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12 Reviews
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150 of 150 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
2 years ahead of the fashion curve! Light years ahead of ordinary plus size fashion!,
By overtakenbyanap "overtakenbyanap" (BC in Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Burda Plus - English ed (Magazine)
I just reviewed Burda Moden, and much of what I said there applies here too.
First off, I'm a plus size lady. I sew, and I love Burda magazines. Till recently I had an annual subscription and I need to refresh my subscription again. I always but always subscribed to both the regular magazine (which has a plus size section!) and the Plus magazine (which NEVER duplicates what you see in the regular one). If given a choice I think I'd take the Plus magazine if I couldn't afford both. Here are some helpful tips on why you might like to subscribe EVEN IF YOU DON'T SEW, and how to do so if you are out of the States area. For Canadians there is a Burda magazine reseller, and it will cost about 10$ Canadian per issue. Which is MUCH less than a normal pattern now. So it saves you on patterns. Burda has ways to subscribe for each country, just go to their website and click till you get the reseller for your own area. WHY BURDA IS THE BEST! The fashions presented are 2 years ahead. I found that styles presented in Burda were a year ahead of hitting the stores in retail, and 2 to 3 years ahead of the other major pattern companies, and about 1 year ahead of Burda's pattern envelopes sold in the fabric stores. EVEN IF ALL YOU DO IS LOOK AT UPCOMING STYLES and never sew a stitch you will find this magazine useful to keep ahead of trend curves. This is what the European ladies are wearing. All clothing is well put together, showing current trends (future trends for north america!) in Europe in shoes, purses, jewelry, colour choices and more. They use fashion forward textiles to make the garments and the photos are clear enough that you can get trim detail and figure out fabric from your local store. If you do sew, this magazine will keep you from wasting money on outdated expensive paper patterns AND keep you in the front end of fashion. After all if you go to the trouble of sewing, and fitting it's nice if you can wear something for a few extra years and look up to date while doing so. As a Plus size lady, I found it a refreshing surprise to find patterns that actually looked stylish and ahead of the ready to wear regular market let alone the nightmare of retail plus size ready to wear. Each magazine comes with ALL the patterns to make all the clothing featured. Look thru, see what you like and trace off your own pattern. A note about sizes --Burda fits much closer than normal pattern companies which makes for a much nicer fit, but you may find yourself needing to go up a size or two. Measure carefully, and try cutting one size up till you get used to the fit. Don't cut into expensive fabric till you are used to how they fit. Make a few cheaper garments first. The armholes and the crotch area fit differently than north american clothes. Be aware that above a size 20/22 in north american sizes, won't fit into these plus sizes. Their idea of plus is 14-20/22. If you are bigger it's fairly easy to size the patterns up a bit, but you do need some experience in sewing and pattern alterations to do that well. (for learning how, check out Sandra Betzina's stuff on altering patterns) Here are a couple of helpful hints to dealing with tracing off the patterns in the centerfold. I used waxed paper in the usual kitchen type roll and traced with a sharpie marker pen. WHY WAX PAPER? It's cheap, you can SEE THRU IT, and you can fuse it into bigger sheets as needed. FUSING WAX PAPER: take a warm iron, and press thru a paper towel so you don't get wax paper on your iron. (when you finish, run your iron over a clean terry facecloth to absorb any wax that seeped out). When fusing, hold till the wax paper clings and it will look a bit "bubbly". EDITED TO ADD: USE A HIGHLIGHTER PEN to mark the lines you are tracing off. It will help you "see" the correct pattern peice and the correct size in the spaghetti trail that is the master pattern in the centerfold. TRACING: Burda patterns DON'T come with a seam allowance so I added that after tracing my patterns. Using a sharpie and a straight edge for long runs I traced off my desired size in the patterns which look like multicoloured spaghetti lines all over the newsprint center. Then add seam allowances BEFORE cutting out your wax paper pattern! About all those lines. Here is where my wax paper tip comes in handy. I've tried tracing paper, even interfacing but the multiple lines on a Burda magazine pattern are too much for those usual tracing papers or interfacing. You will need something much more see thru. Wax paper! cheap, almost transparent, sturdy and won't bleed sharpie marker ink. Burda doesn't print one sided pattern masters so you HAVE to trace. You can't just sacrifice the rest of the patterns to cut yourself one only since the other peices will likely be printed on the back. REMEMBER TO ADD YOUR SEAM ALLOWANCE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Once I cut out my pattern (and write all the notes about what size, layout, darts etc on the pattern) I put my pattern pieces in a Manila envelope. Pattern envelopes for home made patterns work best with some labelling. I put the magazine (fall and winter 05) and the page # (34) and the model I'm copying along with the size, the yardage I require and any sewing notions or extras (zippers, interfacing, 17 buttons, yada yada) Maybe due to being a bit obsessive about such things I sketch a line drawing on the envelope with a note saying, skirt, pants, jacket or whatever the garment is. My drawing isn't perfect but I try to include a front and back view with major seams and darts drawn in. It's useful. I keep them in a normal household file folder, since the manila envelopes fit perfectly. File under Jacket, Dress, Skirt etc. or by year. There, I hope that helps. This is WELL worth getting even if you never sew a single stitch from the magazine.
