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Making Victorian Costumes for Women

[ebooks] Making Victorian Costumes for Women by Heather Audin in Arts-Photography

Description

This timely new book provides an international perspective on Public Private Partnerships. Through 21 case studies; it investigates the existing and fast developing body of principles and practices from a wide range of countries and is the first book to bring together leading international academics and practitioners under a common framework that enables convenient cross-country comparisons. The authors focus on the impact of the financial crisis has had on how governments have reviewed and overhauled their PPP policies as they have examined or tested new ways of partnering more effectively; efficiently and sustainably with the private sector.Readers will be able to gauge the level of maturity of PPP development in the book’s case studies; understand similarities and differences in their practices; and gain useful insights into the regulatory framework and institutional infrastructure in place to support implementation of PPP. Finally; the book offers insights into the future challenges and opportunities that PPP offers stakeholders.


#1921020 in eBooks 2015-10-26 2015-10-26File Name: B015CYJL2G


Review
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. pretty good.By C. F.Overall. pretty good... great resource material. very well done. Absolutely love the layout-- big clear color pics. walks you through things. spans several 19th century style eras. Aimed more at beginners than the intermediate to expert historian/enthusiast. but still plenty of fun stuff. Includes basic pattern diagrams. which I always love. Bit plain. but theyre decent. The meh-- wish there had been photos of the bustle pad dress improver described in a brief tutorial rather than just instructions. Some of the repro dresses are terrific. and some seem a bit off. The torso is really long on the midcentury ones. the elliptical crinoline in particular. Not sure if that was just how it sat on the mannequin. but the skirt could have been moved up at least 4 inches. Not sure if a modern-silhouette dress form was used. some it could pass. others the modern proportions were obvious. My biggest pet peeve was the picture of the repro corset. It was a modern fashion piece. shaped like a tube. barely boned and made in red/black fashion fabric. Just. no. Borrow a period one for the photo. I didnt agree with some of the fabrics chosen for the repros and some of the material was a bit uneven [not enough about petticoats/underpinnings. later era dresses way too plain]. but most had a good aesthetic. Overall I think this book is a yes for someone starting out in re-enacting or costumers. Good overall summaries with period reference pictures shown. and walks you through basic construction of the garments. Looking forward to the Edwardian version of this that comes out soon.0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Focussed on "Costume" rather than "Reproduction"By meFirst of all. I agree with C.F.s excellent review of the book. The book is put together in a similar format to Jean Hunnisetts Period Costume for Stage Screen. A representative style is chosen for 7 different periods from the 1840s to the 1890s shown in both finished form a pattern layout. with extensive illustrated instructions for each step. The author had access to the costume collection of Hull Museum Victorian fashion periodicals for her clothing sources. The book also includes sections on sewing instructions making some undergarments. All of the graphed patterns are sized to fit a 34-24-36 figure. The corset shown as "Victorian" is totally wrong. Its straight. with no gores for shaping the bust hips. I dont think it would give a proper silhouette under Victorian costumes. There are no instructions for making a Victorian corset or crinoline in the book. The author suggests purchasing them. I would look in "Corsets Crinolines" by Norah Waugh for how to make underpinnings. The book seems to be focused on making Victorian "Costume" rather than "Reproduction Victorian Clothing". Thats not really a bad thing. but I dont think the book is worth the $49 price for what is in it. I paid about half that price think its ok for $25. I would still go to Jean Hunnisett or Janet Arnold for more accurate pattern drafts.

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