

This Donkey Kong t-shirt goes into great detail, showing an Oil Drum, a Flame enemy, a score, a top score, and a bonus score.

#Donkey kong shirt how to
I took it apart about two years ago (yes, that’s how long I’ve been planning to make shirts) so I probably won’t be able to figure out how to put it together, but we’ll see. This shirt shows Jumpman hurdling over barrels on a construction site, as he tries to save Pauline from the giant ape, Donkey Kong. I’ve got a tailor-made shirt that fits me like a glove (see picture). I could draft it, but I dislike drafting by hand, I’d rather program it for MakeMyPattern, but that would take too much time. I don’t ever drape really, and I’m not sure how I’ll drape on myself. And if I’m doing a bunch of alterations, I might as well roll my own. I don’t really like commercial patterns that much because they need a bunch of alterations anyway (I’m not a standard size). So here’s my first question: Where do I start?ĭo I use a commercial pattern, like Collette Patterns’ Negroni? Do I copy a shirt? Do I draft one from my Aldrich drafting book, or drape one form my Coffin shirtmaking book? Donkey Kong T Shirt Level new Official retro Gamer Mens Black Size XLTop Rated Seller. And I’m not alone: Twelve sewcialists (including me) are listed on It’s on like Donkey Kong’s shirt, for what’s a plan without its own dedicated blog right? If you want to join, let me know :) New Year’s resolution: I’ll be making shirts this year. I took it apart long ago to copy it, but never started on it. Making shirts: Pattern, copy, draft, or drape?
