SDET

  • 7 Posts
  • 53 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
cake
Cake day: June 9th, 2023

help-circle





  • Cipher@beehaw.orgOPtoCreative@beehaw.orgMy fourth shirt
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    2
    ·
    edit-2
    1 year ago

    The biggest thing is to not be afraid of mistakes in my opinion. You will learn more about how constructions go together by doing them, making mistakes, reevaluating your mental model, and fixing those mistakes than you will by paralyzing yourself with fear.

    Find a reasonable first pattern and make it several times. Then find a second pattern that takes skills from the first and adds others. In this way, you grow your skill set to accomplish the things you want to do.

    Once you reach that point, try different materials. Learn about how different materials need to be finished, and use that knowledge to modify the patterns you already know. French seams are an excellent tool for this.

    At this point, the world is your oyster. I’m currently working my way through a few new patterns, and a wild variety of fabrics. It’s very satisfying, and I hope you enjoy it as much as I am.

    This was my fourth shirt, but I recently posted my ninth. I’ve come a long way, and I still make a bunch of little dumb mistakes. It’s fine, it has never ruined one of my shirts.

    Oh and one more thing! When you buy a pattern many will be printed on tissue paper, and will have the lines printed for ever available size. It’s expensive, but I have grown to love swedish tracing paper. It’s not actually “paper”, and the idea is that you trace your intended size lines of a pattern onto it, cut the panels out of the swedish tracing paper, and now you have a more durable way to repeat the exact same sewing pattern with whatever fabric you find yourself with. By doing this, you can keep the purchased tissue pattern as an archive. Maybe you need to retrace something eventually, or maybe you want to make the same thing in a different size one day. Regardless of why, you can’t do that if you cut your intended size out of the tissue pattern.


  • Cipher@beehaw.orgOPtoCreative@beehaw.orgI finished my tunic!
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    1 year ago

    Especially for those of us who run hot!

    Sometimes you just gotta have clothing that feels like an illusion to survive the ever-growing heat. I find myself particularly enjoying rayon, which often feels actively cool when I wear it.

    This rayon linen blend is like something out of a book for me, though. It may end up being my new favorite fabric


  • Cipher@beehaw.orgOPtoCreative@beehaw.orgI finished my tunic!
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    5
    ·
    1 year ago

    As an aside, this was the most difficult shirt I’ve made yet easily. I attribute this to two factors:

    • The fabric having such a fluid drape is crazy. It’s like trying to stitch water together sometimes.
    • I have come to dislike fusible interfacing because of the puckered texture it often gets during washing. This uses a Pellon branded sew in interfacing, and is my first time using such interfacing. It worked amazingly well, but was an adjustment for sure.

    Ultimately I intend to ask my fabric store more about this particular fabric and what other colors it may be available in. It’s just so glorious to wear.















  • Unfortunately, many of us have to jump into a given role and learn the hard way whether it fits us. As an example, I never intended to go into SQA, I just fell into the role. Turns out I love it.

    Stumbling into your career is inelegant, imprecise, and frustrating though.

    In spite of that sometimes experience is the best teacher whether we like it or not. Good luck out there


  • I’ve been in QA for 12 years, and it can be great if you want to innovate (test automation) while also sometimes doing manual work (manual test) to punctuate hard thinking sessions.

    I’m not diagnosed as neurodivergent(and strongly suspect I may have ADHD) but do I have a lot of ND coworkers in dev and QA.

    This really comes down to choosing for what your ND needs. Spend some time getting to know your brain and it’s particular needs. Identify what you want vs what you need.

    Good luck on finding your way


  • Cipher@beehaw.orgOPtoCreative@beehaw.orgMy fourth shirt
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    1 year ago

    In my opinion, if you are interested you should.

    It’s very satisfying to wear a shirt that you created and that no one else can even own because you made it. Just make sure you watch some tutorial videos and don’t let fear of failure get the best of you

    If you are worried about losing the fabrics value from messing up, consider picking up some super cheap cotton muslin to practice on. Near me it is as low as $5 a yard, So a practice shirt could be 10 to $15 worth of muslin