The Winifred Aldrich method is better because for most persons your behind is bigger than your front, if you use the method where both back and front are the same it pulls the seam line to the back and your front will have to be made bigger to pull in the waist line.
That makes so much sense now that you said it! In the Dennic book it says it’s used for aesthetic reasons and normally the front is bigger so the seam is hidden… that had me confused! Thank you so much for the feedback☺️
I was wondering if the last of the 3 would suit a more angled waist to hip, but the waist was to big as well interesting, i like the idea if the why, i don't want super indepth why, but i like to know why it is done so you can understand it better
I think you might be right, it would be good for a more angled waist but also bigger hips, I would LOVE to try it on different body shapes to understand everything better!!😢
@@_nuriamo I only thought of that because that is my shape, 4-5smaller waist to hip and hips are low. Still in early stages of trying to work out how to make things fit me. Hard when math/geometry and visualisation are skills I lack/not great at, so taking it's time. Wish there were more in person classes around this, but will just have to plod along in the land of Internet to make it work, that's why videos like yours are helpful it allows more knowledge to be gained by people in different locations 😀
Very interesting video, love seeing the comparisons. I agree that Winifred Aldrich draft fitted the best.
Thank you!! I’ll keep making them, then🥰
This was very useful! You should wear more skirts 🥰 thank you one more time, keep posting❤
Can you the skirt pattern or pant method by Connie Amaden-Crawford.
Yees, I’ll look into it!! Thank you☺️
I like the show and tell, because I know it differs but how, and I can note the books you use and results!
Thank you so much!! I’m happy it’s useful ☺️
Your videos are awesome, and so helpful!
Thank you so muuuuuch☺️
The Winifred Aldrich method is better because for most persons your behind is bigger than your front, if you use the method where both back and front are the same it pulls the seam line to the back and your front will have to be made bigger to pull in the waist line.
That makes so much sense now that you said it! In the Dennic book it says it’s used for aesthetic reasons and normally the front is bigger so the seam is hidden… that had me confused! Thank you so much for the feedback☺️
I was wondering if the last of the 3 would suit a more angled waist to hip, but the waist was to big as well interesting, i like the idea if the why, i don't want super indepth why, but i like to know why it is done so you can understand it better
I think you might be right, it would be good for a more angled waist but also bigger hips, I would LOVE to try it on different body shapes to understand everything better!!😢
@@_nuriamo I only thought of that because that is my shape, 4-5smaller waist to hip and hips are low. Still in early stages of trying to work out how to make things fit me. Hard when math/geometry and visualisation are skills I lack/not great at, so taking it's time. Wish there were more in person classes around this, but will just have to plod along in the land of Internet to make it work, that's why videos like yours are helpful it allows more knowledge to be gained by people in different locations 😀