Yearly Archives: 2012

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More finishing details for jersey knits

In making my grey striped jersey dress here, I opted to re-inforce the shoulder seams.  I do not re-inforce the shoulder seams in all my knit garments, but in this case; a long tank dress in a stretchy fabric, where the weight of an entire dress is hanging off those two meagre teensy little shoulder seams, then it is a very good idea to build in a little extra strength in this vulnerable area.
And this is how:
Sew the shoulder seams, and then overlock the raw edges (optional, since you won’t see this when it is finished..).

I then cut a short strip on the bias, in a thin but strong, woven cotton.  Quilting cotton is fine for this purpose.

Stitch the bias strip to the dress shoulder seam; directly over the previous dress/shoulder-seam stitching.  The bias strip should be laying over the dress front, as pictured at right.

Fold the bias strip up over the overlocked seam allowance and press.

Fold the bias strip and the shoulder seam allowance back to lie flat over the dress back, and press.  Fold under the bias raw edge to an even width, encasing the shoulder seam allowance, and pin in place.

Top stitch the folded edge down onto the dress.

There!  Now your shoulder seams will be perfectly rigid and strong enough to hold up the weight of the dress without stretching or ever becoming mis-shapen over time….

Now for the armhole and neckline bands…
I’ve mentioned before how I call this the Metalicus finish, this is merely because I learnt it by studying my Metalicus pieces where I first observed this technique and started trying it out on my own garments.  It probably goes by some other proper name really, but meh, that is my name for it.  It is a very nice neat finish, uses the same fabric, and requires no hand-stitching, expensive twin needles or special machines like overlocking or cover-stitch machines.  And still looks really professional.
It can be used on any raw edge; armholes, necklines, sleeve edges, cardigan edges, Tshirt hems, I’ve even used it on firm stretch fabric waistbands, dress hems; anything.
(Later edit) I’m adding this to address some comments: if you follow this method the seam allowances will not flip out to the outside and will not need topstitching down!

Start out by trimming the armholes/neckline/sleeve length/Tshirt length; whatever, to the finished desired length.

The dimensions of your band strips are calculated as follows:
Measure the raw edge and cut a strip to exactly this length plus 2cm for hemming.

Now, since my fabric in this example here is a stripe,  I wanted to get the stripes matching with the joining seam invisibly between two stripes.  This meant cutting the band to a different, very slightly shorter length that was ideal compared to my measurements.  In the case of pattern matching like this, it is OK to cut the strip a tiny tad shorter, but NOT longer, than required, but you do not want for the difference in length to be any more than 5%.  If you are trying to match up wide stripes and your measurement looks like it is going to be more than 5%, then it would be best to not bother with pattern matching.  Any differences bigger than 5% will mean that your garment will look bunched up, or “gathered”, into the finishing band.
AND, since your stitching line is a longer length than the raw edge, (being a concentric circle of a wider diameter) your band is a slightly shorter length than the stitching length around your neckline/armhole, meaning the band will be stretched slightly during stitching and WILL sit up nicely on the outside of the garment when finished.
The width of your strip should be double the desired finished strip width plus seam allowances…  So for example; say I wish for my neckline band to be a finished width of around 1.5cm, and I am allowing a seam allowance of 1cm.  I should cut my bands to a width of (1.5cm + 1cm) x2 = 5cm; and then add a tad to allow for losing some in the fold-over process, so round it up to 5.2cm.
These are my two armhole bands….

Lay the strip right sides together and sew the short edges together in a 1cm seam to form a ring.

Fold the band in half along its length, wrong sides together.

Pin this ring to the raw edge that you are finishing, right sides together, aligning all three raw edges, and stitch along the seam allowance.
And sorry, I did not take a picture during this stage… but this picture below might give you some idea, with the three raw edges aligned in the seam allowance at the right there.  This is an easy sew; since there is only a slight difference in the measurements of the ring and the raw edge, then there is only a little stretching or easing happening.

At this point, turn out the strip and check to see that the band is sitting in a perfectly even width all the way around, with no dips or lumps or bumps marring the evenness.  If there are any, un pick and re-stitch these bits.
And essentially, you are pretty much finished!
Unless you have an overlocker…  but that is OK if you don’t  ðŸ™‚
Since I do have an overlocker I always go over and finish off the raw edges on the inside, but if you don’t have one you can pink with the pinking shears, or just trim neatly.
If I have reinforced the shoulder seams with a bias strip as outlined above, then BEFORE OVERLOCKING I trim away that bias strip from the seam allowance, as close to the armhole/neckline stitching as possible to remove some of that fabric bulk that is going to end up inside my band finish (as pictured above)

