Yearly Archives: 2011

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Snowfield chic, Japanese style

If, like me, you hail from a sunny snow-less place and are planning a skiing holiday, then chances are the snow gear on offer in your hometown will be of a limited range.  And most probably in drab neutral tones, which may be tres chic colour choices for the city streets but somehow look uninspired and a wee bit boring when you sally forth onto the slopes.  Particularly when one becomes surrounded by extremely eye-catching Japanese boarders and skiers, who employ clashing colours and patterns to really gorgeous effect.

My favourite Japanese fashion inspiration has always come from designers such as Yohji Yamamoto, Rei Kawakubo and Issey Miyake; who built careers on clothing that is not necessarily colourful but derives interest from the folding and manipulation of solid colour fabric to create sculptural shapes and form through texture.  An artistic extension of origami, itself a Japanese tradition.
However the outfits worn by snowbound Japanese are a completely different but equally inspiring story.
Snow-sporters here dress in the most vivid and exciting colour and pattern combinations, which of course look amazing set against the pure white of snowy slopes. 

Other bonuses?  As well as looking fabulous, such individual looks are a great aid to helping you spot your friends from half a mountain away.  

Need a less shallow impetus to go brights?  The inbuilt safety aspects of brights are another plus.  “Inmate orange” really stands out in the snow and means one is less likely to blend into one’s surroundings and be bowled over by an out-of-control newbie.

Speaking of, Japanese ski schools have a kind of weird and slightly embarrassing dress code for adult, yes, these are adult, learner skiers…

I think I would just bow out of the class gracefully in this situation…

This is just a tiny sample of the great outfits I spied out on the slopes, unfortunately getting one’s camera out is a bit of a business when skiing, and what’s more some of the coolest people out on the slopes are the young snowboarders who are fast and are out of sight as soon as spotted.
Plus I didn’t want to be obviously in people’s face, taking photos, but was trying to be discreet about it here and not photograph people’s faces…  but you can get the idea.  I like the fact that Japanese young men are unafraid to wear shocking pink, lurid purple plaid, neon stripes or to have miniature puppy-dog toys hanging off their backpacks.  Pompoms and furry animal costumes are not considered a threat to one’s manhood here.

I admire this.  The girls’ ensembles are equally fun.  Hmmmm, perhaps should have left the ski purchasing until we got here… now I want to trade in my boring white pants for, say, something in neon green plaid… 
But at least Sam bought some really cool gloves!

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Hirafu, Hokkaido, Japan; a pictorial essay

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Australia Day

It’s been pretty difficult to post, what with available computer time being taken up with the superior demands of teenage Facebook time, not to mention some essential out-of-office business maintenance.  My blog has taken very much a back seat.
However today is special, being Australia Day and all.  I was mean and muscled everyone out to get on here…!
No doubt Aussies at home will be wearing a much more summery ensemble today, so I wish you a wonderful day as you sit around the pool with your refreshing cocktail, and/or frolic in the surf at the beach.  Enjoy!  We will be celebrating later with a much more wintery concoction of mulled plum wine.
Looking very Aussie here on the streets of Hirafu, on Mount Niseko-Annupuri in Hokkaido, Japan.

Details:
Jeans; Burda 7863, greige corduroy
Shirt; Burda 7767, check flannelette
Beanie; my own design, charcoal wool
Gloves; ??
Snow boots; from Big KMart, in the US.  I’ve had these for about 10 years.  Big KMart is similar to our KMart in Australia, except about three times as big.  No, I’m not exaggerating…!

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Gratuitous skiing shot with no element of handmade-ness

I apologise in advance for this photo.  I have no excuse for the inclusion of this picture here, which has absolutely nothing to do with sewing, knitting, nor, I fear, even looking one’s best, as I surely look less than gainly or graceful when zooming down the slopes.  Well, I am still a bit proud of this one, since here is the proof.  That I can actually get myself from the top of a snowy slope to the bottom in a reasonably respectable manner.  Upright, at a respectable speed, and without breaking any extremities.  I reckon not too shabby for a committed beachcomber.
Actually, there is an unseen relevance here.  Hand-knitted socks do figure somewhere in this ensemble.
These are the slopes of Mount Bachelor, near Bend in central Oregon, USA.

