Repairs & Modifications
-
This post is deleted!
-
@m4xime the shipping labels for sending in repairs are manually generated during office hours. That ties in with @Mister_Brue’s comment. I had some direct correspondence about my current repair before sending it in, but I guess your form will need to be reviewed to confirm that the repair is possible before they send you the shipping info.
-
This post is deleted!
-
Thanks all! This prompted me to check my spam and it was in there! All sorted. Addressing a small issue where the fabric is softening before it gets worse.
-
Cheers! The blue pen lines should wash out; just haven't washed these since patching 'em.
@DeeDee85 I'd guess something like 12 hours' work, all told. Slow stuff! Had to pull the needle through with pliers pretty often, which added a bunch of time. I imagine it'd go quite a bit quicker if both of the fabrics were thinner/softer.
-
Not sure if it’s the right thread, but I’ve just had these two shirts modified:

Thanks to my mom for the needlework!
They are great shirts, but both suffered from the cats eye buttons becoming undone very easily. So when I realized that IH had started using four-hole buttons on some work shirts I wrote and asked if it was possible to order replacements for the originals.
And - huge shout out to costumer support - they offered me enough to change all buttons on both shirts

Once again, great service, and thank you to IHUK and my mom!
-

Man vs machine crotch repair. 21oz is really the best fabric. My first IH pair still going strong -
Couldn't be farther from iron heart but im fixing a knee on my friends daughters favorite pair of jeans today.
Probably no suprise that I think fast fashion is awful on many levels but I actually get quite a lot of satisfaction working on these types of items as I learn to sew.
Feels like a little act of defiance/protest to keep them alive longer and short circuit the buy-throwaway-rebuy cycle

-
Would it be possible to make an iron heart Western a short sleeved for an above average seamstress? Meaning, is the width/cut of the sleeve a candidate or would it look wonky? To wide or to skinny? I like the 9oz flannels coming soon but want ss for the summer.
-
@CosmoSix5 Best bet would be to ask your seamstress as she would know the best what she can and can’t do. I’ve always thought that a good tailor/seamstress can work miracles.
Let us know what she thinks.
-
said in Repairs & Modifications:
Couldn't be farther from iron heart but im fixing a knee on my friends daughters favorite pair of jeans today.
Probably no suprise that I think fast fashion is awful on many levels but I actually get quite a lot of satisfaction working on these types of items as I learn to sew.
Feels like a little act of defiance/protest to keep them alive longer and short circuit the buy-throwaway-rebuy cycle

Done
Graeme×Zara collab


-
@CosmoSix5 said in Repairs & Modifications:
Would it be possible to make an iron heart Western a short sleeved for an above average seamstress? Meaning, is the width/cut of the sleeve a candidate or would it look wonky? To wide or to skinny? I like the 9oz flannels coming soon but want ss for the summer.
Anyone with a modicum of talent can do the actual shortening.
BUT, short-sleeved shirts typically have a wider circumference at the bicep that a long-sleeved, so may look odd.
If you do decide to go ahead, I would check what the length from shoulder to cuff is on the outseam and armpit to cuff is on the inseam on a SS shirt that looks good. What makes sense geometrically does not necessarily look good. I would cut too long, and pin to what you think is correct, then try it on and play with the angle of the cut.