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A little bit of Sunshine…

Recently Donna gave me the Sunshine award, thank you so much Donna!  I thought at first that I already had this one…  but I noticed that this Sunshine award is a New-and-Improved Sunshine award that now comes with a cool little list of questions…  yay! questions can be fun, can’t they?
Sooo, here we go…. and just for fun, some random sunshine-y photos too  (unless otherwise stated all photos are taken by me)

Favourite Colour: ok, that’s easy!  er… hang on, wait.  Let me think now.  Hmmm.  OK, how’s about this, I saw a divine mustard scarf recently.  Mustard.  Done!  Actually, wait; I’m lately also rather thrilled about that wonderful shade of ox-blood red I achieved here…  And then of course there’s my best neutral, olive.  And my perennial allegiance to ivory remains unabated.  Oh, and then there is charcoal, and pinky-beige, and muddy chocolate, and pure white, and burnt orange, and duck-egg blue, and raspberry … and … and …

Favourite Animal:  I am ridiculously soft and soppy about all animals.  Except for mosquitoes.  Mosquitoes, I squish.  Mosquitoes bringeth no good to the world.  Apart from being frog food.  That one sole good deed on the part of mosquitoes.

Favourite Number: What…?  Do other people really have favourite numbers?  I don’t know if I could pick just one.  The infinite others would feel left out  ðŸ™‚

Favourite Non-Alcoholic Drink: Aha! at last, one for which I can give a straight answer… tea!  English Breakfast.  In a proper tea cup, please.  Strong, and with a little bit of milk.  No, no sugar, but thanks for offering.

Facebook or Twitter: I’ve recently discovered a whole host of old school friends on Facebook. It was so awesome!

(btw, this topless person is not me, but is the husband!)

My Passion: no prizes for guessing that one… 😀

Getting or Giving Presents: er… both??  Y’know what; I’ve been thinking about that one, and I’ve decided that it is one of those posers to which 99% of people will give exactly the same answer, the one I just gave.  Think about it.  Answering the former would be a no-no, except to garner laughs, and answering the latter is raaather priggish, so is equally a no-go…  it’s a non question, really.  What do you think?

Favourite Pattern:  Well, it changes all the time.  Virtually with each new project.  Right now I am in raptures all over again with McCalls 5525, since I have just completed a new coat that I am insanely pleased with.

(Craig took this one.  This is me, on a stand-up paddle board!)

Favourite Day of the Week: Well.  Any day that the whole family’s schedules serendipitously dovetail so we all happen to be all home for dinner, together, at once.  This happens rarely.  But when it does, it is my favourite day of that week.

Favourite Flower: In first place; my daughter, the most beautiful blossom in my life.  In second place; big old-fashioned roses in shades of pink, apricot and old-gold.  The sort that get blousy and overblown and scatter their petals in gorgeous profusion.  Which then dry into sweet-smelling colour-distilled scraps.  Which then becomes divine pot-pourri.

Favourite celebrity role model:  Now why would I idolise a stranger when I have such amazing women in my real life?  Srsly  ðŸ™‚

So now, to pass the sunshine-y love along…. 

Beth; of SunnyGal Sewing Studio
Liza Jane; of Liza Jane Sews
Karin; of Sew Here We Go Again!
ElleC; of ElleC Sews
Alexandra; of Alexandra Mason Crafts and Stuff
Lynne; of Sewing Cafe
Adithi’s Amma; of Adithi’s Amma Sews

Details:
Top; Vogue 1247, of orange cotton, details and my review of this pattern here
Shorts; Burda 7723 modified, of yellow embroidered cotton, details here, and my review of this pattern here
Nail varnish (above); BYS Bright Light, with daisy decal.  I know, decals are so last year, yes?  Well maybe I am a last year kind of a gal  ðŸ™‚

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St Patrick’s Day

I’m a wee bit late, but … 
Fabio is after wishing a Top o’ the Morning to all ye people of the Irish persuasion!

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Grey stripes

I’ve made a new dress for autumn! (sneaky peeked in my Fashionary here)  More accurately, I made this about a month ago and have been awaiting a day I can actually wear it without unladylike perspiration marring the photograph. (ew)
It is a Metalicus sort of a dress.  
Oh, OK; it is pretty much an almost exact copy of one from their summer range.  (pictured at right)
Well, I saw, and I was helpless to resist.  I just had to have.  (shrug)
I used a cotton knit jersey with a charcoal and black stripe from Fabulous Fabrics, and drafted my own pattern with the help of a tank top.  The skirt is just a slightly shaped to-the-waist and then flared A-line design.  I bought 2m of 150cm width fabric, but found that 1.2m was plenty to cut out this dress shape using the layout pictured below.    

