Yearly Archives: 2019

You are browsing the site archives by year.

a new baby in the family!!! plus something for Mummy too :)

So, I have some extremely exciting news… !!  I am going to be a granny!!!!

Last week, Tim and Kelly announced they had a “souvenir” from their honeymoon to give to all of us and gave each of us a package… I unwrapped mine and what should I find, but a length of this adorable fabric and a pattern for a weeny little onesie and beanie…! everyone else had suitably themed pressies too; Sam had a T-shirt with “world’s best uncle”, Craig had a book “Grandad jokes”, and Cassie had a “World’s best auntie” Tshirt… oooh, such an incredibly lovely surprise! We were all stunned and then excited; and of course completely over the moon!  We all cannot WAIT to welcome the newest and littlest member of the family next year…!! the first one in our next generation!!  In the meantime of course I’ve made up the baby fabric immediately! Such fun to be making baby clothes again!   #itsbeenawhile

So this is the pattern they chose; Burda 9434, and the cotton jersey is from Spotlight.  I’m like, haha, first time parents; they bought a full 1.5m of fabric!  Enough for two babies, lol!   Wait, what?!!  but no no, before we all get too excited Kelly has had a scan and there is just a singleton in there  🙂

I immediately traced off the one month size and ran up a onesie.  And a beanie.  Eeeee so cute! and it was such an absolute joy to be making these!!  By the way; I had to trace the pattern in full, and will need to do so again and again, and probably even again! because obviously all sizes must stay intact since we’ll be needing those down the track too, that’s life…   babies GROW 🙂  The pieces are all so tiny though it’s not exactly an unduly cumbersome chore.

I forgot to mention, the beanie is made from navy blue merino from the Fabric Store; I bought in in Melbourne during one of our girly jaunts over there and previously made this T-shirt/sweater using it too.

Kelly also mentioned that she needed to buy maternity clothes, and daa da da daaaa!  (bugle call to arms) mum-in-law to the rescue and all that.  Well, I do love sewing and have SO MUCH time on my hands now I no longer have a wedding dress to make, haha.  I thought this a perfectly good excuse to buy the Closet Case Ebony tee pattern.  This is one of the few Closet Case patterns I hadn’t got my hands on already … I had eyed it up a number of times but not pulled the trigger.  Anyway, I finally did!  And immediately printed out two copies; one for Kelly and one for me.

I know this isn’t a maternity pattern but I also knew it could easily work as one!  I sized up from Kelly’s normal size, just in case; and you know what? it fits her perfectly!  Pregnancy boobs, you know.

now this is a nice touch!  personal.  I like.  I wonder if I can do this for our patterns?!

This is me here, modelling it for ye olde blog, before I hand it over to Kelly.  Maybe I’ll get a shot of her wearing it, one of these days, maybe not.    I’m not feeling very strict about blog photos for this one, because it’s essentially just a wearable muslin to check for size.  It’s all leftovers; the body was from the leftovers from this top (Fabulous Fabrics) and the sleeves leftover from this, old favourite dress (Spotlight).  To be honest, even though they’re both stretch fabrics, I don’t think they had enough stretch actually, but it still worked out, um; reasonable? I think?!  And it’s just a muslin, but I still had to obsessively pin each and every stripe, grrr.    This is a pretty silly thing to do, but it does result in great stripe-matching so *shrug* it’s worth it? I guess?

One thing I can guarantee; I am going to make lots more of both these patterns, and SOON!!!

Details:

Baby clothes; Burda 9434, cotton jersey and merino for the beanie
Tunic; the Ebony tee by Closet Case patterns, striped stuff, probably not enough stretch
Skirt; Vogue 1247, striped drill, details here
Tights; my own custom fit pattern, details on how to make your own here
Booties;  Officine Creative, birthday  present from Craig last year  🙂

pinterestmail

black and cream Eve dress, dp studio

Not very long ago, I was contacted by dp studio, a pattern company whose offerings I’ve always found super interesting and intriguing… I bought a few of their patterns last year but am still yet to find time to make them up… eek!!  Anyway, they wanted to know if I would like to review one of their latest.  Would I?!  Omigosh, yes!!  They have recently brought out a new thing… something called a “kit couture” that is a collaboration between dp studio and Hamon, a fabric and haberdashery store in Paris.  The kit comes in a rather beautifully packed box, and includes the sewing pattern, fabric, and all notions and bits and bobs you needed to finish making it.  Very luxe.  I was so excited to try it out!!  They didn’t have my first choice, but I did like the look of the kit they offered me quite a lot and I anxiously awaited its arrival.

Did not disappoint!!  The kit I received was for Le 912, the Eve dress, described on the box as “Robe effect portefeuille a manches longues”  Oh, how I wish I could speak French! everything sounds so much lovelier and more poetic than in English…  the translation is “dress with wallet effect and long sleeves”

The fabric from Hamon is absolutely lovely; a 100% viscose with a beautifully soft and floaty hand to it, and a loose flowy, silk-like drape.  Divine!!  Even better, the print is super pretty; black flowers and leafy tendrils on a creamy background.  I think this creamy ground suits me quite well, my “white”, so to speak; so I was very happy with this.  The kit also contained a lightweight, fusible interfacing, a stable, fusible stay-tape for the bias cut opening edges and the shoulder seams; and length of perfectly colour-matched satin ribbon for the belt/tie.  Oh! and a reel of perfectly colour-matched, cream coloured thread.  This was actually overlocking thread rather than all-purpose thread, but I found it quite nice, not woolly; and to be absolutely fine for the purposes of sewing this very delicate fabric.

