A shirt design where the sleeve piece extends to the neck like the pattern used on traditional two-color baseball shirts.
A shoulder style following the natural contours of the shoulder invented by Baron Raglan who improvised for his troops by using slit potato sacks.
A sleeve where one piece of fabric extends all the way to the neckline, with slanted seams from the armhole to the neck (no shoulder seam). Traditional two-color baseball shirts are a perfect example of raglan sleeves.
This is an English term that is used in France. It is a loose overcoat in which the sleeves are cut so as to continue up to the collar. The garment is named for English Field Marshal Lord Raglan (1788-1855).
a garment (coat or sweater) that has raglan sleeves
a raglan sleeve is stitched under the arm and in two parallel lines leading from the armpit to the neck; it makes for ease of arm movement.
A type of sleeve sewn in with seams slanting outward from the neck to the underarm. Reactive Dyes. Dyes that work by forming a chemical reaction between the fiber and the solution of alkaline and dyestuff. Heat is used to develop the shade, and soap is applied and rinsed out after dying to remove any unfixed dye.