David Page Coffin was a home sewing, mostly self-taught legend. I read this book almost like a novel, it's that interesting (could just be me?). It makes me want to sew nothing but finely made shirts. Not a bad idea as these are the items that make the most impact to appearance and wear out the fastest.
Multiple methods are discussed (with personal anecdotes and decided opinions) for all aspects of shirt-making from the quick, industry methods to fine custom tailoring. And then there are the quirky bits like using a pair of socks for knit cuffs on a sportsman's pullover. Full of ideas, adaptations, examples and modifications; a whole shirt sewing education in a book.
Introduction - Why he wrote a specific shirtmaking book and why you should make your own shirts.
SHIRTS EXAMINED
One: The Materials of Fine Shirts - shirting fabrics, preparing shirting fabrics
Two: The Shirtmaker's Tools - for shirtmaking, for pattern preparation and sewing practice, desirable but optional tools
Three: The Classic Shirt - anatomy of a classic shirt, one piece back, one or two-piece double yoke, shirt front, flat felled armscye and side seams, one-piece sleeves with plackets, barrel and French cuffs, collar on a stand, rolled hem, sundry details
PATTERNMAKING
Four: Making Shirts Fit - the well fitted shirt, collar fit, shoulder fit, sleeve fit, body fit, achieving good fit, developing a shirt pattern that fits, adjusting a commercial pattern, drafting your own pattern, copying existing shirts, combined pattern-making method
Five: Developing A Basic Pattern- the drape method, draping a woman's shirt pattern, sleeves
Six: Collars, Plackets, Cuffs and Pockets - with a catalogue of pattern details at full scale
SHIRT CONSTRUCTION
Seven: A Workshop in Precision Sewing Techniques - stay stitching and sewing seams, construction ironing, trimming seam allowances, edge-stitching and top-stitching, flat-felled seams and rolled hems, sewing the sleeve/body seam, attaching cuffs and collar bands, placket construction, turning collar points, making the collar
Eight: Sewing It All Together - working with striped fabrics, pattern layout, putting the shirt together
Nine: Variations on a Classic Theme - a closer look at the rectangular shirt, the bib shirt and shirt-waist, the shirt in the early 20th century, the modern shirt, the outdoor, utility and over-shirt, the modern non-dress shirt, a catalogue of design ideas
Addendum: Monogramming Shirts
Sources of Supply / Bibliography / Index