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A short break…

I’m just letting you know that I am going to be away from regular blogging for a short while.
We are travelling overseas; visiting friends and going skiing.  I am a very bad skier, which is hardly surprising given that we have lived almost our whole lives 2000 miles away from anywhere that ever sees snow, but I still enjoy skiing nonetheless!  I should mention my family are much better than me… er, so maybe it’s just that I’m kinda uncoordinated.
We are also spending some time in Tokyo.  It’s no secret that I find Japanese fashion incredibly inspiring, so I’m looking forward to seeing some for real and check out people in the streetz and going window shopping.  Real shopping?  Maybe.  I think my no-shopping pledge can be stretched just a little bit when it comes to souvenirs…  I love to have wearable souvenirs from our holidays.
Of course, fabric is totally allowed…  ðŸ˜‰
Without a doubt the highlight of my time in Tokyo will be meeting up with some fellow seamstresses and bloggers whilst I am there, Yoshimi and Novita.  I can hardly wait to meet them and chat about self-fashioning and stuff…!  So exciting!

So, later, dudes!

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Tim’s quilt

I’m a bit embarrassed putting a picture of this up here now, because it’s quite old and worn now and has really seen better days, but that is the nature of quilts, right?  That they are supposed to age gracefully and naturally, like fine wine (and women) and take on a character and story all of their own with each little rip and patch?
And I did set out to document as much as I could, even things that have had a rough life…
This was my first effort at a full bed-sized quilt.  I hadn’t really done any quilting prior to this, apart from a little baby floor quilt which was done totally on my machine, posted here.  
So,  in my usual way, I rocked up to Calico House (as it was called then, now Calico and Ivy), just bought a selection of boy-ish type of fabrics and went home to nut it out for myself.  I can recall the ladies in the store were a bit scandalised that I wasn’t going to take any lessons, or even buy a book.   How hard could it be, I reasoned?  Patchwork and quilting is hardly rocket science.  Me being a bit gung-ho, I inwardly scoffed at the idea of needing instructions…  I just did up a rough mud map of what I wanted and then made some measurements of numbers of squares times dimensions, added all up, to work out how much fabric I would need.  The backing is a single sized navy blue flat sheet.
It’s a very simple design.  The edging is very amateurish, I turned under the edges and overstitched by hand all around the edge.  I only quilted around the edges of the quilt; both in the ditch and a few stars, moons, suns and swirls in the border by hand, the middle part of the quilt is knotted at the corners of each square with surgeon’s knots.  Right now I will confess that this is an inferior method to traditional quilting; it looked nice but did not make for a robust quilt.  As a toddler Tim used to love to sit on the side of his bed and slide himself along with the quilt on to the floor… yeah… Activities like this, coupled with the flimsy knotting do make for a short life-span… and as you can tell, some of the fabrics in the middle have worn and ripped with use and been patched with other fabrics.  
And, early in its life I used to carefully handwash in the bath tub, but nowadays I just toss it in the washing machine.
C’est la vie.  I’m a big one for believing things should be used and loved on a daily basis and not tucked away preciously for special occasions, and this quilt has definitely been much loved and used, and still is to this day.  That’s all that counts for me.

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The Sandwich Bag dress

I finished a new dress…
I love this new little thing; we are expecting more really hot weather around here and I wanted some more really cool floaty things that can waft around my body, if not picking up any actual real breezes then possibly the swishing about of fabric just might create flurries of pseudo-breezes to cool me off…  I know, could be hopeless wishful thinking but in a heatwave one is willing to try anything.
You’re probably wondering about the strange and seemingly random name I’ve given to this quite romantic little number… well remember this?

