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About the Author
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Laurel Hoffmann is a
production patternmaker who, over the last twenty years has
developed and experimented with new ways to scale down and
personalize industrial fashion technology to make it easier to learn and so it can be
more successfully used in industry, cottage industry and by individuals who sew for themselves and their families in their home.
Three of her books:
Design Room Techniques, Drafting & Fitting Pants and Skirts,
and
Sewing Pants and Skirts are now on the market.
Former coordinator/professor of two noncredit continuing professional studies’ certificate
programs, now teaching independently, her students include fashion industry personnel,
cottage fashion entrepreneurs, professionals in other
Over the past fifteen years Ms. Hoffmann has developed, written and
taught her 6-course program. She is also writing the program’s
textbooks, which she and her students are testing in the
classroom. Inside Fashion, the international trade paper,
advertised her first published book, Slacks that Fit, now titled
Drafting & Fitting Pants and Skirts, on their Bookshelf. In 1995
she proposed Sewing Secrets from the Fashion Industry to Rodale
Ms. Hoffmann began her career in custom couture with
Philadelphia’s Main Line clientele. She then worked in
industrial high-end bridal couture and later sportswear,
drafting and grading production patterns and eventually
supervising factory production. She is specialized in all phases
of industrial manufacturing; including draping and design,
cutting and sample making, patternmaking, grading, layouts and
factory production. She is experienced in custom color, design
and fit, and has had her own cottage industry for many years,
first with domestics, now as a desktop publisher.
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Laurel with her paternal
grandmother, her first sewing teacher. When this picture
was taken at Laurel's wedding reception, Laurel was working as a patternmaker, grader
trainee, and fit model. |
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Ms. Hoffmann recognized the need for better fitting and sewing
instructions when she retired to raise her children. She
realized how difficult it would be for someone who had not
worked in the industry to produce professional garments. She
began researching to learn more about these problems, asking
other women whether they sewed, if not, why? – how they felt
about the patterns and information that was available to them.
She started a 4-H sewing club for her daughter and two of her
daughter’s friends who had just turned nine and ten years old.
Although warned that the children would not be able to learn
industrial sewing, she taught her club the same scaled down
industrial sewing methods she used at home. Her club completed
Pennsylvania’s ten Clothing and Textiles levels in three years,
normally a 10-year process, winning perfect scores in the senior
division on the second half of their projects.
When Philadelphia University learned of her club’s success, they
asked her to teach in their fashion degree program, which she
did for five years. She wrote the textbook for the prerequisite
course she was asked to teach; and wrote and developed Couture
Techniques, a senior capstone course. She designed sample books
for both courses. |
The School of Graduate and Continuing Studies then asked if she
would teach adult fashion classes. Her pragmatic program
includes a business course. The economics of time, materials,
and cost are also discussed in each of the other five
multi-disciplined fashion studio courses.
Ms. Hoffmann’s intent is to enable her students and the people
who buy her books to use the best of industrial technology to
design and make beautiful clothes that work for them. She
emphasizes that with scaled down industrial technology, a
beautiful, custom designed high-end wardrobe can be achieved at
minimal expense, with minimal equipment, within a reasonable
time frame.
Professor Laurel Hoffmann worked in the industry as
a production patternmaker/technical designer after
working in high-end custom. She
wrote the Industrial Fashion Methods Continuing
Professional Education Certificate Program that she
teaches at Philadelphia University, and is writing
and testing its textbooks in that program. The
books' material is determined by her students' needs
and by what she needed to know when she ran
factories in the industry. She has adapted that
information, where necessary, so it can be used with
minimal equipment. Her students include design
personnel from the industry.
Laurel began her career in custom design in a small
shop with Philadelphia's Main Line clientele. She
then worked in industrial high-end bridal and later
sportswear, drafting and grading production patterns
and eventually supervising factory production. She
is specialized in all phases of industrial
manufacturing; including draping and design, cutting
and sample making, patternmaking, grading, layouts,
and factory production. She is experienced in custom
color, design, and fit, and has had her own cottage
industry for many years, first with custom clothing,
then domestics, now as an author and publisher. She
is also a former 4-H Leader and Master Leader. Their
national web site
is
www.4husa.org.
The PA 4-H website is
http://pa4h.cas.psu.edu
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Drafting & Fitting Pants and
Skirts contains 288 pages. |
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Sewing Pants and Skirts contains
272 pages. |
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USA $90.00 per book, plus $6.00 shipping
and handling.
Order the Book.
More about Laurel Hoffmann:
Writer
Companion books, Drafting & Fitting Pants and Skirts and Sewing
Pants and Skirts went on the market in the spring of 2004.
Inside Fashion, the international trade paper published in Hong
Kong, selected them for sale on their virtual Bookshelf.
Ms. Hoffmann continues to write and test the pattern making and sewing textbooks. She also wrote various articles for the
Professional Association of Custom Clothiers’ PACCNews and the
American Sewing Guild’s Notions newsletters.
She wrote the blouse chapter for SEWING SECRETS FROM THE FASHION
INDUSTRY, published by Rodale Press, 1996; gave sewing
suggestions for SEWING TIPS FROM THE FASHION INDUSTRY, published
by Rodale Press.
She also wrote the required textbook, BASIC SAMPLE MAKING PROCEDURES Used in
the Fashion Industry, for degree fashion program at Philadelphia
University, 1991. Textbook addresses industrial, cottage
industry, classroom, and personal sewing technology needs. That book formed the basis for Design Room Techniques.
Videos
PILLOW MAKING is the pilot film produced for and sold to
students, cottage industry, and home markets.
College Fashion Professor
Developed and taught Continuing Professional Education
certificate program designed for
cottage industry. Students learn all aspects of industrial
designing, patternmaking and sewing including custom fitting,
tailoring, utilizing home sewing patterns as slopers and related
skills.
Testing new industrial custom fit and grading procedures in
the classroom.
Previously developed and taught Philadelphia University fashion
degree program’s prerequisite fashion design Garment Structures
course; wrote and taught senior industrial Couture Techniques
fashion degree sample making course. Designed and developed the
textbook for prerequisite fashion degree course, sample books
for both courses, skirt and shirt patterns for prerequisite
sample making fashion degree course.
Industrial Production Patternmaker/Technical Designer
Experienced in all aspects of clothing manufacture: sportswear
production patternmaker/factory supervisor, grader, fit model,
assistant designer of couture wedding gowns, custom couture
designer, sample making – cutting and sewing - and sample sales.
Bruce Nussbaum, Inc.; Lynne Carol, Inc., Philadelphia, Pa.;
Janed, Inc. (Corner House) Quakertown, Pa.; Alfred Angelo, Inc.,
Willow Grove, Pa.; Joie De Vivre, Haverford, Pa.
Cottage Industry Entrepreneur
Home based publishing business.
In the past manufactured pillows, other home furnishings;
needlepoint finishing, custom clothing.
Current Work History
Publisher, author, artist of pant books currently on the market
Coordinator/Instructor at Philadelphia University
Affliations
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