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Slapdash sewost
Slapdash sewost











slapdash sewost
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If I don't sew up the center back seam first, I can use Trena's much easier method or another method I learned from Threads. It does sound like gymnastics, doesn't it. Lastly, I sew the side dress and facing seams in one continuous seam. Next, I sew the last bit of the neck and armhole curves near the shoulder seam. Then I sew the shoulder seams on the dress and as much of the facing as I can handle.

slapdash sewost

Unlike the example in Kathleen's tutorial, I sewed the facing and the dress at the neck and armholes only to about 1" below the shoulder seam. I do the zipper first, the way Kathleen showed in her centered zipper tutorial. She appears to insert the zipper after attaching the lining at the armhole and neck. Trena over at Slapdash Sewist explained her method of lining a dress today. It seems like there have been a flurry of blog mentions of dressmaking topology. If you like this article, may I suggest you buy his book, From Here to Infinity? I read it in grad school and remember it fondly. Sadly, Martin Gardiner's columns for SciAm were republished, but Ian Stewart's have not (to my knowledge). Click on the images to read the very amusing article, The Topological Dressmaker by Ian Stewart. This copy of Scientific American from July 1993 is crumbling, so I scanned it in at high-res.

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Use code “TCARTICLE” at checkout to get 20 percent off tickets right here.Speaking of "sewing gymnastics", I dug out this article about the topology of sewing. Each session also has audience participation built-in – there’s ample time included for audience questions and discussion. We’ll cover every aspect of company-building: Fundraising, recruiting, sales, product market fit, PR, marketing and brand building. You’ll hear first-hand how some of the most successful founders and VCs build their businesses, raise money and manage their portfolios. “We have quite a lot of confidence that even at this sort of individual atomic level, we built something pretty joyful and helpful.”Įarly Stage is the premier ‘how-to’ event for startup entrepreneurs and investors.

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“If you anticipate rolling this out to larger organizations, you would want the people that are using the software to have a blast with it,” he says. As the team hopes to make the tool essential to startups, Kanevski sees the app’s hefty utility for individual users as a clear asset in scaling up. Things look more customized for enterprise-wide pricing.

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The company offers a free tier for users indexing up to five apps and creating 10 commands and spaces any more than that and you level up into a $12 per month paid plan. “You won’t see us, for example, building document editing, you won’t see us building project management, just because our sort of philosophy is that we’re a neutral platform.” “We’re not trying to displace the applications that you connect to Slapdash,” he says. While most of the integration-heavy software suites to emerge during the remote work boom have focused on promoting visibility or re-skinning workflows across the tangled weave of SaaS apps, Slapdash founder Ivan Kanevski hopes that the company’s efforts to engineer a quicker path to information will push tech workers to integrate another tool into their workflow. Slapdash is aiming to carve a new niche out for itself among workplace software tools, pushing a desire for peak performance to the forefront with a product that shaves seconds off each instance where a user needs to find data hosted in a cloud app or carry out an action. It’s all time that users can take for granted, even when carrying out common tasks like navigating to the calendar to view more info to click a link to open the browser to redirect to the native app to open a Zoom call. But learning to use a dozen new programs while having to decipher which data is hosted where can sometimes seem to have an adverse effect on worker productivity. The explosion in productivity software amid a broader remote work boom has been one of the pandemic’s clearest tech impacts.













Slapdash sewost