How To Create A Sleeve Pattern in CLO 3D

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  • Опубліковано 30 сер 2022
  • Draft a sleeve pattern from scratch to match any size armhole using this simple method. Learn all the tools in order to draft, edit and sew it properly in CLO.
    00:00:08 Drafting The Pattern Pt. 1- Basic Pattern Shape
    00:02:32 Drafting The Pattern Pt. 2- Shaping The Sleeve Cap
    00:05:23 Refining The Sleeve- Notches, Ease and Balance
    EDIT Sorry everyone, I've realised some of the shortcuts I show in my first few videos are incorrect. They list the tools as being Command + Letter, when it should just be the letter. I've fixed this going forward!

КОМЕНТАРІ • 18

  • @madelinegrudens
    @madelinegrudens Рік тому

    That was a thoroughly superb tutorial - I followed you from start to finish and made a sleeve pattern from scratch - amen!!! You're a fantastic instructor and thank you!

    • @ides.studio
      @ides.studio  Рік тому

      Ah! I'm so glad! It's a brilliant method. Had to share.

  • @nalelirugege3216
    @nalelirugege3216 Рік тому

    Your Pattern Tutorials are so insightful, Thank You! I especially Appreciated the one on Pants. I look forward to one on Bodice & Male Basic Tops.

    • @ides.studio
      @ides.studio  Рік тому

      Great! I'll work on adding those :)

  • @donovanhuynh3301
    @donovanhuynh3301 Рік тому +2

    Love this, please do a trouser and bodice version of this

    • @ides.studio
      @ides.studio  Рік тому +3

      I definitely plan to. The trouser maybe first. The bodice is bloody complicated if you do it properly! But I’m on it ☺️

  • @rafaelcasa316
    @rafaelcasa316 Рік тому

    You're some of the best in the Clo game out there. Thanks.

    • @ides.studio
      @ides.studio  Рік тому

      Thanks so much🥰 I really appreciate it!

  • @danglejangles1999
    @danglejangles1999 Рік тому

    If you didn't break your sewing into two lines and just used one, would there be a difference in the drape in clo? I can't find any info on how using 1 or more sewing lines on a segment effects drape if that makes sense.

    • @ides.studio
      @ides.studio  Рік тому +1

      Sorry for the delayed reply. It does make a difference if you put all the sleeve ease at the top, as you would in real life. If your sewing is all 1, the ease gets distributed evenly all the way around. You might not notice the difference until you put your garment in hi-res, but then you can definitely see.

  • @akhmedmagomedov7552
    @akhmedmagomedov7552 Рік тому

    Stunning but couldn’t get why and what’s the methods you use

    • @ides.studio
      @ides.studio  Рік тому

      Hmm, what do you mean?

    • @akhmedmagomedov7552
      @akhmedmagomedov7552 Рік тому

      @@ides.studio it’s hard to explain because of my English but I mean why you offset about 0.75 inch or something (I don’t remember clearly)
      but anyway you’re doing great work 🙂

    • @akhmedmagomedov7552
      @akhmedmagomedov7552 Рік тому

      I think I don't get this because I have no education or experience in sewing or designing

    • @ides.studio
      @ides.studio  Рік тому +1

      @@akhmedmagomedov7552 No worries on the language. It's so hard to translate industry-specific terms. I think you mean "the ease." There is usually about 2-2.5cm or .75-1" extra in the sleeve cap compared to the armhole, sewn only at the middle or shoulder tip. This is true for woven, set-in sleeves, not knits/t-shirts. It's what helps the sleeve have that little bit of roundness to go over your shoulder. Let me know if that's what you were asking.

    • @akhmedmagomedov7552
      @akhmedmagomedov7552 Рік тому +1

      @@ides.studio okay now I get it. Thank you :)

  • @polkunus
    @polkunus Рік тому

    this makes mens cap heights look weird

    • @ides.studio
      @ides.studio  Рік тому

      Oh no! I haven’t had that experience. Is it just height? Are they coming out too long or too short? I’ll do another test and see what I can find out.