
Men's shirt, 2012
Re-enactor's closet seems to always
lack basic linens, at least in this household. It took a
shamefully long time for Jarno to get a second shirt.
This time I used the best shirt material I've come across so far
(thanks to Riikka), a very fine italian linen. It's so densely
wowen with fine thread that it's much slower to sew by hand than
any other linen I've worked with, but the result makes up for
the extra effort.

The
construction is based, like in Jarno's first shirt, on
Garsault's instructions intrepreted by La Couturiere
Parisienne. The seams are sewn by machine and flat-felled by
hand, and all the gatherings and hemming are done by hand.

I began on the sleeves, which were easy to work with while they
were still separate from the shirt body. I gathered the sleeve
ends to a 2cm wide wrist band and added a gathered cotton lace
on the other edge.

On the shirt body I first made up the shoulder reinforcement
bands with the neck gussets and sewed them on their place. This
time I made them longer than in the instructions, which clearly
were meant fit a less well built period fop.
Like in Jarno's first shirt, I made a little modern tweaking by
lowering the front of the neckline by 3cm as it just fits so
much better and is also more comfortable.

This time I also managed to get the front slit reinforcement
piece quite heart shaped, as the dense linen didn't ravel so
easily. I think I used gathering thread on the edges too to help
turning and ironing them. I managed to burn my fingers with
steam nevertheless.

I gathered the neckline on the collar, again taking the (perhaps
modern) precaution of measuring where the shoulder should end up
for the collar to fit properly. This caused the back part to be
more gathered than the front.
After finishing the gathering on the front side I sewed the
underside of the collar on the gathering. The finished width of
the collar is 6cm.

After finishing the more time-consuming details on the wrists
and neck I got to making up the shirt. I was happy to realise
that after making a few shirts I didn't have to rack my brain
anymore about how the heck the underarm gusset is best sewn in,
it all went quite smoothly. It's all done in flat felled seams
like I already mentioned - they are more work than french ones
but I'm still grown very fond of them.

In the first shirt I had left off the slit gussets, which I
lived to regret after a few wears and washing - there is a
reason why they were there! This time I added them, and learned
that they were not hard to make at all. Of course, I don't know
whether the assembly method I used is completely period correct
or not, but it works.

Another thing I changed from the first shirt was to gather the
extra material at the shoulder instead of pleating it. I wasn't
quite sure where the seam allowances should go, but it felt
logical to finish them between the shirt body and the shoulder
reinforcement piece. I had already turned the flat felled
seam on the sleeve's side, so I had to twist them a bit.

The buttonholes are worked by hand with a heavier stitching
thread, which I also used in making the dorset wheel-type of
buttons. The plastic rings I used for the base are thicker than
the period variants made of bone, so the buttons are not quite
that elegant, but at least there's an attempt to get
period-looking buttons.

A relatively simple item such as a shirt took some time due to
the high amount of hand-sewing, but the result makes up for it.
Even though a shirt belongs strictly speaking to the category of
underwear, details such as sleeve ends and neck are still
visible, and moreover Jarno may sometimes remove his coat in
company although a gentleman ought not to. Anyway, regardless of
how much of the hand finishing actually shows, there is
something charmingly old fashioned and sweet about sewing a
shirt for one's husband.