27 of 27 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
I'm a Believer!,
By ReadMakeSew (Chicago, IL USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Burda Plus - English ed (Magazine)
I ordered back issues of this magazine from an Ebay dealer in the UK after the Spring 2006 issue came out and I am sold not just on Burda Plus but on Berlin fashion designers as well- the women, anyway, make lovely, flowing but not "girly" clothes that are very wearable - Think Eileen Fisher or Flax but with darker, richer colors, fibers and textures, slightly more "fit" and more interesting shapes in a wider variety -- not just the same few repeated again and again. Clothes for the decades, not the season -- and the patterns are HERE! at least some of them, from designers like Evelyn Brandt, Doris Strietch (and another Berliner (female) whose name escapes me at the moment, but whose clothes I deeply admire.)
The fit is better than most American pattern companies - especially pants. If you make one garment from each issue the subscription has more than paid for itself. Good info on sizing patterns up or down in the back issues I recently received - keeping the proportions if using a "petite" or a "tall" pattern if you are neither. Pattern directions themselves can be less than enlightening, though - perhaps "non-fluent" would be the best description of their translation. And the breathless tone (LOTS of exclamation points!!!!) of the editorial content seems a bit much for such "smart" clothes, but we're not buying this for the elegancce of the writing! Another reviewer complained of delivery delay. This is only published in January and July. If you missed subscribing in time for the last issue and the print run is gone, you have to wait until the next one pubs. And the print runs DO sell out. As I can attest.
28 of 29 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
wonderful patterns,
By hillcountrygirl "hillcountrygirl" (Austin, TX) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Burda Plus - English ed (Magazine)
Contrary to the previous review, the majority of the patterns in the Fall/Winter 2005 issue were normal sizes (5'6"). This particular issue contains 10 jackets (two of which were for petites), four skirts (one of them petite), three pants (one petite), and four shells (two petites). There were no dresses and no blouses with sleeves. The interesting fabric choices and the superb fashion photography were also excellent. This particular issue also had an article on how to change a petite pattern to a regular pattern and vice versa. The pattern pieces have unique sophisticated shapes, very interesting for the intermediate to advanced sewer. One thing I did find lacking was there was no casual sportswear. The magazine seems geared toward business suits and formal occasions.
23 of 25 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
be aware of sizing and your skill level,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Burda Plus - English ed (Magazine)
I love the fashions but some are for 5'3 and some for 5'6. At 5'10 I have to make serious adjustments for height. If you can barely cut out a multi-sized pattern then this magazine is definitely above your skill level. If you can trace and adjust patterns and work without detailed instructions then you will enjoy the fresh styles and many collections presented for such a low price. Even if you only use one pattern from every issue it is worth the money.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The best plus size patterns,
By Bonny Dune (Great Plains) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Burda Plus - English ed (Magazine)
I have been getting this magazine since 2000, and I am still using the patterns out of the first issue. The clothing made from a Burda magazine pattern fits like nothing else. When I wear them I get stopped by women asking me where they can buy those wonderful clothes, even skinny women want these clothes. No frumpy fat women clothes here.
Each magazine seems to have a theme, office clothes, sportswear, dress up. You will have to collect a few issues before all your pattern needs are filled. And do hold on to those old issues. I have one magazine I put away as just not what I wanted. Four years later and it has the perfect blouse. And yes they are always ahead of the curve. Something unique you see in Burda won't show up in the stores for 18 months. And the fit!!! No pattern other pattern fits like Burda. They require some advanced skills. Tracing can get very tiring. But if you want to be the best dressed and not look like you shop at the mall then this pattern mag is for you.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Things you should know before subscribing to Burda Plus,
By Joanna Daneman (Middletown, DE USA) - See all my reviews (TOP 10 REVIEWER) (VINE VOICE) (COMMUNITY FORUM 04) (HALL OF FAME REVIEWER) (REAL NAME)
This review is from: Burda Plus - English ed (Magazine)
This is an extract (now) of Burda Style patterns for larger sizes (up to European 52 which is an American 20 or so) and some half sizes for petites. There are new patterns, but about 65 percent of the Burda Plus magazine are patterns that have appeared in the generally-sized Burda Style in these larger sizes. So if you are a subscriber to Burda Style, you will have seen many of these patterns before.
