Young girls can get free lessons in public school. I've always thought this is ideal for a cross dresser. Last year I finally bought a sewing machine. Has anyone else been tempted?
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Young girls can get free lessons in public school. I've always thought this is ideal for a cross dresser. Last year I finally bought a sewing machine. Has anyone else been tempted?
I have one, inherited from my mother. If I were unusually sized I would be tempted to sew my own, but I have the good luck of being able to fit off-the-rack clothing easily. Considering the cost of fabric and the time sewing consumes it makes more sense to buy ready-made.
Sewing is like sailing. If you really enjoy the journey it can be very rewarding, but if you want to get somewhere you take the jet.
I have sewn since I was a teenager. I started out sewing rolled and pleated panels for my car. Later, as a performer, I sewed shirts just to have different ones than what were available. It's a waste of time now that sewing is done overseas for pennies per hour.
I still do repairs and I also do canvas sewing on a 60 year old Singer machine I bought off ebay. It looked so nice I bought an antique table for it. So I have two sewing machines, a heavy duty straight stitch and a "normal" one that does stretch fabric, hems, etc.
Sewing doesn't have to be "girly", most tailors are male.
Why would sewing be connected to cross dressing. We're dudes. Very few dudes are into sewing.
Yeah, I'm into sewing big time, We just moved so it's still packed away :(
Not really. I probably wouldn't be interested unless I became someone's wife and a home maker.:)
I never learned how to sew, and clothing is cheap, so I figure why bother....besides, I can get a great club outfit for $20....
I purchased a sewing machine a while back for alterations more than for making new cloths. Hemming cloths to the right length, sewing a tear in a piece of material, maybe replace a zipper etc. I will probably not take it much farther than that. Mine is a Kenmore and it also sews monograms into the cloths if you take the time to program it. I told the lady at sears I wanted one that would sew canvas, she pointed me to the more expensive line. I figured if it will sew canvas it will go through a few layers of denim. I guess it would sew the thicker things like Corsets that need to be much stronger than normal cloths.
I haven't bought a sewing machine yet, but i have made other modifications, alterations etc. to various pieces of clothing. I may buy a sewing machine eventually.
I also do a lot of jewelry work. I like when people are very creative.
I am very much a dude but yes I have thought about getting one. I just would like to be able to make "exactly" what I want the way I want it to fit. I could also make my fiance stuff.
Should CD's natural take to a sewing machine? I think not. In this day and age, if a shirt or skirt is ripped up, throw it away and buy another one. Way back in the times like 100 years ago when the sewing machine was invented, give or take a decade or so, women stayed home as kept house, cooked, and sewed. People were very poor and had so little, so when a garment was ripped or had a hole in it, sewing it up saved a few cents. Nowadays I feel a personal home sewing machine is obsolete. And the darning of socks should be just that, throw those darn socks away if they had holes in them. Maybe they aren't done on a sewing machine but the principle is the same, throw them away and buy more. Sleeve ripped off of shirt, throw it away and get another one. But back in the day, the sewing machine had it's place. But today, the home sewing machine is only good for a boat anchor.
I've considered it. Oftentimes, there's a look or feel you can imagine, but you can't find something that matches that. I think it'd be fun artistically.
Having said that, however, I can't find enough time to do everything else on my list of things to do, so I've not bothered.
Yes I've been 'tempted' as you say. Probably will follow through. Sewing and crochet too would be good pastimes. I love the detailed focus of attention on intricate colorful complicated patterns. And the sheer joy of accomplishment once a task like that is served. Especially if it's something for a GG friend, and is also appreciated by them....er...I mean 'her' (because I'm a 1-woman girl).
I am ready for a new one, The one I have is over 25 years old. The new ones are so cool, you can even get a programmable one and do embroidery I learned to sew when I was a teenager, out of need. I had two pair of identical jeans, both torn in a critical area. Fortunately the tears were on different panels. I removed and changed out an entire panel to get one good pair of Jeans. My mom was impressed. I do any sewing in the house. When we first got married, I sewed a Santa suit that I have been using every Christmas for more than 25 years. The wife wouldn't know how to thread the needle on it.