I really enjoyed making up my dress.  Lately – well I mean, once I’d got my mad, rough knitting bag project out of my system; I’ve been more in the mood for careful, quietly lengthy and dedicated sewing projects; something that takes time and effort, and maybe even requires unpicking and re-doing things over and over until I get them right.  I think it’s the process of making Kelly’s wedding dress that has brought this new mood for meticulous perfection upon me.  Will this be the case from now on?  possibly not! but it is right now so I’m contentedly riding that wave in serene and unhurried happiness.

I initially made long; bias cut ties, seen above; using the black/cream print for the waist tie, which is actually what the pattern instructions tell you to make.  Ultimately though, I didn’t like these so substituted the included cream coloured ribbon tie instead, which is really much nicer in the end; prettier, softer, and easier and more comfortable to wear too.

Craig heartily approves of the dress which I found slightly surprising.  After all, the dress is quite “covered up” and not figure hugging or the least bit “sexy”; and Craig usually prefers this sort of thing…  #husbands  However, he really likes this one; called it “classy” and “really nice”.  Well OK then!!

One thing the kit did not include was a required button; but I’m perfectly ok with that since I have about a billion buttons and absolutely zero need to ever buy buttons again in my lifetime.  I used a tiny, “pearl-with-a-shank” button for the closure.

Yesterday, we went to the city and my reluctant-photographer husband Craig kindly took a few pictures of me, for my blog.  Well, that was an unusually nice surprise!  Hurray!!  Afterwards, I regretted a little that we hadn’d taken Clara, since she goes so nicely with the dress.  #dressingtomatchyourdog  #itsathing  #promise

So I couldn’t resist another picture at home, this time including my very worthy little accessory, hehe

Details:

Dress: le 912, the “eve” dress by dp studio, cream/black viscose
Shoes; Vitullimoda, from Zomp shoes
I also wore my hand-knitted cardigan all day, because it was a COLD day!  Jo Sharp Tweed Coat, shortened, in Jo Sharp Silkroad DK  tweed yarn in colour Peppercorn (col 425), blogged here

pinterestmail

box of socks; the June edition. plus a bag!

Pair of no-frills socks, but look at those pretty stripes!  LOVE those bright pastels!!  Making these has dutifully used up some more of the leftovers from my advent jumper, from the Dingo Dyeworks advent calendar of last year…  pretty cute and frugal, huh? *self-back-pat*  and this yarn is so soft and divinely snuggly.

the box of socks is looking quite colourful!

Oh! and I also ran up a little bag, specifically for my sock knitting.  I’ve been using my pink bum bag for this purpose ever since Japan, which was… fine, I guess, but still not ideal.  It wasn’t really big enough, for one thing, and had zero pockets.  Hmmm, yes; ordinarily a zero-pocket bag would have its days very much numbered, except that I’m kinda sentimental about it since Mum and Dad gave it to me when I was quite a young teenager and it’s always been … well, one of those forever things, you know??  Anyway, I digress…  What I really wanted for my knitting bag was one identical to the one I made for Mum, blogged here.  So I rummaged through the old clothing chuck-out bag and came out with a pair of old chinos that I used to wear when the kids were really little. Haven’t worn them in decades and don’t really know why I kept these hideous things but probably for the usual reason, that the fabric would come in handy some day.

The new bag is terrible really; slapdash, ugly, just thrown together in a very uncaring way.  But man, it was so much fun to do a bit of rough, random, whatever sewing!  Quite a therapeutic project, in fact!   And/or cathartic!  Slicing, dicing and cutting on the fly, drawing straight onto the fabric, machine-stitching rather wildly, minimal measuring, if any.   FELT SO GOOD.  THIS HOUSE, IS CLEAN!!!

I used the back of the chinos, and gave the bag a “bottom”, so it can stand up by itself.  It is self-lined, using more of the same fabric from a leg of the chinos, and has five pockets including the two outside patch pockets with buttoned flaps, that were originally in situ on the seat of the chinos.  Inside, I stitched two new, rectangular open patch pockets to the lining, as well as the tiny and rather adorable coin pocket that I painstakingly unpicked from the chinos just because it was so super cute.

I slipped a few coins in there for … I dunno, just in case

The other pockets hold my kindy scissors, my notebook and pen, a wool needle, and my personal, basic knitting pattern.  Which is near-identical to the Patons one I’ve been using for years, but has one or two mods that I’ve developed along the way to make my own idea of the perfect sock.  Actually I recently re-typed it all into a new word document so I can print it out for myself any time, and now I no longer have to decipher the old photocopied one from the Patons pamphlet that is almost falling to bits from un-folding and re-folding, and has multiple crossing-outs and arrows and modifications and notes scribbled chaotically in the margins and on the back.  Hurrah!

The inside waistband of my old chinos had  a rather nice bias bound strip finishing, so I kept this and used it to edge the, also recycled zip for the bag,  Goodness knows why I once went to the trouble of ripping out and stowing away an old zip just in case, but hey.  I did indeed find a use for it in the end!

So, cute bag? or piece of trash?  completely rhetorical questions btw since I know that; yes it is a pretty rubbishy sort of a thing!  It’s nowhere near as nice as the one I made for Mum, which I did measure out, cut carefully, and sew somewhat meticulously, and also had really nice fabric going for it.  But it only cost me some thread and half a day, and it will do for now.  And I had a lot of fun making it!  Maybe I’ll treat myself to a proper one, one of these days.

couldn’t resist taking a picture showing my ever-present companion, wondering what the heck I’m doing…

pinterestmail

sasha-jenny trousers, and a honey-coloured turtleneck

I made a new outfit for myself! well actually I thought I was, although as it turns out I had only made half a new outfit for myself.  But as halves go, I’m pretty happy!  Also,  I know it seems like I’ve only just finished wedding sewing, but how does one choose to wind down after a bout of incredibly, stressfully intense, VIS???    btw, that’s Very Important Sewing in case it wasn’t obvious.   Well, one dives head-first into a fresh new sewing project, of course!!  Ha!  and it felt awesome too… because by comparison this is VUS, or Very Unimportant Sewing, and man it sure felt good! I loved every minute of making these new things  #youknowyoureobsessedwhen

