The clothes took a long time to make. Even for her, she had to stay in the system for over ten hours each day. If she got tired, she would nap for a while and then continue embroidering. As a result, it took her roughly ten days to finish the garment. She didn't even dare to imagine how much longer it would take outside the system—dozens of days, a few months, or even longer.
After all, this kind of pure hand embroidery is inherently slow. Thinking back on it, those in later generations who embroidered cross-stitch, like the Qingming River Painting, would take five to six years to complete. And if she were to use the traditional double-sided embroidery technique, she really didn't know how long it would take.
However, she did want to challenge herself with embroidering a Qingming River Painting that spanned several dozen meters.