Lesson 1 : Bodice Sloper
Sweetheart Bodice - How to add lining and how to hem edges
BODICE.wmv
DIY-Basic Pattern Tutorial: The Bodice
Leah in a Bodice!!!
Draping a Strapless Bodice - Lesson 2 Taster
Introduction to pattern-making - Basic Bodice Block
Pattern Drafting 101: Basic Bodice Sloper
Art Dress Tutorial - Part 1 - Paper Mache Bodice
How To Drape a Basic Darted Bodice: Design School with Nick Verreos
How to Sew Lining in a Bodice
Art Dress tutorial with Paper Mache Bodice Tutorial
E13 - Draping 101 :: Draping Front/Back Bodice Part 1 of 2
Clean Finish Bodice Lining Tutorial
Lesson 1 : Bodice Sloper
Sweetheart Bodice - How to add lining and how to hem edges
BODICE.wmv
DIY-Basic Pattern Tutorial: The Bodice
Leah in a Bodice!!!
Draping a Strapless Bodice - Lesson 2 Taster
Introduction to pattern-making - Basic Bodice Block
Pattern Drafting 101: Basic Bodice Sloper
Art Dress Tutorial - Part 1 - Paper Mache Bodice
How To Drape a Basic Darted Bodice: Design School with Nick Verreos
How to Sew Lining in a Bodice
Art Dress tutorial with Paper Mache Bodice Tutorial
E13 - Draping 101 :: Draping Front/Back Bodice Part 1 of 2
Clean Finish Bodice Lining Tutorial
Lesson 2-14 MEDIUM Front Bodice Part 1a - PATTERN MAKING OF A BASIC DRESS WITH WAISTLINE
How to sew a Basic Bodice Sloper-- a tutorial for sewing and fitting the Bodice
How to sew facings to the bodice around the armholes
How to Measure For Bodice Block Pattern Making (Free Sample)
Bodice and Boxers, Oh MY!, Threadbanger
Art Dress Bodice Tutorial
How to Draft an Upper Torso (aka Bodice) Sloper
How to Assemble a Bodice Lining| BurdaStyle
DIY: Sewing Your Own Bodice With Pattern
A bodice, historically, is an article of clothing for women, covering the body from the neck to the waist. In modern usage it typically refers to a specific type of upper garment common in Europe during the 16th to the 18th century, or to the upper portion of a modern dress to distinguish it from the skirt and sleeves. The term comes from pair of bodies (because the garment was originally made in two pieces that fastened together, frequently by lacing).[citation needed]
In historical usage, particularly in Victorian and early 20th century fashion, a bodice (in earlier sources, body[citation needed]) indicates the upper part of a dress that was constructed in two parts (i.e., with separate skirt and bodice, such as a ballet tutu), but of matching or coordinating fabric with the intention of wearing the two parts as a unit. In dressmaking, the term waist (sometimes given as "dress waist" to distinguish it from a shirtwaist) was also used. During wear, the parts might be connected by hooks and eyes. This construction was standard for fashionable garments from the 18th century until the late 19th century, and had the advantages of allowing a voluminous skirt to be paired with a close-fitting bodice, and of allowing two or more bodices to be worn with the same skirt (e.g., a high-necked bodice and a low-necked bodice allowed the same skirt to serve for both daywear and evening wear). One-piece construction became more common after 1900 due to the trend for looser, more simply-constructed clothing with narrower skirts.
Nick Verreos (born February 13, 1967 in St. Louis, Missouri) is an American fashion designer and contestant on the second season of the reality television program Project Runway.
Verreos was born in Missouri on February 13, 1967 to a Greek-American father and a Panamanian mother. Though born in St. Louis, Missouri, he spent his early childhood in Caracas, Venezuela after his father, a U.S. State Department diplomat in Panama, met his mother, whose great uncle had been the president of that country.[citation needed] At age 10, Verreos and his family moved back to the United States and he finished elementary and high school in San Francisco, California. He began college at UCLA, studying Political Science and International Relations, but after graduation, turned his interest to fashion design and pursued additional work at the Fashion Institute of Design and Merchandising (FIDM) in Los Angeles. He completed the Advanced Fashion Design Program at FIDM.[citation needed]
After finishing studies at FIDM, Verreos immediately found success in the fashion industry.[citation needed] He won the Suisse du Jeune Talent competition, in which he represented the United States in St. Gallen, Switzerland.[citation needed] He began his career in Los Angeles working for a variety of companies, before forming his own design firm, Nikolaki, with partner David Paul in 2001. Since 2003 he has also worked part-time at FIDM teaching technical sketching and draping/pattern drafting.[citation needed]