First things first; I made some new trousers…  I’ve been wanting to make this particular love-child of these two different Closet-Case patterns for aaaages now!  I’ve always really liked the mid-riding style of the Sashas; how it sits feels very comfortable, and how it fits is quite flattering for me.  I also love the magnificently flared wide-legs of the Jennys, and thought how cool it would be if they could be jammed together into one, gloriously slouchy, flare-y package.  Well, ta da!!!

please excuse horrible but apparently obligatory butt-picture…

I just needed some nice fabric, which popped up suddenly in Spotlight of all places… Spotlight has fabric highs, where they’re stuffed with a tonne of really very nice and affordable options and you’re completely spoilt for choice; and also sad and lengthy lows, where there’s nothing but absolute crap…   You just have get in there and stock up during the good times and then endure the bad times until the good times roll around again.  Anyway, currently they’re having a rather awesome high, which is pretty nice for us sewing-obsessed peeps.  I mean, I’m not supposed to be buying any fabric right now… but you know.  When you see something good, it’s not going to be there forever!  I pounced upon this stretchy, narrow-whale cotton corduroy in this gorgeously yummy shade of caramel pretty much instantly… not only is the colour so very me, but the stretchiness is just exactly right for that required for the Sasha’s too.  Right nearby was some really lovely, very soft honey-coloured knit; very cashmere-like in its feel though it’s actually just acrylic, but that’s fine.  Fabric snob, I am not, well, most of the time anyway.  I planned a honey/caramelly sort of an outfit for myself.  A Mars Bar, sort of an outfit.  #nowiwantamarsbar  #damn

What is the other half of the wannabe outfit?? well, I’d downloaded the free, tessuti patterns Monroe turtleneck pattern ages ago, printed it out and had it lying around; and I decided it would be a good one for the honey-coloured knit.  In my head my snuggly new sweater was going to look absolute perfect with my new, wide-legged slouchy trousers.    I could hardly wait to wear them together!  So did things work out just exactly as planned?  don’t be silly!

I absolute adore my caramel trousers, they turned out to be everything I could have hoped for; however… the turtleneck…    Well right from the word go it did not want to be my turtleneck.  It really really just wanted to be Cassie’s.   I was barely halfway through when I realised it had her name written all over it.  The sleeves and collar of the Monroe turtleneck are tight-fitting, with a dropped shoulder and a very boxy, oversized body; a combination which looks pretty terrible on me,  I’m coming to terms with that sad fact (sob) but I know is quite gorgeous on Cassie.  It’s a style she has worn before, and worn well too.  When she came over in the evening I gave it to her, and her reception was most satisfyingly enthusiastic!  I might even whip some more for her… it’s a very quick and easy pattern to make and you only need about 1.2m or so.  And I do have several other tops already that I can wear with my trousers.  I’m ok with passing things on that don’t want to look good on me, especially when they look so good on another, and are so warmly received!  🙂

Some technical sewing deets:

The turtleneck; nothing much to say, just made straight up; sleeve hems done using a twin needle, hemline done by hand because the fabric was stretching out some.  Super easy.

R2D2 says hi….

The trousers; I cut out the tops as Sashas, and from the hip down they are almost Jenny’s.  Not exactly Jenny’s because the patterns are actually completely different from each other and can’t really be “melded” that easily.  For one thing, the Sasha’s are drafted for a stretch while the Jenny’s are not.  Another thing I pondered quite a bit, was the alignment of the back leg piece; because the grainlines of the back legs in the two patterns are very different to each other.  I’ve made up two pairs of Sasha trousers previously, exactly to the pattern, and for this new pair I decided to alter the alignment of the back leg piece, pivoting the ankle a little outward, so it’s got a similar grain line to the Jenny’s.

The waistband lining and pockets are cut from some ikat cotton, that Mum gave to me a few years ago, from when she cleaned out her stash.  You can see I attempted to finish the pocket edges with French seams as indicated in the pattern, but it was just too bulky around the heavily-interfaced pocket opening area, so I overlocked the edges for that little bit.  Probably would have looked better to overlock the whole thing, but the pockets were all basically finished, done and dusted by this point so I was just, ehhh  *shrug*  I used the little Closet Case label Heather sent out along with the pattern.  Cute, huh?

  

I’ve found that around the waistband hook and eye closure at the front, no matter how heavily you interface the waistband and facing, the hook and eye will pull the facing out a little, just because the two layers aren’t joined together at this point…. for these ones I kind of stab-stitched the two layers together all around the hook, keeping the stitches tiny and almost invisible on the right side of the waistband.  You can see the stitches if you know they’re there, but I think you can barely tell, and it does help to keep the waistband nice and flat-looking, and no hint of pulling out of shape while you’re wearing them.

I am SO PROUD of my welt pockets!!  You know how sometimes one welt pocket might look a little better than the other and so you just take picture of that one for your sewing blog and quietly leave out the other??  oh wait, what? no I never!!  oooo I would never something so devious, oh no….  Well anyway, both my pockets turned out to be things of perfectly-matching beauty, if I say so myself…

.

    

Details:

Trousers; Sasha trousers by Closet Case patterns, with wide legs from the Jenny trouser pattern
Honey coloured turtleneck; the free Monroe turtleneck by Tessuti Patterns
my pink top; the twist top from the Japanese pattern book “Pattern Magic” by Tomoko Nakamachi 

 this picture adds nothing to the story apart from Zoe looking kinda funny … oo I’m so mean.  Would I ever post a picture of myself looking kinda funny??  NO

me and my big fluffy girl on our  holiday down south together, just the two of us… was so nice  🙂

…wearing them here with my mustard Nettie tee and my self-designed mustard cowl also self-knitted socks

pinterestmail

Kelly’s wedding dress

photo by Shoshana Kruger Photography

Kelly’s hair by Higley’s Hairdressing

location; the Melbourne Hotel in Perth

dress and veil; made by me!

