The contract becomes terminated with full delivery to the address provided by the buyer to Artist Shot. The contract is only accepted and becomes active when Artist Shot ships the ordered product to the buyer and confirms the shipment of the product to the buyer in a second e-mail. This e-mail validates and shall only inform the buyer that their order was received by Artist Shot and does not suggest an approval of the offer. The buyer then will receive an e-mail with the order confirmation. The proposals offered on Artist Shot and in partner shops on the website serve a non-binding request for the customer to purchase an order with Artist Shot.īy completing an order application and sending the request to purchase a "product" on the Artist Shot website, the buyer makes a binding offer for a contract of sale of the content product offered on the website. With that said it could very well still be a user error, so I will pay very close attention on my next skirt to see if I run into the same problem or not.Standard Terms for Purchasing/Returning a Product on Artist Shot I went back to make sure that my pattern pieces were correct and they seemed to be and then I double checked how I constructed the waistband and I am pretty sure I constructed everything properly. I am curious, however, to figure out why this might have happened. It did not seem to cause any issues as far as construction and it does not look too bad that the front and back waistbands are different heights. On my skirt however my back waistband was about a 1/4" or more shorter that my front waistband (and my length at the bottom of the skirt lined up perfectly). The way I interpreted the pattern was that the flat front waistband should have lined up with the back waistband, so that the stitching would look continuous around the entire waistband when you were finished. As far as everything lining up, I only had one issue. I did have to pause several times to tend to my two year old, so it would probably not even take that long if your were uninterrupted. I was able to finish in a few hours once my pieces were cut out. The skirt goes together really easily and relatively quickly. I am going to try this on my next version of the skirt using my wool fabric, and I will let you know how it turns out. The yardage for the 44" wide is right on, but I think that with the 60" wide you could get away with using less if you use a different fabric to line your pockets. The pattern provides yardage for both 44" wide and 60" wide fabric. You need two of the side panel, pocket lining, and pocket and the rest you only need one. The pattern has six pattern pieces: a front panel, back panel, side panels, a waist band, pocket lining, and pocket I actually don't have the pocket lining piece in the photo above). I did notice that some of my lines were ever so slightly off even when I lined up one of the other sides of the piece, but the difference is negligible and did not cause any problems with constructing the skirt. Then double check that the sizing is correct by measuring the one inch reference on the pattern print out. You do need to make sure that you print your pattern on actual size, by going into the printer properties and selection the "actual size" option and not the "fit to page" option for example. As far as taping the pages together to make the pattern pieces, it is super easy, because each piece has a number and letter combination that matches with its corresponding piece. Plus, I like the instant gratification of have the pattern immediately.sometimes I can be so impatient. The downside is that it does take quite a bit of paper, but you always have the back up just in case something gets lost or messed up or you need a different size. What I love about digital downloads is that you can print it out as many times as you want and cut your size directly out instead of using tracing paper. The Everyday Skirt pattern is a digital download that you can print out on your home printer, including the instructions and the pattern pieces, which you then tape together and cut out. Hopefully you can get a good idea of what to expect from the pattern, then again Liesl + Co/Oliver + S haven't let me down yet.Įveryday Skirt by Liesl + Co Pattern Review Long story, somewhat short, I have lots of pictures to show you of my first Everyday Skirt (but please excuse my pasty legs they don't often see the light of day.yikes). So, I checked my stash once again and found a neat linen/cotton blend fabric that I got super cheap a few months ago that I could use to make a test skirt. I cut out the larger of the two, thinking I could just down-size it if I needed to, but couldn't bare to cut my wool fabric until I was sure. However, I could not decide what size to make.
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