It's mostly not that demanding, and super easy to learn. You see what you make with your own hands as a result (which is nice) and in the long run can replace most of your wardrobe with stuff that is exactly your style.
I make all of my underwear myself (boxers are a super simple pattern, 2h a piece), have self-made joggers, work outfits with trousers and shirts, high vis cycling jacket with merino lining in a softshell windbreaker, pullovers, backpacks...
And you can listen to podcasts and audiobooks while you're at it, and it's a hobby that needs little usage of screens (working in front of a display all day I want to spend time doing sth offline)
I actually know a good deal about sewing, my mother was a pretty well known dress maker in the Midwest renfair scene so I was raised to know all the tricks. I'm even restoring a singer rocketeer to be my main machine. I just don't have a lot of room and can't really find patterns for stuff I'd wear. The projector idea fixes one of those problems though!
Question: what material would one use for underwear? Boxers make sense, anything thin and light and not scratchy.
But what about boxer briefs? Material with a bit of stretch to it? I imagine this would be harder to sew?
I just bought a sewing machine at Goodwill on a whim, gonna play with it, just trying to size up the difficulty here lol
I use pattern projector, https://www.patternprojector.com/en
It's a web-app where you first calibrate the projector to a size of your choice (I use my cutting map's grid for that) and then load your pattern as pdf.
Really simple to use, setup takes 2 minutes and you're ready to cut
you need equipment, I. E. You have more stuff standing around.
you need to find a place to setup the projector permanently or go through the hazzle of doing it every time manually
Pro:
TL/DR; Boost in productivity
you safe so much time
in the long run you save money (don't need to print anymore, need a lot less chalk)
you need no printer anymore
you can perfectly align all your pieces beforehand in inkscape, then minimize the leftovers
less time spent with stuff you don't like to do (cut the pattern, bring pattern on the fabric) and a lot more time spent with stuff you want to do (actual sewing)
By now I just take photos of all the scrap pieces I have, with a metering tool lying around it (similar to old csi crime scene photos). That way I can judge quickly whether any leftovers I have are large enough to fit the pattern, which saves even more time :)
I started with a German pattern designer, who posts in depth video tutorials to all her designs, called pattydoo.
Even if you don't speak German, she speaks very clearly so I guess YouTube auto subtitles could do a decent job.
While I'd personally recommend starting on sth easy like a beanie. I think it's more important that you show them why sewing is awesome. And that is because you can use your imagination to do what you want and make it reality. Make a piece of clothing you like in the style/colors/pattern you want.
So if they want to go for a t-shirt or dress instead, let them 🙂 (perhaps steer clear from sth really complex like a buttoned shirt for the first thing they make...)
Then take it from there.
Let them plan the project themselves (what do I want to do, which cloth do I want, how much do I need, how many buttons etc).
Especially in the beginning be generous with how much cloth you buy, that way they can make mistakes without having to stop for a week, waiting for the next trip to the store to buy an extra half-meter of fabric. And you'll find some use for smaller leftovers eventually.
I just started trying this around December. I was able to mount the projector on the ceiling, but since installation, I think it has shifted a little because one side seems slightly blurrier than the other. So I need to adjust it, but since it’s on the ceiling, it’s pretty high up and I haven’t gotten the ladder out. I’ve been mostly sewing knits and they’re forgiving enough to let it go.
This is something I'm recently struggling since I discovered the availability of patterns online.
I've been learning to draw bespoke patterns from scratch and the lack of reference points for measurements on most of the available stuff throws me off.
I have considered something like this but I don't know, seems too much set up in my tiny workshop for something I'm not sure I'll use often enough.
The MacGyver variant took some time to setup, but if you can find a way to permanently mount it as I had in my old flat then it's actually very quick to start :)
Still I get the reluctance. I was at the point where I thought of getting a printer and then decided for the projector instead. It's faster and produces less waste (speaking more of the fabric than the paper here).
If you got a dedicated workshop (little bit of envy here, I'd love that) then you could just mount it to the ceiling, thereby it takes up no additional space
That's pretty awesome, your light table means you don't have the hand shadow on the projection, but also only works on cloth that let's through light. what material do you use for the top so that your can cut on it and have the light shine through?
I'm mostly dealing with light ripstop fabrics. So yea, it doesn't apply great to more solid fabrics.
The table's surface is tempered glass. Then I have a paper template on that. Then I hot cut the ripstop right on top of the paper template with a soldering iron. If I go quick enough, the paper doesn't burn. The paper does degrade over multiple uses, but I've been able to use the same blueprint ~8 times before holes start showing up.
Didn't know that even existed but your suggestion is genius! That's fixing the problem so much better than anything I came up with 😍. Ordered, incl. a mount for the Beamer. Will post an update once it's here