SO; Tim and Kelly became engaged to be married in January of last year…

and shortly afterwards Kelly asked me to make her dress for her.  Of course I was honoured to be asked!  Kelly had checked out a few dresses online and pinned a few she liked, and had also tried on a few irl; narrowing down the style and shape that suited her the best.  She eventually settled upon having a dress with an ivory crepe skirt and a “nude” illusion style bodice overlaid with random beaded and sequinned lace; the bodice to be very fitting, sleeveless and with a scooped neckline so as to show off the necklace Tim had given to her; and the skirt to skim her body to the hips, then flare out below that into a graceful, gently mermaid-style hemline.  And a train!

The bodice was to be lace in an organic, “growing vines” look to it, and the lace would extend down onto the skirt and around to the back.  The train was to have lace too, and with have a cut-away insert section so you could see the floor underneath the lace.  The border of the skirt was to be edged with lace.  In addition, there were to be self-fabric covered buttons down the entire centre back seam of the dress.  Okay!!

First things first; we swooped upon Fabulous Fabrics during their yearly sale, perused and selected patterns, and spent ages picking out laces, various silks, nets and crepes, and draping and layering everything over each other, and Kelly.  The very definition of girly fun!!!

  

What did we pick??  In the end, we settled upon two patterns for the dress; Vogue 9239 as a starting point for the bodice, and Vogue 1032 as a starting point for the skirt.  I made a first muslin using grey sheets, put it on Kelly and got pinning and drawing lines on the muslin for fit.

Oh my gosh, fit!  there was quite a lot of fit customisation.   Kelly has a classic hourglass shape; busty with a small waist and flat stomach, and looks absolutely wonderful in her chosen silhouette, imo.  We wanted a perfectly fitted bodice, and for the skirt to skim her hips without being tight, nor for there to be any folds about her body from being even little bit loose.  Kelly bought a corset, I made measurements and issued strict instructions for her to neither lose, nor gain weight!  The pattern I used for the bodice, V9239, is actually brilliant for having different pieces for different cup sizes, which made for a much easier starting point; although my final pieces of course look very different from the starting point!  As it is drafted, the pattern is not actually very fitted at all.  I also altered the pattern pieces so as to have a straight waistline seam, which Kelly was firm about.  The skirt of Vogue 1032 is absolutely lovely; but at the centre back the three seams curve to join up in the middle in a sort of pointed arch-shape; which we all agreed is um, decidedly unattractive.  I fixed it so as to have more regular seams, and cut up the grey muslin to use as my pattern for the second muslin…

Made up the second muslin in white sheets, and the fit and style were given a big thumbs up… perfect!  I cut this one up to use as my pattern for the actual dress…

I then got brave and started cutting out the REAL fabric!

early bodice…

Bodice; for the illusion bodice, we’d chosen light coffee coloured silk habotai, overlaid with a beige/pink soft netting… this was for two reasons, firstly because the coffee-coloured silk was quite yellow in tone, too yellow; and the beige/pink net toned it down to be a better colour for Kelly’s skin.  Secondly, having a net bodice made a nice background to the lace we’d chosen for the appliquéd bodice, because it had a net background too, obviously; so having net as the default background for the bodice meant that everything blended in nicely together and looked more seamless.  So essentially, the bodice was pink/beige net/ underlined with coffee silk habotai, and I made the lining in the coffee silk habotai too.  Everything was hand-basted together and double checked for fit before machine-stitching…

skirt fabric…

lining and underlining fabric, doubled up…

The skirt is ivory crepe, underlined with ivory lining fabric, and with the separate lining of ivory lining fabric too.  I cut out the skirt and underlining and laid the pieces together, and then hand-basted all together around all edges.  MAN!!  This alone took me DAYS; literally .

Little story:  Craig absolutely insisted that we go down to Eagle Bay one long weekend, grrrr, even though he knew I was flat-chat working on the dress, so I’d bundled all the skirt pieces together and into a bag, and taken them down with me.  I spent the entire long weekend standing up at the kitchen counter in our cottage, hand basting the skirt/underlining pieces together, and to each other.  Then they were bundled back into a bag to bring home again at the end of the it.  Obviously everything was quite crinkled after such treatment and needed pressing again.  And pressing them took me over an hour too.  NEVER AGAIN!  After that, I kept all pieces laid out flat on our spare bed, and once the skirt, and then dress was pieced together, hanging up from a high curtain rod; and absolutely nothing was rolled up in a bag, ever again.

I found a length of turquoise ribbon in my stash, which I snipped in half and then stitched securely to each side seam at the waist through all layers, so as to hang it up and keep everything smooth and wrinkle free.

Also… something blue!

Technical edge finishing bizzo inside the skirt:  To lessen seam bulk, because let’s just consider for a minute that there are SIX layers of fabric at each seamline on that skirt, that need to sit as nice and as unobtrusively flat as possible; I treated the edges in the following ways; the skirt edges are pinked, the underlining edges are overlocked, and the seams pressed open.  For the skirt lining, I overlocked both seam allowances together, quite close to the stitching.  In the bodice, I didn’t actually finish the raw edges at all (gasp) because all that appliqué keeps things pretty secure I think and also obviously a bodice doesn’t face the fraying risks like the skirts.

below: edge finishing deets: pinked skirt and overlocked underlining edging, basting stitches can also be seen here, separate lining seen at top right with the edges overlocked together close to seam stitching

zip and waist stay: so I pride myself on getting seamlines and zip tops and bottoms lining up perfectly on everything I make, and I obviously wanted to achieve that here too…

We also wanted for the waistline to fit Kelly to a tee.  At this point, I’m going to mention again that the 3-layered, fairly massive skirt is HEAVY, and that little flimsy bodice is constructed purely of very lightweight silk habotai and net… so I realised there needed to be some fairly substantial internal engineering required.  I made a waist stay from grosgrain ribbon and stitched it firmly to the waist seam allowances, in between the outer dress and lining dress.  Then, I stitched buttonholes in the lining dress, about 12cm away from the centre back, through which the ribbon could emerge.

