Sunday, 30 September 2018

Hattendum

When I made the black version of simplicity 1587 I thought it would go very nicely with a bright red cardigan. I was right, but I thought it wanted another red in the outfit and I took it into my head that I would like to make a co-ordinating pillbox hat. This would have been Thursday. I knew that Saturday would be my last chance for a photoshoot for a while so that was my deadline. I did some googling and appealed to my friend, who owns an original pillbox hat, for some photos and measurements. That evening was spent making paper mockups to get the size right - and hemming the purple dress, because I needed that for Saturday too.
Friday after work I immediately cut the buckram, wadding and fabric so I could be sewing it together while at youth group. The outside of the hat is made from faux suede left over from my Esther costume. As well as matching nicely, I wanted a textured fabric that would have some grip on my slippery hair. The hat is lined with leftover dress fabric because I had that immediately on hand.
For construction I opted to forgo blocking (because time and inexperience) and instead cut a circle (with tabs) and a rectangle and sewed them together. I wired only the lower edge of the hat as the top seemed quite stable without. I’m not certain that the wired edge isn’t slightly smaller than the top. I was eyeballing it and I think it should be just a few millimetres bigger, but I don’t know if the whole hat is too small or just that edge.
I have wadding on both sides of the top piece and a layer around the outside of the crown. Once I had the top and inside of the hat covered I put a band around the outside. I wanted this to have a bit of body from the hat so I wrapped my fabric around another strip of wadding. By this time I was at band practice and sewing every second I wasn’t singing, and then in the carpark while waiting to pick up my mum. Turns out the steering wheel makes a very convenient sewing stand.
I got the hat done just in time. We had been planning on an outdoor shoot but the weather was very overcast and windy. The hat stays on pretty well against a breeze; it wasn’t going to survive that.

Generally I’ve found that if you’re in public in weird clothes with a person toting a camera, people seem to assume you’re meant to be there. At one point another person with a camera joined in and took a photo as well. An elderly gentleman, who told me he owned 400 hats, asked about mine and was disappointed to find it wasn’t made properly. I’ll block the next one, promise.

Monday, 24 September 2018

A call to arms

I’ve been wanting to branch out a bit with my 40s sewing and try something other than the pattern I made up at 1 o’clock in the morning three years ago. One of the patterns I picked up is Simplicity 1587, a reprint of a pattern from the 40s. I made a mock-up, probably a year ago now, and started on the adjustments before getting distracted by Butterick 6018.
I pulled out my adjusted 1587 pattern a few weeks ago and made another mock-up. It was almost there. Almost. In the past I would have called it good enough and moved on – after all, arm movement is a luxury, not a necessity – but now it’s time to fix this thing and luxuriate.

My adjustments to this pattern include
  • Square shoulder
  • Broad shoulder
  • My own magic armscye fix
  • Large upper arm
  • Making the 3/4 sleeve a long sleeve
  • Widening the hip yoke
  • Moving the zip from the side seam to the back
  • Removing the peak and gathers from the centre of the skirt waistline, ‘cos, wow, that looked bad! (Going by other blogs this is a popular change.)

Usually I would omit the facing as my experience is that they just cause trouble without any great advantage but this one actually worked nicely. I sewed it down at the shoulder seams and between that and the zip stitching it all stays in place.
The square shoulder adjustment affected both the front and the yoke. Because of the way they fit together I had to do the yoke adjustment on the diagonal which took a bit to get my head around but seems to have worked.
The fix to the square shoulder and my armscye fix counteract each other so in the future I think I will try doing square shoulder only on the top half of the armscye and see if that turns out neater.

The large upper arm adjustment most confuses me as I don’t have a large upper arm relative to me or relative to average. However, without it, I have uncomfortably limited movement, even with all the shoulder adjustments. Or maybe they exacerbate the problem.
I bought a lovely, lovely, lovely fabric from Lincraft. I am indifferent to the print but it feels beautiful, drapes exactly right and doesn’t static the way a lot of these dresses do. So one black dress (very like the original envelope) was my plan. The fabric was a bit jelly-like and inclined to stretch, so to handle that I sewed all the seams with a tearaway backing. I’ve not used this technique before but it was very successful – I had no trouble with unstable seams.
Then my aunt was clearing out her mother’s stash and gave me a collection of fabrics. This included a very nice, light floral and navy print. I think it must be lawn or voile. I did a burn test so I know it is at least partly an artificial fibre which is probably why it doesn’t crumple very much. Unfortunately there was just not quite enough. No amount of creative laying out was going to get me all the pieces from the fabric. So I scoured the stash for something that might match. There was a skerrick left over from my chemise dress petticoat in just the right purple and a similarly light weight. Sadly it doesn’t quite have the same crease-resistant properties as the print but I don’t think I could do any better (especially since I wanted to start cutting Now). On the plus side, the plain colour means the yoke pleating is actually visible and not lost amongst flowers. 
Most of my 40s dresses have the zip starting a couple of inches below the neckline and close with a hook and eye, or have a v-shape in the back. This allows enough opening for the dress to come off over my hips as no-one sells zips long enough for my waist-to-hip ratio. For these dresses I decided to forgo this convenience and started the zip itself at the neckline. By 'decided' I mean I forgot on the first one... but it looked so much neater that I did it on purpose the second time.
Both dresses went together quickly, bar a pause due to running out of thread (both times!) and they fit very comfortably. They have no discomfort in the arm and shoulder region which is a nice change so I think my adjustments were the right thing to do.