jane wrote:I get frustrated that many manufactures of specialised technical clothing finish at a womens size 16 .
It leads me to wonder where to look for such clothing in " my perfect size " and also if its worth sewing my own
Is anyone out there in the real world sewing their own custom made hiking clothing ?
It's definitely worth making your own if you have a pretty good domestic machine and time to research something like YT and ask questions and then time to practice. Bushwalking clothing pants, shorts, shirts etc is not different in shape etc to normal clothing. The whole bushwalking clothing scene for nearly all people, most of the time is overblown. It's all twaddle. Mock something up, beat the hell out of it-refine it and make a copy.
You want the size up or down for almost any clothing item you can get the pattern for it. Youtube is just unbelievable also, truly. I recently tracked down my 1983 Janome machine being used in a demo of stitches after a service-it's just astounding. You can even use you own stuff for a pattern. Might well be a bit messy first go, but you can refine it and best of all you get what you want.
The real issue I have found is getting the the 'technical fabric' for clothes. I priced some highly technical fabric recently for a job and the bought version was only a wee bit (30%) more expensive. You can get almost any fabric you want but you'll be going overseas (likely Euro or US) and postage from the land of Pepe la Chump is so stupidly expensive.
Fabric that breathes well yet blocks wind some waterproofing and variations of that will be harder to find and can be exy.
If you want more generic clothing fabrics cut and stitched to your own dimensions, you have the time and they work for you why not?
Cecile gave me some good pointers as well

I'd love to see some of your creations.