At Kelly’s exact waist measurement, I stitched on a metal hook and eye; so this is a “belt” that basically holds up the skirt and prevents too much strain on that lightweight bodice.  The last thing I wanted was ripping shoulder seams, or anything like that!  Getting the zip inserted at this exact spot, to match the belt, and of course, Kelly’s waist measurement, felt HUGE to me!  Its this sort of precision work that no one will ever see, but that is hugely satisfying to get right, that makes projects like this such a rush!  I was so proud of myself to get this bit exactly right!

 

Then for the arguably pretty and frivolous bit; appliquéing the lace.  Haha.

So, to digress for a minute: I realise the order here sounds counter-intuitive, I mean, wouldn’t it be better to appliqué the lace onto that little bodice before attaching it to that huge skirt with its like 20-odd metres of fabric, give or take?  And yes, I concede this might have been a good plan, for ease of stitching.  However, because the lace extended over both the bodice and the skirt, covering the join, and because the appliqué was very much going to be a 3D thing going all around Kelly’s curves, well I am actually glad I did it this way.  I started with the lace at the waistline, so as to place it over the waist seam “just right” and then started cutting motifs and laying them so as to achieve the “organically growing” look we wanted, moving up and over each shoulder.

This is the lace as bought:

snipped down into smaller motifs…

… fitted together like a jigsaw puzzle…

Motifs were cut down to size to fit holes and gaps; and I arranged so as to achieve an even and fully covered look with no overlapping.  Kelly also wanted for the motifs to reach the very edges of the bodice but very definitely NOT go over the edge, she hates that look! but at the same time we didn’t want any flowers or leaves to be cut in half, so there was much careful planning and placing going on…. Far from being fluffy and frivolous this part of the process was hands-down of course the most time-consuming part of the whole project.

During our trip to Japan, Yoshimi had given to me the most wonderful pair of magnifying spectacles (Hizumi), which helped enormously to stitch the tiniest, most invisible hand-stitches of lace to bodice I could achieve, and also the white-on-white appliqué on the skirt!

Because of course there is appliqué on the upper part of the skirt.  The train is fully covered with lace motifs too, although here I allowed for the motifs to be not so crowded on each other, and for there to be more “skirt” around each one.

All the motifs on the skirt are stitched to the skirt shell only, with the underlining kept free, and all the motifs on the bodice are stitched to the net and habotai shell, and the lining is kept free.  The only part where this proved difficult was when I was stitching motifs to the shoulder areas of the bodice… because Kelly wanted the motifs to be placed so as to kiss the edges of the bodice without sticking out and also I didn’t want motifs to be caught in the edges either, I stitched the bodice lining on before adding any motifs, and finished the under stitching etc, fully.  So appliquéing on these motifs required sliding my hand up carefully inside and ensuring the needle did not go through the lining layer underneath!  A little tricky, but doable, and I really love how the motifs turned out here.  The dress lining was hand-stitched to the zip tape inside after I’d finished all the appliqué.

Sorta funny story… so it was near the end and I’d basically finished the dress, and Kelly was trying it on; Cassie was there and she ever so casually pointed out a slightly bald spot, only about a few cm too big, near the back of one shoulder.  Moment of pure shock!!  Kelly said she didn’t even notice it, but for me … well obviously I just could NOT unsee again!  I just sighed, mentally girded my loins and cut out a new motif, stitched it on.  I honestly don’t think anyone would ever have noticed, but I just had to fix it.  Also did a ultra careful inspection to see if there were any more bald spots… there were not!

weeks and weeks… that’s all…

Shout out to my wonderful Mum who responded to my stressed-out vibes through the phone, came up for a weekend and spent two days working on lace appliqué while I worked on Georgia’s dress… thank you Mum!!  and I’m sorry I was such an exacting taskmaster!!

The lace border to the skirt… this is also a cautionary tale … initially I’d stitched the border onto both the skirt and underlining together.  BIG mistake!  Because the skirt is crepe, which has a heavy-fish drape to it, and the underlining is polyacetate lining fabric, which has less drape to it; the skirt just “hung” over the border lace, just ever so slightly, in several places, in a most unattractive way.  It was subtle, but noticeable.  I could not believe my eyes when I hung the dress up on its curtain rod, and noticed it.  Moment of utter deep depression; I was going to have to unpick that border lace and re-attach it to just the shell this time.  I mean, let’s just speculate for a minute on the length of that skirt border.  I reckon it is, oh I dunno; 6m? or more?? I couldn’t bring myself to actually measure… and what’s more, I’d done a really good job sewing on that lace border; nice solid zig-zag stitch, by machine, around each and every in-and-out bit.  This was a real low-point for me, where I actually wanted to cry.  However I just got out that old seam-ripper, immediately; and like a robot just got straight onto it; otherwise I knew I might actually break down.  The border hung perfectly after I’d re-attached it to just the top layer, thank goodness for that.

