A Few Procrastinatory Monday Links

Jessica found this incredibly steampunk Norman pattern and wonders if anyone has information they can share about Mrs. N.R. Norman, inventress. This is Centennial Pattern No. 8, for those keeping score at home, and is from the 1890s. It may be a St. Louis company -- it's marked St. Louis. Any information? Please leave a comment! (Here's a bigger image.)
Speaking of comments, Becky O. left one on Friday pointing us to this WONDERFUL writeup by TrueUp about the different on-demand fabric printers. Exhaustive and well-researched, definitely worth checking out.
Kate found the button-top (not dress) I was thinking of. Great for Rolling Stones fans!
Kristen sent this link to dresses knitted from trash. So cool. (Although probably itchy.)
Anna sent me a link to The Sewing Machine Attachment book. (It's a book about different attachments FOR your machine, not about fostering your attachment TO your machine.) I have purchased mine, will review when I get it!
Lucy (who is the person behind Home Movie Day London) sent this link to a digitised (British spelling, in Lucy's honour) film of 1930s fashions. Lovely!
A few self-promoty links:
If you like words, and are on Facebook, might you not consider being a fan of Wordnik on Facebook? Our fan page is here. If you're not a Facebooker but still want Wordnik words of the day, that link is here. But the only place you can see the Wordnik LIST of the day (a collection of related words) is on Twitter:@wordnik. [If you're looking for me on Twitter, I'm @emckean for word-type stuff, @FakeErinMcKean for "what-I-had-for-lunch" type stuff.] (Whew! That's a lot of social media in one place ...)
Labels: blatant_self_promotion, linkgasm, Norman_patterns


14 Comments:
At Mar 8, 2010 6:53:00 AM,
Kathryn said…
Only thing I could find is a link to an old rare book:
http://www.worthpoint.com/worthopedia/centennial-patterns-norman-tailor-book-1896-antique
At Mar 8, 2010 7:08:00 AM,
beangirl said…
OK, so here's a thing I love: becoming a fan of something on Facebook that has less than 10 gajillion other fans. I'm elitist like that. The fact that it's something cool, no wait SUPER SUPER SUPER COOOOOL like Worknik. Well, that's just icing.
At Mar 8, 2010 7:09:00 AM,
beangirl said…
OK, I think "Wordnik" is super super super cool.
"Worknik" on the other hand sounds suspiciously like something my comrade in Siberia thinks I should be once I get to the gulag. So no, not so super cool sounding.
At Mar 8, 2010 11:26:00 AM,
Sheila / Out of the Ashes Collectibles said…
Inventress? Okay that's a new one for me - is that a real word?
At Mar 8, 2010 12:18:00 PM,
cpeep said…
Check out this article, too. (Search within the document for the word Norman.)
http://www.sil.si.edu/smithsoniancontributions/HistoryTechnology/text/SSHT-0042.txt
Carol
Extreme Cards and Papercrafting
At Mar 8, 2010 1:37:00 PM,
Sara said…
What a lot of cool links. I love how you provide all these neat things I like to look at, without my having to search for them. Those garments knitted from trash--just the kind of thing I wish I had done in art school!
At Mar 8, 2010 5:40:00 PM,
Becky O. said…
The True Up post was updated with a downloadable chart today- what timing!
http://www.trueup.net/?p=5364
It should also be noted that each printer has a flickr group where you can see inspiring pictures...
At Mar 8, 2010 9:58:00 PM,
Anonymous said…
Unfortunately, if she patented any of her inventions, Google Patents ( www.google.com/patents )has mangled crucial information in the optical conversion of the patent documents to electronic text. I couldn't find any matches for combinations of terms like Norman, St. Louis, Missouri, dressmaking, 1893, etc., that would seem to be for her inventions. However, searching for "dressmaking" and sorting by older patents first does yield the work of some other inventive women and men of her day.
At Mar 10, 2010 10:53:00 PM,
Eva said…
There were a huge number of tailor block systems and commercial pattern makers by the 1890's. American women were already very prolific seamstresses and they were constantly keeping up with "modern" fashions. :)
At Mar 11, 2010 11:04:00 AM,
Sara said…
Maybe this tailor's square is the only thing she invented? Fabulous graphic.
At Mar 12, 2010 9:43:00 AM,
libby said…
Mrs. Norman's pattern is actually a giant sewist's Ouija board. Quick! Erin! Delete this post or all of our mystical powers will be revealed!
At Mar 12, 2010 2:17:00 PM,
judi.0044 said…
Help - I hope you or a reader can solve a question I have regarding a Simplicity pattern line (they don't seem to know the answer). I'm wondering what the origination was for the pattern line of the 1990's known as "Maren dress"? This would be a women's line - separates as well as dresses I believe. Many thanks.
At Mar 13, 2010 12:45:00 AM,
What-I-Found said…
I have a book "Cutting a Fashionable Fit" by Claudia B Kidwell. Published by Smithsonian Institution Press, 1979. Mrs. N. R. Norman is mentioned; Her publications are listed from 1878 to 1896 (4 publications listed, all privately printed), but it's not clear which one this is. It does say that the State of Origin is Missouri and that the clothing types were Men, Women and Children.
Maybe that will help the research!
At Mar 15, 2010 5:48:00 PM,
Jessica in AR said…
Thanks to Erin for posting the Norman pattern and thanks to everyone for the helpful comments! I have Kidwell's book in hand(thank you inter-library loan!) and the link to the auction was surprisingly helpful. I still don't have a lot of info, but I'm getting a good start.
Thank you!
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