confused and who
then go round and round being yet more confused, all to the end of
asserting they can do whatever they feel like. Read some books on
copyright law.
Fran
On 5/13/2010 2:30 PM, R Lloyd Mitchell wrote:
Such clarity. Your thoughtful explanation is of great interest to me...one of
those independents who strives to do Art with originality as well as craft. The
laws that have been developed are suppose to be safe=guards...
And they are. There is
Or you could get on Skype and hold it up to your web cam for your
long-distance friend to see. That way someone can look without making a
copy for them.
Or you can just give them the title and explain why you think it's such
a good book, and let them look up reviews and bookstores on the
Thus
stealing the bread from the mouths of the children of the starving
publishers since, unless self published, or a Best Seller, the authors
of academic stuff get little or nothing for their hard work.
So you think they should get less?
Fran
___
But I do know a few of her contributors
Do you know what the contributor payment range is? I don't do much
magazine work any more but if the price is right . . . .
Fran
Lavolta Press
www.lavoltapress.com
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want to see in marketing prose is pretty geeky. Give me the facts
and figures, that's what makes me happy.
Fran
Lavolta Press
www.lavoltapress.com
On 5/17/2010 8:32 PM, Marjorie Wilser wrote:
Here it is:
http://yourwardrobeunlockd.com/
I clicked on an ad on Facebook.
Thoughts on this site
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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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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http://www.magnoliapearl.com/shop/clothing/clothing-gallery3.htm
http://www.magnoliapearl.com/shop/clothing/clothing-gallery2.htm
Fran
Lavolta Press
Books on making historic clothing
www.lavoltapress.com
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