The lace insert for the train was another moment of “how the heck am I going to do this??”  In the end, I made a tissue-paper pattern of the train, in the size and shape that we wanted the lace insert to be, and simply arranged lace motifs in as artistic and “interesting” way as I could.  I’d used lots of the lace we’d bought on the bodice by this time and was running low on the bigger pieces, but managed to make it work!  Then I stitched them together onto the pattern, ripped the tissue-paper away, and firmly zig-zag stitched the whole thing around its edge to the; as yet still intact, train.

I left cutting away the crepe from underneath until quite late in the whole saga, simply because I was so nervous about this part!  The point of no return!  What if we didn’t like it?!   In the end it was fine and I needn’t have stressed about this.  I also cut away the underlining a bit bigger, and carefully overlocked the edges.  To keep the underlining in place underneath the skirt and not fold in on itself, or flip underneath the lace insert and show underneath; I joined shell and underlining together all around the lower edge with hand-stitched “tethers” about 1″ long, at about 6″ intervals.  This worked really well!

The buttons…  So I spent some time investigating and sourcing possible candidates for the self-fabric covered buttons.  The ones you get at Spotlight are absolute CRAP, by the way.  DO NOT BUY.  You can order custom-made self-covered buttons done at Buttonmania in Melbourne, for a price.  In the end though, I bought a 100 pack of 11mm self-cover buttons from this etsy store, and was very happy with both the product and the delivery time.  Have I written before about the experience of covering them?  If so, I am about to repeat myself, because this story illustrates quite clearly how very mad and insanely attention-detail-y I can be, ahem…  so the metal buttons are naturally silver, and I covered a few experimentally and for Kelly to see.  Both she and I could see that the silver of the buttons was showing through the crepe a little, and making them look noticeably grey in comparison to the dress.  Also, being metal and slippery, it was quite difficult to hold the little circle of fabric in place evenly while trying to push the edges in between button and shank-piece.  So eventually; I got the remainder of the 100 buttons and lined them up along bamboo skewers that had been set up like train tracks, and spray-painted them all with ivory spray paint, leftover from when I made my Queen Rutela cosplay…  the painted surface not only provided a nice “grippy” surface making them a lot easier to cover, but they were also noticeably less grey.

Finicky? yes, but a definite win and worth it in the end. I stitched the buttons down the back seam of the dress at 2.3cm intervals.

This length chosen because it was visually pleasing, and worked out to be a perfect division of the seam length from the top point down to the bustle point and to the bustle loop point; where I stitched the upper of the train lace motifs.

At the aforementioned bustle points; I stitched plain buttons inside – blue ones, something else blue!!  – beneath the outer, decorative ones, stitching them together to the seam allowance through shell and underlining skirt layers.

For the bustle loop, I took 4 strands of Gutermann’s upholstery thread, for strength, and crotched a 4.6cm length to fit perfectly around the button above and back, so the button spacing would be perfectly even even with the bustle done up.   The thread ends of the crochet loop passed through the skirt and through the holes of the button underneath, and were then fastened off with multiple, very firm tight knots.  The loop is not itself stitched to the skirt, because I worried about the possibility of the skirt ripping if there was any strain placed on it, instead all the strain is placed on the button on the inside.  You know what? that train is HEAVY.  As it is, in a lot of pictures where the train is bustled up I see, or think I can see, at least, how the weight of it is pulling the back of the dress down quite substantially.  I don’t think there’s any way around this, it’s just how it is; but I’m glad I made that crochet loop industrial strength!  It held up beautifully.  When the train was not bustled up, the loop sat unobtrusively and fairly invisibly looped around the button above, nicely tucked out of the way.

the veil:

the funny thing is that at first Kelly didn’t even want a veil; but we’d visited a bridal boutique where the girl dressing her just popped one on her head, without being asked.  It looked so lovely against her dark hair and Kelly just froze, I could immediately see that a veil had suddenly become a very firm “yes” in her head.  The veil was very simple and plain, one soft waterfall of unadorned net, with a comb and one single lace motif.  So we bought a metre of net in the right shade of ivory, too.

Now is the time to mention; Kelly also had a piece of her grandmother’s wedding dress that we wanted to incorporate into her dress somehow… it is peach satin; completely lovely, however a very different colour and texture to any of the other fabrics that Kelly had chosen for her dress.

I’d put a lot of thought into how we could use some of it in her dress, eventually I had the idea of using some to make the padded base for her veil on which to sew the lace motif she wanted…  I cut a short piece of batting and hand-covered it with a piece of the peach satin, then stitched this to the metal comb Kelly gave me… the first double pass of stitching I used regular all-purpose thread, then for the second pass of stitching I used ivory Gutermann’s upholstery thread.

I snipped a motif from the wedding dress lace down to a good size/arrangement, but it was quite floppy on its own so I boiled up a solution of cornflour/water to make a homemade starch to stiffen it.  A short soak in the starch, then left it to dry overnight… I had intended to use more starch if the lace wasn’t stiff enough however my very helpful husband threw out the starch and washed the saucepan, thinking it was just dirty water!!  Fortunately, just one soak in the starch was enough to stiffen it perfectly fine  🙂

I’d lightly tacked the wedding netting on the comb already, and then just stitched the stiffened lace motif to the top… voila!!  All I had to do was trim the veil to the right length… I laid it out on the table, measured, measured again, measured a third time!!  Then in one clean go, cut a nice even swoop off at the length we’d decided.

I think it looks so understated and beautiful, and perfect for Kelly’s style.

the garter; Kelly had planned to make the garter herself, but with less than a week to go and she was still super busy she emergency-asked if I could please make a garter too?  fortunately this is super easy.  I used another piece of the precious scrap from her grandmother’s wedding dress, and whipped one up.  Along with a tiny lace motif stitched on the join.

