I went for a range of matching browns and greens for an under-tunic, a jacket and trousers. And to distance the elven style from normal medieval or other garments, I decided to make all the parts leaf-shaped to some degree - apart from the elvish embroidery that is to follow. My mistake with the first elven outfits was to stick too closely with average patterns and shapes. But to design garments for a completely different culture deserves some thought of the background and ideas for new shapes.
The under-tunic is from lightweight cotton in a warm, reddish brown. Front and back are roughly leaf-shaped, the point will show beneath the leaf-shaped side panels of the jacket. The sleeves are slightly overlong and cut straight. To fit them under the tighter sleeves of the jacket I sewed in narrow tucks up to the elbow which add to the extravagant appearance I want to create.
The jacket is based on leaf-shapes in general. The basis aren't front and back pieces, but two leaf-shaped side-pieces that overlap at the back where they are sewn together, and at the front where they close with braid fastenings. I even managed to make a cut-on standing collar just so. Amazing what I'm capable of once I'm stressed and can't afford time for thinking! :D
The sleeves are split into an upper and lower part. The lower part is cut in leaf-shape (surprise...) and rolled around the arm to be sewn together by hand. The pattern is my own design. Here it is, as well as one finished sleeve and the second one in the process of growing.
The upper sleeve part is just there to connect it with the body part and is therefore nothing special, just a short sleeve matched to fit the leaf component.
The embroidery of this jacket is a bramble-blackberry-design, as my elf once got caught in a bramble thicket (wearing her court robe; that happens if you put a ranger into a court gown and let her romp off into the woods, drunk!), so now it's a running gag between her and her companion that she has a special fondness for brambles... ^^