Don’t worry, the leftover 80cm has been put to good use already, undergoing a rapid transformation into a three-quarter sleeved, scoop-necked Tshirt.  This using my now go-to Tshirt pattern, the one formerly known as Burdastyle 06/2011, 120 (altered completely until beyond recognition, but still one must give credit, non?)

I edged the neckline and armhole/sleeve edges of both the dress and the Tshirt with a folded band, the type that you see on just about all Metalicus pieces,which is why I have it stuck in my head as The Metalicus Finish, lol.

Please note; the Absolute Perfection in Stripe-Matching.  I pinned the junction of each and every stripe to achieve this.  No, I am not exaggerating.

The red pen below is pointing to a bodice side seam.  Can you even see it? (said with an unseemly lack of humility)  
This is the kind of thing not noticeable to a, er, normal person (read: someone who does not sew), but is the ultimate in self-satisfaction for those of us who have ever sewn stripes together.  Stretchy jersey stripes, I might add.  (insert deep and disgracefully un-humble sigh)

The lower hem is overlocked, folded under once, and finished with a straight stitch.  I hemmed my dress exactly the right length to work perfectly over one of my favourite actual Metalicus pieces, this frill-edged white petticoat.

Details:
Dress; self-drafted, from charcoal and black striped cotton jersey
petticoat; Metalicus
Sandals; Misano, from Marie-Claire shoes

Now OK; do I feel bad about outright copying a dress like this?  I do, a bit.  You see while I like to make my own clothes nowadays, I have a lot of respect for Metalicus.  I used to buy their clothes.  And actually I will own up now that in a small transgression of my pledge I did indeed buy a few pairs of Metalicus winter tights at their New Year’s sale,  eep!  But they were such fantabulous colours!! (the colours made me do it, your Honour…) and anyhow, tights can be classed as underwear, right??
I am OK with supporting Metalicus, since it is an Australian company, with the clothing traditionally made here in Australia.  I am of course a big supporter of ethical fashion which includes buying locally made stuff wherever possible.  So I wish to see Metalicus successfully continuing on this path and not succumb to the evil lure of the profits that come with overseas manufacturing.
It was during this visit to Metalicus I noticed that a few “made in China” pieces were making an insidious and very unwelcome appearance in the range.  I did feel sad about this and wondered briefly (and probably foolishly) if my boycotting of RTW had contributed in even some minuscule part.  And copying a dress from the store, even just one, for me, is also part and parcel of taking away business from what is a legitimate Australian business.  So I did feel a bit guilty.  But if Metalicus is going to go to the dark side and send  their manufacturing overseas, taking away Australian jobs, then while I am very sad about that it does at least make it a heck of a lot easier for me to stay away from RTW.
btw I did check my tights before I bought them, and they are indeedy of the Made in Australia variety.
So I’m resting easy on that purchase.
Sort of.

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Ex-ci-ted!

Little Red Dress
Ohmigosh, I can hardly believe it myself, but I WON the Red Dress contest over at Pattern Review!  Sooooooo thrilling!
If any of my kind readers did put in a vote for my dress, then THANK YOU so much!
I did pop over on the weekend and saw my entry at what seemed to be at the top of the list, but not all the votes were there so I wasn’t sure whether that meant they had not all been tallied yet or something; not being very with it on how the contests work over there…. so I tried not to get excited.  Kept that excitement contained; just like a dog spotting a ham bone sitting up there on the kitchen bench.  You can see the bone, and you think that bone might just be intended for you, but you don’t dare hope just yet;  that it might at the last minute be plonked into the cooking pot for soup, and not into your bowl.  
Oh I guess the analogy falls down somewhat there at the end bit, but you’re getting my drift, right…?
But now I am allowing myself to be excited!
(subdued and ladylike) squeeeal!
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Miniature “denim jacket” purse

I’ve been making some funny little purses; as silly birthday gifts for my crafty friends.  I got the idea for these from a miniature leather jacket coin-purse that we have from goodness-knows-where, I think it was given to Cassie sometime yonks ago.  I used the shortest zips I could find and orange top-stitching thread to replicate the design aesthetic of the purses’ parent garment; a beat-up hole-y old pair of Wranglers jeans from the children’s younger days.
These are quite sturdy; and could be used as a coin-purse, as a repository for receipts, as a keyring, for, er,  feminine hygiene bizzoes, whatever.
I think they are kind of cute, and I’m hoping my friends will like them!