The very last touch?!  As a secret surprise for Kelly, I embroidered another piece of her grandmother’s wedding satin with Tim and Kelly’s names, and the date of the wedding.  I used a water-soluble pen to handwrite as neatly as I could, my own hand-writing; and hand embroidered using embroidery floss.  Something else blue!!  I stitched this precious patch inside the dress as a final touch. and she did not see this until the very moment she put on the dress on the day of their wedding!

I’m just going to write a story of transportation of the dress to the hotel on the day; because we spent some time worrying how to get it there, perfectly clean and safe from rain, street dirt, or anything like that… the solution; a mattress protector!  Yep, Tim went to Bunnings, picked up a single size mattress protector, which is basically a huge plastic bag.  I pulled it up over the dress and taped it shut at the top, over the hanger.  Hehe, funny story; he initially bought a Queen sized mattress protector, which made for some outraged jokes from Kelly along the lines of “just how big do you think I am, TIM?!!!”  Lol!

One other little story; the buttons on Tim’s waistcoat were coming loose so he’d asked me to stitch them on again, so I did.  I also took the opportunity to stitch a tiny, subtle little good luck message to the inside.  I wondered if he’d even notice it? and he did!  The lovely photographer Shosh made sure …  🙂

I just had to include this picture… look at our handsome boy!!!

photograph by Shoshana Kruger Photography;  genes by us  😉

 

So that is that!  Easily the biggest and most emotional thing I have ever made so far in my sewing life; I’ve been living and breathing this for like six months and have actually done very little else during that time.  However? also one of the most wonderful and rewarding things I have ever done!  I am so grateful for the experience, and for the trust placed in me and my abilities by Kelly, entrusting me with the task of making her dream dress.  This will forever be one of my most special projects.

And of course she looked absolutely beautiful!! glowing with love, lending her beauty to the dress, making it look amazing!!  She was an absolute dream to sew for, not only committed to her original ideas, but also ultra-enthusiastic and infectiously excited about every single step.; it was really wonderful to be buoyed along by such joy and interest in how I was getting along with it every time she came over… also, let it be said, that she had such a very firm vision of how her dress was to be, which certainly made my life happily so much easier when it came to the creative process.  She never ever backtracked on her earliest decisions or her vision of the dress, not one little bit, which thank goodness for that! I mean, this is my first experience making a wedding dress, and I can now fully appreciate now how very hard it could be if you had a bride constantly second-guessing or changing their mind half way.

I love this picture of Tim twirling Kelly about…

photograph by Shoshana Kruger Photography

Also of course most importantly of all to mention is that Kelly and I forged even more lovely solid bond of friendship during the process of bringing her special dress to life, which I hope continues to strengthen and grow in the years to come…  🙂

jarrah wedding arch made by Tim himself

flowers by Green Vase Flowers, Perth

 photograph by Shoshana Kruger Photography

Kelly’s hair by Higley’s Hairdressing

pinterestmail

the mother-of-the-groom, plus a gorgeous bridesmaid

So, I made my own outfit for Tim and Kelly’s wedding too, of course!  I’m posting about this outfit before the wedding dress, partly because I’m waiting for the professional photos … a social media blackout was imposed for the wedding, although of course I was far too occupied chatting to all our friends and relatives to even think about taking out my phone a lot of the time anyway!!  I did take a coupla snaps during our getting-ready period, and during the reception, but for about 99% of the day my phone stayed firmly silent, neglected and untouched in my bag.  And honestly, that’s the way important celebrations should be done anyway, I think!

If there’s a nice professional picture of my outfit from the wedding, I will edit later to put it here.   But in the meantime these’ll do…

I used Vogue 1537, a Kay Unger design.  I bought this pattern ages ago and have always wanted to use it for some special occasion outfit.  What could be more special than my son’s wedding?!!

I knew in my head exactly the fabric I wanted to make it out of… textured damask or brocade ideally a nice warm light pink, though actually dark pink, would have been ok or anything even remotely pink would have been considered actually.  Yes, pink is my current obsession, I may have mentioned that once or twice before, hehe…. anyway, do you think I could find anything even vaguely pink? of course not! despite the fact that pink is allegedly the colour of the season and although I scoured through every single fabric shop in Perth and Tokyo, and even hunted through the offerings of several online stores with the single minded determination of a sniffer dog.  Ultimately a failed sniffer dog with absolutely nothing to show for a heckuvva lot of sniffing though, sadly…

I found a few damasks at Fabulous Fabrics, less than a handful of colour choices, and the colour that was the most acceptable to me was this ruby red silk.  Admittedly, it is a lovely colour.  I did consult with Kelly as to whether she thought it too bright – I didn’t want to be be too conspicuous!!  and luckily she gave it a big thumbs up  🙂

The dress has a fairly plain front, which I love! with a shallow scooped, wide neckline giving a 60s-chic, almost Jackie Kennedy feel to it!  The visual interest here is in the back; a deep low V with wide straps to hold the two sides stable, and which also fortuitously happen to hide one’s bra strap.  Handy!

 

The dress has neckline facings, and is fully lined with deep navy/gunmetal blue lining fabric, also from Fabulous Fabrics.

I bought the deep maroon zip from either Spotlight? or Fabulous Fabrics? … I can’t remember which now.  Often one store doesn’t have quite the colour I need so I’ll just quickly stop by the other and hope for a better match there!

I attached a small length of ribbon with a press stud so to hold the bra strap securely under.  Remember the lingerie set I made specifically to wear with this ensemble?  Now you can see why although my outfit is not navy blue, how it matches perfectly!!

The sheath dress as it is drafted turned out way too boxy for my tastes, in fact I’m willing to bet money that the model on the pattern cover has the dress nipped in at the back with a big peg or two! – and I ended up bringing it in through the back princess seams by several inches to give it a lot more shape through the waist.  I also had cut the dress longer by 5cm all round, and just had to trim the hemline off shorter around the front,  to make the shaping adjustment possible.

