Women's Jacket Pattern MakingVinaykumar GuruswamappaFeb 20, 20233 min readRated NaN out of 5 stars.Measurement RequiredFull LengthShoulderChestWaistHipArm holeSleeve LengthSleeve roundWaist lengthNeck roundBackBegin with the top left corner of the square. A-A1 = ½ of Bust Circumference + 5cm + 2.5cm A-B = Move Down 1/24 + .5 cmA-C =1/6 Chest + 1/24 chest + 1.7cm Ease allowance( not a fixed measurement)A-D = Back waist Length Measurement. Square across.D-E = Hip Depth, Square AcrossA-F = Jacket Length Square AcrossA-G =1/12 of chest + 0.5cm (with a curve join points B-G)A-H = ½ Back Width + 0.5cmC-C2 = ½ C-c1 – 1cmF –F1 = Same amount as C-C1 join points C2 to F2H1 = Perpendicular to C-C1H-L = move down4.5cmB1 – L1 = ½ Back shoulder width + 1.5cm (1cm ease) + 0.5cm ease allowance. Jon points G Shoulder LengthL1-L2 =Mark up 0.5cm (for Shoulder pad)1-M = Square up 5cm and square right 0.8 cmM-M1 = move right .05 cm with a curve draw the armhole joining the points L1, M2, M1, C1. Move down 9cm along the armhole and mark two notches.B2 = ½ of A-CD-D2 = Move right 2cmF-f3 = Move Right 2cm and join points B2-D2-E2D2-R = Move 1/3 of half chest + 2cm square down from R for FR1-F4 =with a curve join points M, R.F4 = Move cm to each side.R3- R4 = From R mark 1.2cm each side. With a curve join points M – R2-F4 and M, R, F4 (as shown in the diagram)FRONTD1 – A2 =Front Waist LengthA2 – B = 1/6 size + 1 cmA2 – H = ½ back width, same measurement as back 1cmH-1 = Perpendicular to C1 – C2H-L = Square down 6.5cm1-M = Square Up 5cmsM-M1 = square left 1-1.5cm (Not a fixed measurements)M1-M2 = Square down from M1 (Reference points for sleeve)A2-A3 = Move down 3cmA3-G = 1/12 Chest +0.5cmL1-L2 = Move up 0.5cm (for the shoulder pad)G-L1 =Same Measurement of G-L1M-M2 = Move left 0.5cm – 1cmA3-N = Bust heightN-N1 = ½ Bust distance + 1.2cmN1-R =Parallel to N-D1N1-R1 = Move down 2-3cmR3 – F5 = Parallel with C2 – F2 (square down from l)R3-R4 = From point R move each side 2cm (Not a fixed measurement from point F5 move 0.5cm each side) With a curve join points M1-R2-F5 and M2-R2-F5D1-D2 = Square right 2-2.5cm (single breasted)D2-P = Square up 10cm, bust point (Not a fixed measurement)G-G1 = Mark 1.5cm on RHS and join to point P. draw the collar as shown R-O = Square down 5-7cm pocket positionO-O1 = Square right 1.5-2cmO1-O2 = Square left 1.5cm (pocket measurement)R1-O = Draw the dart, moving 1.5cm left as shown in the diagramSleeveTrace Front bodice as shown in the diagram. Mark 1 as D and 2 as E and L1 as B & CMark BP at center of the line B-D and FP at M1 in front armhole curve from the bodice.Square up and across from 0.0–1 -one third armscye measurement; square across.1–2 -1/3 measurement of 0–1 + 1 cm; Draw a line across.0–3 -quarter the measurement 0–1.3–4 -Measurement of C–FP + 1 cm Join 3–4.4–5 -Measure B–BP from bodice + 0.8 cm Join 4–5.0–6 -The measurement C2–E on body block.0–7 -2 cm; square across both ways. 7–8 and 7–9, 2 cm; Draw a line down from 8 and 9.1–10 -sleeve length measurement; draw line across to 11 and 12.10–13 -3 cm; square across.10–14 -Half of sleeve round; join 10–14 and 10–11.7–15 -half the measurement 7–10; square across inward curve 2 cms at elbow line Draw in sleeve head.5–4 -Raise the curve 1 cm. Mark 16; 4–16 is 1/3rd measurement of 4–3.4–3 -Draw a curve line at 16, 2 cm; join 3–8 with a curve.6–17 -Measure A–BP on bodice block,measure straight, + 0.5 cm.Join 6–17, draw a curve 1.5 cm.Join 6–9 with a curve line.Join 17–14 and 5–14.Mark 18 and 19 on elbow line.Draw Curve line outer sleeve seams outward 2.3 cm Note: All curve measurements are measured accurately along the curved lineswith the tape upright.Ease at the sleeve headThe ease in the sleeve cap is drafted to give a fullrounded appearance to the sleeve cap. .Padded shouldersAll the blocks and sleeves have no seam allowanceincluded. Points to consider:1. Fabric Required 1.7 Mtrs’ length & width of 58".2. slightly stretch fabric diagonally to align the warp & weft.3. Iron the fabric to remove crease, prior to marking and place the draft.4. if you are a beginner, prefer making the paper draft first, then pin it to fabric.
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