I don't own a sewing machine, but I have thought about it. Just the other day while reminiscing about my early CDing I was looking at McCalls dress patterns on the web and remembering my Mom cutting out and making cloths for herself and my sisters.
I am not a typical GG shape, I am shaped very much like a man. There are so many styles of dresses I would love to wear but they just don't fit right. My shoulders are too wide and there just is no way I am going to wear that much hip padding to fill out the bottom!
What I would really like to find is a friend with a sewing machine;)
Actually (more seriously) I would like to find a CD friendly alteration shop near me.
Seana
Seana, that's why I thought a sewing machine was such a natural thing. I learned to take in the side seams. That way I can buy any style I want.
I have always thought that the "male" brain was well suited for using a sewing machine. Think about it - power tools, assembly of parts, visualization, diagrams and so on.
I've been seriously tempted, and have spent quite a bit of time researching options and reading about the basics. If I had more time on my hands I have no doubt I'd pursue it further. I see far too many garments in a flattering pattern but the wrong material, or vice versa. Wouldn't it be nice to make what appeals to me? Not that it's a trivial challenge,of course, but I've always liked a challenge. Perhaps when I retire.
I think of Dilbert in the episode of the TV series where he visits his mother's house and says, "Mom? Can I borrow your sewing machine? Mine doesn't exist." :D
I think back to one summer when I was so desperately craving being able to wear a nightgown (and hadn't yet worked up the courage to just buy one) that I made one, out of an old bedsheet. I did all the sewing on that by hand. Took me weeks of spare-time effort, but I finished it. It was crude, yes, but quite comfortable. Now imagine what I'd have been able to do if I'd had a sewing machine and known how to use it... ;)
- Amy
Sewing machines these days are computers for women....
I use mine to taper the legs of my jeans so as I can squeeze into them.
Who wants loose fitting jeans anyway?
To sew well requires a lot of practice. Ideally you need someone to teach you or else take classes, which might be a deterrent for many CD's. You won't save any money, but I think it would be fun to make my own dress. Growing up my Mom made all of my shirts and thought me the basics -- not that she knew I was CD but because we were poor and it made more sense to repair your shirt than buy a new one. Since sewing machines are cheap these days, I'd like to get back into it. Project Runway here I come (lol!)
I have a sewing machine, To date though its more likely to see the straighter side of me, Think land rover soft top, Think new zippers in overalls that kinda thing. Heck it normally runs some pretty coarse waxed thread and about the biggest needle i have ever yet been able to get :-) Making actual clothes that are any good with one is a whole diffrent ball game.
Also worth pointing out my granddad who i spent a lot of time growing up with was the areas sewing machine sales rep - repair man. Hence i kinda know a fair bit about them.
To me there just another tool, not really a nice stone encrusted dainty necklaces. Certainly not something i would use as a prime example of cross-dressing.
Hi,
Been sewing since age 10 if i could sew it i did, car seats horse gear clothes pinnys sack bags . we have 6 machines & have had 5 more , some are singers 55 years old .
Of cause now i design make & sew, so far some 14 outfits new garb & skirts blouse's tops & redone more skirts to fit, plus bonnits hats bags for our Renaissance & Edwardian groups, plus normal day wear, i dont use patterns though i have some, & still need to make at least 10 more & still wont be enough.
Is it hard, can be try makeing simple things like pinnys bags then skirts or buy some 2nd hand & rework them you then learn how they are sown find a book on sewing with all attachments , & give it a go. you ether enjoy doing it or not . the best part is when youv done a lovely neat job of it you then can wear it down the streets & show it off as iv done many times for both of our groups, as iv just done to day in Edwardian wear. for morning tea 17 of us 15 of us women & the other two men.
Just an after thought if you have the ability or it's there then its not wether your male or female you just have that yes i can do that, its a gift like we all have different ones its wether we use them ,i use those i know i have,
...noeleena...
For years my wife has said "I need to teach you how to sew". Now I have tears in some skirts and other repairs to make. It's tme for my lessons -- break out the Singer! Maybe I can even learn to make my own clothes.