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Tag: polyester

2010.04.30 16:40:24
My apparel construction class began work on our shirt this week.  I have made shirts before, so I expected to have no problems with this project.  As my classmates were still working on collars and front plackets all I had left was cuffs, buttonholes, and hem.  My plan was to have the shirt finished by now so I could spend the weekend and the last week of class studying and working on other projects.  My optimism was foolish, but at least I have time to make another shirt.

I ran into two problems.  My fabric is a polyester/cotton blend, and my iron was too hot.  The heat setting was fine for pressing the fabric flat and pressing open seam allowances, but my front plackets became horribly distorted.  If the crinkled plackets were the only problem I might have been able to turn in this shirt, but I ran into a bigger problem with the sleeves.  Instead of making a muslin for the shirt we just did a tissue fit.  I thought my sleeves were long enough.  They weren’t.  This problem could be fixed with huge cuffs, but then the shirt would look silly.

I need a greige goods shirt to wear for my final project presentation in my fashion industry class, but I did not plan to have that shirt finished by the time my apparel construction shirt is due.  Now I will have to use the same shirt for both classes.  So the shirt I made with fashion fabric is my muslin, and the shirt I will make with muslin is my finished product.  At least I am getting a lot of experience making shirts.




2010.03.09 23:19:53
I recently completed a small project about label laws for my textiles class.  As part of the project I had to examine the labels from a garment made of two or more types of fiber.  I needed to explain what the information on the labels means.  I also had to assess the care instructions to determine if they are appropriate.

A brief search of my closet turned up some shirts, a sweater, and two pairs of bicycle shorts that met the fiber requirements for the project.  The shorts contained some synthetic fibers I have not learned about yet, so I did not use them.  The sweater had the most interesting combination of fibers.  It contains cotton, acrylic, and two other synthetic fibers, but I was unable to use it.  I have never washed the sweater, so I cannot comment on its care instructions.  No, I do not have a dirty sweater in my closet.  It has never been washed because it has never been worn.  That left me with a choice between a cotton/rayon shirt and a cotton/polyester shirt.  Both have been worn and washed a lot, but only the cotton/poly shirt has been ironed, so that is the one I chose.  Had I picked the cotton/rayon one my responses would have looked the same.  I have not followed the care instructions for either one.

Care instruction labels never attracted my attention before this semester.  I knew to separate whites and darks, and to not use the higher iron temperatures on synthetic fabrics, but I never considered a temperature setting other than high for a washing machine.  For white shirts I set dryers at medium temperatures, but for all other items I used the highest dryer temperature setting.  In the Laundromat dryers 12 minutes at high heat costs the same as 12 minutes on low heat.  Other than a few white shirts that were slightly singed by dryers on high and one olefin carpet that should not have been ironed, none of my textile products have been damaged by my care.  (Ink stains from pens left in pants pockets in the wash don’t count.)

The care labels for both shirts advise me to wash cold, dry low, iron warm, and use only non-chlorine bleach.  The cotton/rayon shirt is dark blue, so I do not bleach it, but the white cotton/poly shirt is always washed with a large dose of chlorine bleach.  The cotton/rayon shirt is dried at high heat, and the cotton/poly at medium.  Both shirts are washed at high heat.  My iron is set near its highest setting for the cotton/poly shirt.  Neither shirt has suffered any damage from my aggressive care.

It seems to me that care labels are overly restrictive.  I found labels recommending low heat settings for 100% cotton shirts and pants.  Before taking my textiles class I did not know that rayon is easily damaged by heat, yet my two 100% rayon shirts have survived multiple hot washings without harm.  I treat my dry-clean-only garments correctly, but why must I treat my machine-washable items so gently?  I suspect manufacturers exhort us to exercise such caution in how we wash our garments in order to avoid responsibility for the routine wear and tear that garments experience.  I will continue to disregard most care labels, and I will accept the blame for any damage to my clothing in the wash.



2009.11.18 00:55:17

I continued work on my tailored shirt in class today.  That shirt is not the ugly one; the ugly shirt is the one I made at home this past weekend.  My shirt for class will be beautiful.  I will get to the ugly shirt soon, but first a few words about today’s class.  I attached a pocket and finished the two front pieces.  I also had time to take my serger threading test.  Students must thread a four thread serger to pass the class.  I threaded the serger.  My instructor’s lesson about serger threading made me think the process would be difficult, but the moment I got my hands into the serger’s guts I realized that threading it is easy.  Just follow the color coded threading guide and there is nothing to worry about.  I have not yet threaded a five thread serger, but I expect it will be no more difficult than the four thread one.

This past week I tried to make a tailored shirt at home.  My goal was to gain experience and pick up a few tricks that will make the shirt for class a little easier.  I did not expect my first attempt to turn out too well, but I have to start somewhere.  The shirt is no good, but while making it I learned a lot.   I will make at least one more shirt each week, and as long as each one is better than the last I will call it a success.

I was going to use muslin for my first shirt, but at Walmart I found a print for three cents per yard more than the muslin.  It is polyester, and the print is horribly ugly, but I have not worked with prints or polyester before so the fabric presented me with two more things to learn from this project.

Read more for additional details and photos.






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