Karen Skowron Victoria, BC
Inspired by Japanese paper folding, wondering how fabric would translate into a garment, led to this design. Each one is different because it is the material, the depth of the first fold, the desired width of the item that govern subsequent folds. There are only three cuts - neck, armholes. And, except for the addition of sleeves, the sewing is a minimum, mostly anchoring cloth to cloth. Pockets occur, kickpleats, unique patterns.
This one is folded from an exquisite piece of Zimbabwe cloth. A flower knit from bamboo holds the final drape.
The material has a satisfying stance between a soft drape and loosely housing the body; yes, an example of clothing as architecture.
Made from a medium-weight denim the garment definitely houses the body; the pocket is deep; edges are left free.
This was one of the earlier versions when I was scouting the linen racks in thrift stores for fabric to 'cheaply' experiment with and also provide the patina of age and use, and to take part in the adventure of reuse, renew, recycle. An old cotton table cloth, there was fabric left after folding into the basic garment so I cut it off and turned it into sleeves and 'filled in' the kick pleat. It serves as a lounging gown with a cozy drape.
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