The very very sweet but fabric-clueless young man who cut, cut? nay, hacked off this piece of silk for me in the Alannah Hill outlet store in Melbourne then packaged it for me by stuffing it (and by “stuffing” I’m not speaking figuratively but quite literally) into a little sandwich bag, painstakingly sealed closed, and presented thus for me to carry out of the store…  Funny!  I was so entertained by this cavalier treatment of fine, high quality silk that the image just became firmly wedged in my head never to be dislodged…  the Sandwich Bag dress was always going to be its name after that.  
A positive, at a pinch I know I can always fit this dress in a teensy little sandwich bag if an emergency packing situation arises…
I’ve had this Vogue pattern for about a year, and finally have used it.  I had always looked at it a bit sideways and wondered if was a very silly purchase that wasn’t me at all, but I’m over that now.  I’ve decided all those extravagant ruffles that before had me balking are really quite flattering for my figure.  So it does pay to try new things and to stretch oneself out of one’s comfort zone every once in a while.  And fortuitously I had just exactly the right amount of fabric, lucky or what??  That young man with his jaggedy cuts did it just right!
The dress is completely lined with navy blue acetate lining, and all the ruffles and raw edges are finished with a rolled hem using two shades of red overlocking thread, just using threads I had already.  The lining hem is finished in the traditional way.  The buttons are these perfect dark mauve discs found at Fabulous Fabrics.  Aaand, I added pockets… ! (self high five)
Below is the pattern review I submitted, in case you’re interested…

Pattern Description:
Lined dresses A, B, fitted through bust area have princess seams, contrast neck and lower flounce, straps and loop closure, sash with threaded loops.
Pattern Sizing:
Overall 6-20, I bought the AA option with sizes 6-12 and sewed a straight size 10.
Did it look like the photo/drawing on the pattern envelope once you had finished sewing it?
yes, except that I used self fabric for the ruffles, not a contrasting fabric

Were the instructions easy to follow?
yes

What did you particularly like or dislike about the pattern?
It is a loose fitting dress, so precision fitting is not an issue here, simplifying things.
I wasn’t sure about the look of all those ruffles at first and so put off making up this one for about a year.  Now I love them and feel they are very flattering to my figure.  However those same extravagant ruffles are what contributes to the difficulty of getting a good finish, particularly in the neckline/shoulder strap area, sewing dress to lining and turning right side out in step 24.  In this part I fully appreciated how essential thin lightweight fabric is for this pattern to work at all, so you can scrunch up those ruffles up tight enough to be contained with those thin little shoulder areas when sewing.
Understitching around these areas and the button loop area was quite fiddly.  The button loop area was quite fiddly full stop, but I put this down to the delicate and slippery silk I chose to make the dress up in, and not the fault of the pattern.
Fabric used:
Thin silk charmeuse
Pattern alterations or any design changes you made:
I added in-seam pockets in the side seams of the dress.
I used the rolled hem function on my overlocker to finish all raw edges of the ruffles and the sash, rather than the narrow hem method described in step 4 and 5 of the instructions.  So much easier!  Plus instead of double stitching all the seam allowances as described I finished raw edges on the inside by overlocking.
Would you sew it again?  Would you recommend it?
I won’t sew this again in the near future, as it is such an eye-catching thing one of these is enough in my wardrobe.  But when this one bites the dust I might.
I recommend this pattern as a lovely romantic little dress, perfect for summer days.  It is actually simpler than it looks, my only proviso is to be certain to only attempt this with very thin fabric.
Conclusion:
I’m a little surprised myself at how much I love the “adorableness” of this dress, not a style I usually go for.  I feel so feminine in it, plus on a practical note it’ll to be very cool to wear on very hot summer days.

Below: I almost didn’t include this picture, but decided the wind had co-operated by showing off the lining, which I hadn’t photographed otherwise…

Below at left; threaded sash loops, at right; yup, pockets!
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A walk in the park

A day of colourlessness (ness, ness) is often followed by a more colourful day, in my world.
And today is a bad hair day, sorry.  Thus the pony.  I am getting my hair cut this afternoon, and I am so sorely tempted to wait until I am salon-coiffured all fabulously before taking a photo… but I am just too busy later on today.  So a dog-walking photo with messy hair it had to be.
In sewing news, I am nearly finished another little floral floaty summer dress, and just needed some lining fabric so headed up to my favourite fabric shop.  And they were having a massive pattern sale!  So I just had to…  Fired up with enthusiasm and a misguided optimism about my own time-management abilities, I bought three new dress patterns, below.  I’ve got so many new patterns to try out…   I’d better get cracking.

Details:
Dress; partly based on McCalls 4453, partly my own design, red/pink polyester chiffon, to see this dress styled in 6 different ways go here
Ballet top; Metalicus, found secondhand
Sandals; Vincenzo, from Soletta shoes
Sunnies; RayBan
Nail varnish; BYS Mint Condition

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