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Peekaboo in blue

New top, woot!
Its real name is a mystery to me, but the word peekaboo just pops irresistably into my head every single time I look at it so there it is!  This is the project on p20 of Pattern Magic 3, by Tomoko Nakamichi.  As far as wearability goes, this is probably one of the better projects in the book, and ditto for the ease of construction.  Super easy!
In hood down mode this appears not unlike an ordinary little Tshirt, plain-ish but with a just-interesting-enough little variation to redeem it from being outright featureless and boring.  The incorporated hoodie thingie (that’s a technical sartorial term there) looks a bit like a backward cowl neck when it is flipped down like above….  it’s actually quite cute, yes?
Hood up… well, okaaay.  Quirky, yes.   A bit noice, unusual, different.  Definitely funky.  Wearable? Hmmm, borderline, methinks…  🙂
But hood down? yes, I likey!
I used a length of jersey in a lovely shade of deep royal blue, part of the bundle of fabrics given to me by my friend C from her late mother’s stash.  It is quite thick and sturdy stuff, so I am really looking forward to wearing this more as we head into the cooler days of autumn.
I attached a folded band to finish the armholes and the neckline, a technique I think of as the Metalicus finish since they use it extensively on all their pieces and is where I first noticed it.  The lower hemline is turned up once and slip-stitched in place.
I’m very happy with this funky, slightly sporty addition to my wardrobe.  The concept of the design is totally to my taste; unique and simple, but with a twist!
Oh, and I’ve updated things on the blog a bit; now all my projects from each the Pattern Magic books have been gathered into sets, and can be viewed by clicking on the picture of that book in my sidebar over there.  They’re a bit jumbled up right now, as I am still working out how to order the pictures in those albums….  that’s a work in progress!
Later peops!

Details:
Top; from Pattern Magic 3, by Tomoko Nakamichi, made from royal blue jersey
Shorts; Burda 7723, white linen, my review of this pattern here

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Pruning and baking…

… I’ve been getting out in the garden.  And engaged in some brutal hacking garden maintenance.  But I felt sad about those fallen sprays of soft and velvet-y grey-green, and gathered them up, and made an arrangement.  Quite nice, don’t you think?  I think sometimes the obvious beauty of flowers blinds us to the quiet and subtle beauty of plain unadorned foliage.
Alongside there; a knitting work in progress  ðŸ˜‰
And just to prove that my kitchen is not merely for show (although everyone including my family might be forgiven for mistaking that one) I have been baking….   A friend had an important birthday and I hosted a birthday do and made a cake, and y’know what? fortuitously it was delicious!  I was so proud like a mother with her new baby I took a picture…
 Pink Velvet Cake  (recipe from the Australian Women’s Weekly “High Tea” cookbook)

There!  It can be seen that I do occasionally dabble in activities other than sewing!
But back to important matters…
In sewing news:
I’m getting behind on my documentation… I have three new things to show here  ðŸ™‚  I am just awaiting on the right day to take photographs…. you know how I am a bit of a perfectionist in such things.  It’s not like I am going to just slap any ol’ hideous me-photo here on the internet…  And realistically, it has just been too darn crazy-hot to actually wear any of my new creations yet, and I like to actually be wearing that thing on that day or I feel like a bit of a fraud.  Silly, I know…  as it is I have been boringly wearing the same-old-same-old little summer things and I am getting.  Sick.  To.  Death. of my summer wardrobe.  I’m dying to get into some of my new cooler weather things!  But we are expecting a nice cool change today, so soon a “new thing” picture shall appear.  I promise.

I received a very cool and very generous gift recently from the very talented Shams.  Thank you so much Shams!!  I won’t show details here just yet… but I will at the right time.  Sorry to be all mysterious, but results will appear in due course… watch this space!
Also, the lovely Mary awarded me the Versatile blogger award!  Since I already have this one I won’t repeat myself by doing it over again, but if you want you can click on those award buttons in my sidebar to read the things I have written about before.  Thank you so much for thinking of me, Mary!
Now I’m going to have a minor rant give my considered opinion on something that is bothering me heaps lately;

That hideous new word verification thingy.  Is the new system not the most teeth-grindingly awful thing in blogworld at the mo’, or what….  Does anybody else agree?  Whenever I go to leave a comment and that blurry, blended-together, ridiculously illegible as well unintelligible, thing pops up… well, half the time it’s so damn difficult to work it out I have to have a couple of goes at it before I get it right.  And … “prove you are not a robot”?  What the heck?  that’s a little bit rude…  Honestly, it seriously saps the will to comment…  I removed the word verification from my own blog months ago, even back when the word was still relatively easy to figure out and I haven’t been spammed or had any (intentionally) rude comments yet.
Here’s my feeling; the sewing and creative community is nearly always so kind and supportive, do we really want to put obstacles in the paths of people who might merely wish to say a kind word about our new creations?  So I respectfully suggest that if you do have word verification attached to your blog then you might consider removing it for a while and see how you go.
It might not be as bad as you think  ðŸ™‚

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