Also, there was some flurry of rumor that the magazine is going to annual, not semi-annual but this was due to a misprint in the Autumn 2010 issue and is NOT true. You will receive 2 issues a year, Spring and Autumn. Be warned, that if you subscribe near to one issue's print date, you will possibly not get your first issue until the next half year because the print runs are limited and they do sell out. Now, onto the magazine itself. This is a German fashion sewing magazine. The models (supposedly plus sized) are not really all that zaftig, though in the latest (Autumn 2010), one model definitely has curves and is not a coat-hanger. But the fashions are very up to date, and there is a great business-work clothes section as well as a very nice evening fashion section. I find these useful because I want to sew special occasion clothes as I find these are difficult to shop for and I don't want to spend a bundle on a one- or a few-times outfit. The patterns range in difficulty from very simple to requiring tailoring knowledge. Most fall into the 2 or 2 1/2 out of 4 difficulty range, meaning you need general sewing knowledge but not a whole lot more. General sewing would be using interfacing, adding a seam allowance, finishing seams, inserting elastic or making a casing, inserting a zipper, gathering, doing buttonholes to give you some idea. Simple designs are mostly seamed, no fastenings. The patterns are on one large set of sheets, coded by letter, color and dotted, dashed or solid line. To use this kind of pattern, you trace out your size line and the pieces indicated in the instructions included in the middle. You can trace out on waxed paper, pattern tracing paper (commonly found in Europe but available in sewing stores in the US) or on butcher or freezer paper. Then you transfer the markings, and pin or weight down on your fabric. WARNING WARNING. There are NO seam allowances! But this is not a bad thing. To cut out, you trace outside the pattern and allow for the seam allowance you require, meaning if a piece is to be serged or you want a scant 1/4 inch allowance, you can cut for that; American patterns generally default to a 5/8th inch allowance but that is really not needed for straight seams, especially those to be finished. If you use a serger to sew and finish a seam, you will want to cut a narrower allowance anyway. More accurate for sewing. The instructions are quite clear; I never have difficulty using Burda patterns. It is more time consuming to have to trace out magazine patterns, but the cost for so many patterns is worth it; one pattern is generally going to repay your purchase of the entire issue. There is a detailed section for fitting requirements, showing where to measure on the body. The Autumn 2010 issue contained patterns for sewing a sequin sheath gown (long or short, fitted with seams that follow body curves), a sequin draped jacket, a velvet blazer, an asymmetrical narrow skirt with gathering on one side, a white blouse, a tunic, a Bohemian style scarf dress, trousers including deep cuffed, Marlena Dietrich style, jeans, and a quilted winter coat, to give you some idea of what was included. There were also leather pants, for petite women with detailed instructions on how to sew with leather. If you wear larger sizes, this is a great sewing magazine, the fashions are up to date and the patterns are useful. There are no kids' or mens' patterns here; for that, you need the general publication.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Inspiration!,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Burda Plus - English ed (Magazine)
I love the inspiration that I find in the Burda Plus magazine. So many fabulous patterns, so little time! Sigh...
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Burda Plus Magazine,
By McCombs "sewwhat" (Kentucky) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Burda Plus - English ed (Magazine)
Lots of patterns plus directions and exciting illustrative pictures make this magazine worth every penny. If you bought one of the patterns from a pattern company you would pay more than the cost of the magazine. Love it!
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Cutting edge,
This review is from: Burda Plus - English ed (Magazine)
This is great 'magazine'. I put it in quotes because it is really a collection of the newest styles coming out so if you have the time to sew the patterns you are with the 'in-crowd'
6 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A tip about ALL PATTERN SIZING,
By xoxonikki "not ur granny's reviews" (1313 mockingbird lane) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Burda Plus - English ed (Magazine)
It is well known by industry professionals that most ALL COMMERICAL SEWING PATTERNS BY BIG COMPANIES ARE SIZED BY OLD STANDARDS. THIS MEANS THAT YOU MUST GO BY THE ACTUAL MEASUREMENTS ON THE ENVELOPE AND NOT BY THE "SIZE" OF THE GARMENT. They usually fall TWO SIZES LARGER THAN YOUR READY TO WEAR SIZE. This isn't the company trying to screw with you, or making a mistake, this is just an INDUSTRY STANDARD. It makes no sense to me whatsoever because if anything you'd think that they would want to make the sizes two sizes smaller so women wouldn't have to go up two sizes which is hard on your brain. For instance a commercial sewing pattern marked a size 14 IS NOT A READY TO WEAR SIZE 14. It is a READY TO WEAR SIZE 10 (look at the measurements) So, to be safe, always measure your bust waist and hips and look at the envelope and go by your bust waist and hips on the pattern envelope. that's what size you are according to the old industry standards. It's a hold over from like the victorian era when everyone was much smaller.
have fun sewing! |
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Burda Plus - English ed by Verlag Aenne Burda
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