Wednesday 31 August 2016

Technical clothes

In my previous post I mentioned this hoody, which I was given for my birthday and I thought it would be a good opportunity to explain what I mean by technical clothing in my exceptions for not buying clothes.

Fashionable hoody is fashionable (credit: Sensory Direct)

First a little bit of background to why I asked for and why I looooove this hoody.  I have some issues with anxiety (read: have had panic attacks and other anxiety related problems since I was tiny) and find that deep pressure helps me relax.  Deep pressure is essentially a firm consistent pressure, which Temple Grandin famously found helped many people with autism cope with the world.  She developed a hug machine to squeeze people to their heart's desire, but the same effect can also be felt with weighted products: weighted blankets being the most common.  Since Temple Grandin implemented it as a therapy for autism it's expanded to other areas.  I know quite a lot of people who find it helpful for their anxiety (though there are plenty of others with anxiety who find it anything from pointless to horrible) and plenty of people with no particular issues who find it comforting.

I made myself a weighted blanket a while ago now and sleep under it most nights (the recent heat and having to be without it was unpleasant), but it's not exactly portable, and if I'm having a stressful day and just want a bit of a top up on my calm while still being able to watch Oscar or sew, the hoody is way more convenient.  Also the hoody is much easier to take if we're going away somewhere to sleep under - I can throw it on my legs or my chest and be comfortable enough even in a strange bed.

On to the technicalities!  Since I did make my weighted blanket I do have some insight into how I would go about making a weighted hoody and my initial inspections when it first arrived bore out my theories.  The weight in a blanket it produced by putting two layers together and essentially sewing little sealed off pockets all over the blanket full of little plastic pellets to create an even weight distribution.  Here's a tutorial I looked at before I made mine.
Credit to the lady at the above tutorial.  You fill each row with pellets then sew across.  Fill, sew, fill, sew....
The hoody is made in a similar way - hidden pockets on the inside of the hoody contain weights of varying sizes made with this method.  You can actually order additional weights to add to it, but it's plenty heavy enough for me.
dinky weight
So why not make this myself?  It's just a hoody with some weights in.  Well, yeah, I could make it myself, but for me there's a couple of reasons not to.  The first being that I wanted it quickly (I'm impatient) and didn't want to learn how to make a halfway decent hoody from scratch first.  I guess I could have found a secondhand hoody and added pockets, but that runs into all kinds of other problems with making sure the pockets are in the right place and the right size and not visible from the outside and blah blah blah.

Another reason not to make it myself I learned from making weighted blankets.  My machine is great and all, but it's still just a home machine and it really really doesn't like it when it hits even small pieces of very hard plastic.  There are some things it's really just not made for and dodging flying shards of shattered needles is no fun.

In future as I get better and maybe get better equipment I might try more of the things that I consider "technical" at the moment, but for now I'm happy having a little bit of leeway on not buying.

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