The fit I'm talking about here is not about your body, but about what you
put on your body, about making clothes that fit and flatter. There was a time when I simply pulled the pattern pieces out of the envelope, cut out my garment and sewed it up. Most of the time those garments fit, at least fairly well. That was called Youth. What we have here now is Maturity. Look, even
la belle Catherine Deneuve (who is 68!) isn't the sylph she used to be. But, in addition to Maturity, what we also have now is Discernment, that is: recognizing, appreciating and insisting on an excellent fit in the garments we sew. It was only in the past decade, perhaps when I first encountered Peggy Sagers of
Silhouette Patterns at Martha's Sewing Market, that I began to focus on fit. What Peggy says is the we home sewers were really never taught to fit, to sew, yes, perhaps even beautifully, but not to fit. And that was certainly true in my case.
So where to start? Sewing books. No particular recommendations here, but among the books in my own sewing library I have Singer Reference Library
The Perfect Fit, Palmer/Pletsch
Fit for Real People, Nancy Zieman's
Fitting Finesse,
Bodymapping by Kathy Illian and
Shortcuts to a Perfect Sewing Pattern by Rusty Bensussen. The last two are more about creating slopers but are still useful for fitting help. Obviously, there's a wealth of information on the Internet. On the Silhouette Patterns site you'll find an article on
Understanding Fit as well as several
webcasts. Go to
Pattern Review and search their knowledge base or their boards. Subscribe to
Threads, buy their archive, check them out online. Just some of the more obvious suggestions. Most of all I think I really profited from attending sewing shows, both
Martha's Sewing Market in Arlington, Texas, and the
ETA here in Dallas. You'd be amazed at how much you'll learn from a 30-minute class, given by excellent instructors such as Peggy,
Cynthia Guffey, or
Connie Crawford, just to name three whom I found really helpful. If there's a sewing show you can get to, go. You'll find it informative, inspiring and lots of fun.


This simple jacket is a good example of the importance of fit. It doesn't have darts, or princess seams, or any other of the obvious facilitators of fit. When I first made a muslin of this out-of-print McCall's pattern quite some time ago, it was so shapeless and unflattering that I wondered what I'd been thinking of and put the whole thing away. Then some years later I acquired this fabric with its predominate woven-in pattern which I didn't want to break up or have to subject to tricky matching, and, searching my very large collection of patterns for something appropriate, I settled on this. But not, of course, as it came out of the package. I narrowed the upper back and shoulders, raised the armscye, replaced the sleeve with a closer-fitting one, and reshaped the collar.
VoilĂ ...a jacket that's easy but not baggy and which has become one of those go-to garments that always feels right when I wear it.
For those of you interested in more specific aspects of how I refined this pattern, and photos thereof, please continue.