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title: Curated measurements sets
sidebar_position: 70
---
FreeSewing's **curated measurements sets** are a collection of
measurements sets that represent real people.
These sets are used by designers to test their designs on a variety of bodies,
as well as by FreeSewing users to test the platform.
## History
FreeSewing is all about bespoke sewing patterns, so perpetuating the
myth of _standard sizes_ was never something we wanted to be part of.
In reality, having to take measurements prior to even being able to try the
platform adds a lot of friction to the onboarding of new users. So at one
point, we added a sizing table with a variety of measurements/sizes so
people could see what generating a pattern looked like without having to
start measuring themselves.
With the release of version 3 of FreeSewing, we wanted to move away from these
_made up_ measurements and instead work with the data of real people to test
our platform.
We now no longer present users who want to try out the site a range of
_standard sizes_ but rather a collection of measurements sets where they can
pick the one that best represents their own body.
## Suggesting a measurements set for curation
We rely on our community to submit measurements sets for curation. If you have
a public measurements set on the site, you can suggest it for curation.
To be part of our curated measurements sets collection, you should provide the
following:
- **All measurements** of the person. We do not accept incomplete sets as that
would mean some designs would not work with them.
- **The height** of the person. This helps users select a measurements set
closest to their own body.
- **A picture** of the person to be featured [in our line-up of curated
measurements sets]https://freesewing.org(/curated-sets). See below for tips.
## Tips for line-up pictures
We present measurements sets in a line-up style, so the picture should be a
full frontal picture where you are standing straight and relaxed with your arms
beside your body.
Below are some tips on how to get good results:
### Don't stand too close to the camera
For best results, ask a friend to take a picture from further away and zoom in.
This helps avoid the _fisheye_ effect that you get when taking a picture from
up close.


The fist picture is taken from (too) close. There's nothing really wrong with
this picture, but it looks weird. That's because this is taken with a mobile
phone and the wide angle on these types of cameras gives you this subtle fish
eye effect.
The picture on the right was take further away with zoom. This is a much
better representation of reality and the pose looks natural because the fish
eye effect is neutralized.
#### Stand in front of a white background
We will edit out the background of your picture like this:

So you can make that step a lit easier for us if you can pose in front of a
white or plain background.