ursula: Gules, a bear passant sable (bear)
A cat helps cut out fabric

I cut out a linen undertunic this afternoon, and machine-sewed the major seams. For someone who's been in the SCA as long as I have, I'm pretty terrible at making garb: I haven't put the effort in to learn how to fit clothing well up front, nor have I made enough clothing to improve much through trial and error. But I live in a Pennsic kingdom, now, which means I need lots of clothes. And I've been wanting a handwork project for events (I'll hem and finish the seams by hand).

For undertunics there's a shortcut I learned about from [personal profile] chemicallace, called the Elizabethan smock pattern generator. (Instructions for assembly are here.) Despite the name, the smock generator makes a solid rectangular-construction undertunic suitable for most of the SCA's period. The fit is very good, at least if you're a person whose chest measurement is larger than their waist measurement, and you can adjust the time period by playing with the shape of the neckline. (In my experience, it's easier to make a neat rounded neckline than a square one, anyway.) You can also use the smock generator for overtunics, if you add a few inches to your hypothetical measurements.
ursula: Gules, a bear passant sable (bear)
I'm making a stack of lightweight linen undertunics for Pennsic, courtesy of the Elizabethan Smock Generator. The smock generator suggests that you use a facing for the neck hole, but I have a vague sense that this isn't a very medieval solution, due to the waste of fabric; I'm tempted to substitute a strip of linen. Will this be more trouble than it's worth? How do you deal with neck holes?

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