Back Waist Draglines Corrections – Adding a Design Line

Back draglines often occur due to the curvature of the spine or the roundness of the shoulder blades. These natural body lines may be deceiving and could result in fabric excess along the back waist area of your patterns. There are several options for fixing this problem. This is the first one and works well for both knits and wovens.

Before going into this correction, always check if the pattern is balanced. So often, the back armhole is too low compared to the front armhole, which should be checked before you make this correction. That can actually fix a big part of this issue as a starting point. To review pattern balancing, here are the videos about balanced tops and balanced coats and jackets.

For this option, we will add a yoke seam, peplum waist seam, or any seam location in between those.

1. Chose where you want your seam to go. It can be any horizontal line between the yoke area at the across-back to the peplum area at the waist.
2. Pin the amount needed to eliminate the back draglines. It will be more at the CB than at the side seams. Make sure you can still move comfortably.
3. Mark the pattern in the location you pinned. Your line will be a fish-eye shape.
4. You may or may not need to add back to the CB length at the hem. This varies per person for the shape and depends on the amount you’ve pinned, too.

– Generally, yoke shapes are nicer for woven fabrics when they are rounded the opposite way, giving more room for the shoulder blades, as we’ve seen in previous videos.
– You’ll be most successful in adding the seam on woven materials between the back bust area and peplum waist area.
– It would be more common in knits for adding the upper yoke seam area.
– Adding the seam at the peplum waistline area is amazing for both wovens and knits.

Again, always check that armhole depth-first between front and back bodices to make sure it’s balanced!

This information and more can be found in The Fitting Book. Order your book today through the link below.

Learn the 3-Step Fitting Process:

A) Identify the Fitting Issue.

B) Pin, Cut, & Tape the Fitting Sample.

C) Correct the Sewing Pattern.

The Fitting Book Includes:

Tops

Pants

Skirts/Dresses

My Secret in Diagonal Draglines

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