Here’s a super ease way to do really nice, resizable armhole curves. I’ve put it into a pdf, so please feel free to download it and I’ve done one curve in detail with explanations and left the other for you to do. Feel free to share your results:
I am trying to follow the steps but it is challenging. Whenever I fill in any value for the second control point on the first node of the path the path does something weird. It goes past said first node and then turns around to reach it. Only if the value is zero (or very close to zero) does this not occur but in the PDF file the values of the length of the control points are never zero. This makes it hard to follow the rest of the steps because I don’t know what to do with the length for the control points.
An additionial pain point for me is the use of A6 as a reference point for the angle of control point one of node A3. In my case the front and the back of the bodice are part of one pattern and the seamline between these two is straight (vertical). Would that mean I use a 90 degree angle as my baseline
Attached are two pictures of what I’m talking about and the file I’m using. I don’t expect you to help me that thoroughly but hey, it’s worth a shot.
Regardless of the outcome, thank you for all the help you have provided to me and the community as a whole! Happy Holidays.
Small tip : when you want to draw a curve, click where you want the point to be, keep your mouse pressed and drag it a little bit so you can immediately extend the handle. Doing that you prevent the handle to be at the same place as the point of the spline. You also avoid having the handles reversed
One should be formulizing the control points, so entering the correct length & angle makes dragging curves & control points moot… as well as avoiding reverse handle angles.
If one does not formulize the control points, the pattern will not resize with a change in measurments. Drawing curves by hand is basically only good for the one size of the current measurments.
That being said… holding the SHIFT key while moving a control point will contrain the angle every 45 degs. If the curves are formulized the CP angles are most likely going to be 0, 90, 180, or 270.
Here I’ve inserted the curve using your preferred method of creating curves and Seamly’s numbering system so that you can see the nodes that I’ve added.
I like to use the shoulder lines as the angle of the 1st & last curve handle angles, but the NINE point is a little high, so I created point A22 and used it instead. It’s important that, when the shoulder seams are sewn together, that the armhole forms a straight line at the shoulder points, otherwise you’ll get a peak that will need trimming to fit in the sleeve neatly.
Another way would be to deduct 10° from both shoulder angles, which will slant the straight line a bit and may also cause fitting discrepancies, however, it’s a design feature that one can use.