I link to ones which work well for my preferred sewing quality and learning style, in my Aim for Quality blog. And different people prefer different styles of presentation. There must be dozens of on-line tutorials on every possible sewing technique, with hugely variable quality. I’ve noticed some UK companies doing much to develop customer loyalty by providing extra free services during this virus-shutdown-time. It’s difficult to build a big business with many staff if helpfulness is your only income stream, as people can usually go elsewhere. Creative Bug celebrates this DIY style as a sign of their overall attitudes.Īnother problem with high teaching costs in this industry is there are so many good free sources of information. Maybe some DIY effects, but it is more financially sustainable. Compare to one-man-band teaching sites which film themselves using fixed camera angles and do their own editing. One of the problems with the Craftsy business model has been the huge team of professionals making the shows. So happily this post is just of historic interest.īig graunches and groans that Bluprint/Craftsy is closing down.
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