The coat!!  I do LOVE the dress but the coat HAS to be my favourite part of the ensemble!  It is single breasted, with three quarter sleeves, with arrowhead tabs and self-covered, decorative buttons – more about these infamous things later!, a deep, curved collar, and lovely deep deep patch pockets with flap openings.

It too is fully lined with the same navy/gunmetal blue lining fabric, and I stitched in one of my new labels…

spare button attached inside….

I loved making this, and wearing it, and I think I will be able to wear it again in the future, even over jeans or dresses for daywear every now and then.  I will see!

I went all out with the bound buttonholes…

oh the button saga! sooooooo, as I’ve mentioned in a previous post, I covered 100 11mm buttons for Kelly’s dresss, and thought what this ensemble reeeeeeeally needed was also self-covered buttons, because after all the entire thing is all in one fabric and some other non-self-covered buttons would have just looked a bit random, probably not quite matching, and just scream “homemade”.  So I ordered some 28mm buttons from the same vendor from which I purchased Kelly’s buttons.  And waited.  And waited.  And waited!!  For about three weeks! and I was just getting more and more worried, finally with only just over two weeks to go until the wedding, I thought that if they’d been lost in the post as I suspected they had, then I’d better order more NOW or the replacement order was just not going to get here on time.  So I contacted the vendor with an emergency request to send me some more 28mm buttons by the very fastest postage service possible with a tracking number, and she did so.  And to my great relief the replacement buttons turned up with just a week to the wedding!  Phew!!

As I did with the bridal buttons; I spray painted the bare buttons with red spray paint, leftover from my Queen Rutela cosplay; which helps make the smooth metal surface a bit “grippier” and easier to cover.  They covered up perfectly, and I could finally finish my outfit, in plenty of time for the wedding.  So relieved!

there’s that spare button!

Dressmaking details now, er addressed, haha; the following is story time… please feel free to stop right now if the sewing details are all that is of interest.  Fair warning:

So, the previous modelled photos are obviously a bit of a pre-enactment, and the above mirror selfie in which I am all made-up and coiffured as befits the mother-of-the-groom status about to be undertaken, was quickly snapped on the day while waiting for my uber, … it was such a busy day!!  In fact it was a super busy week beforehand too, come to think of it.  Kelly’s family came over from Adelaide during the week, and we had a delightful dinner at the Boatshed Restaurant with her parents on the Thursday night, actually overlooking the jetty where Tim proposed to Kelly which was nice!  Then on Friday evening, we had a big family dinner with both parents and all of our kids, and T & G who are the other groomsman and bridesmaid alongside Sam and Cassie.

On the day itself, Craig and I walked Clara early, then I had my hair appointment, then quickly came home and threw on my outfit and headed straight to the hotel to “get ready” with all the other girls! though obviously I myself was ready by that point, Kelly had kindly invited me to be a part of the girly fun and I was really excited to join in with them too.  Craig had already headed in separately for his own “getting ready” session and photoshoot with Tim, Sam and the other groomsman T, before he had to nip out and come back home to meet the dog sitter, pick up Craig’s parents and bring them in to the hotel where they were checking in for that night.

The hotel room where the girls were getting ready was a scene of quietly controlled pandemonium.  Kelly had booked a suite with a living area, coffee table and desk area; the coffee table was piled high with snacks, fruit and drinks and just general crap; and the desk was absolutely chocka with hair and makeup paraphernalia…  Flowers, dresses, shoes, and overflowing suitcases were stacked up in the dressing room.  Not to mention the room was bursting with people too!  Kelly, Cassie and G (bride and bridesmaids), L  and me (mothers of the bride and groom respectively), H (Kelly’s sister), the hairdresser, the makeup artist, Shosh the photographer and a male videographer whose name I was told but which is now lost to me in the excitement of the day…  everybody bustling and chatting and working and laughing and manoeuvre-ing around each other taking pictures… so much fun!

Cassie went and sat on the window sill to be out of the way, and she looked so pretty I couldn’t help snapping a picture…

we hung the wedding dress up in the window for Shosh to take some detail shots and I took a picture of her, taking a picture of the dress  #someta …

Kelly putting on her jewellery…  she was supposed to be wearing a bracelet belonging to an aunt for her “something borrowed”, but there was some miscommunication, I’m not sure what happened, but I ended up lending her my own bracelet … Shosh took a picture of me putting it on Kelly’s wrist, I’ll post it when I get it!

also, my three at the reception… my heart was fair dinkum bursting with pride when I took this one!

Cassie made her own dress, and it turned out just beautiful!!

oh did I mention I made the other bridesmaid G’s dress?  She looks absolutely lovely yes? I think so, and I’m so grateful to her for her charm and natural beauty, making my dressmaking look far better than I deserve.  To be honest, I wasn’t very happy with this dress, it was actually a bit of a nightmare and once or twice I nearly despaired of it and seriously considered heaving the whole thing in the bin and starting over from scratch… however it came together in the end and on the night G’s radiant demeanour made it look far more lovely than I could have hoped for!  Thank goodness for gorgeous young girls!!

   

Essentially, I used the same patterns I used for Kelly’s dress; the bodice from Vogue 9239 (above left) and skirt modified from Vogue 1032 (above right), all custom fit to G.  Style-wise, for G’s dress I obviously cut the skirt pieces so as to not have a train, and the back pieces are cut so as to have straight up princess seams at the back and not have that weird seam curve in to centre back.  I made the initial muslins to include that curve and we all agreed that it was, ah, unattractive…  The front and back skirt pieces were all cut so as to have a straight-as-possible waistline seam at the top, attaching it to the bodice.  I altered the seams on the bodice so as to join up to the skirt princess seams, and of course did a FBA for both G and K.  Both girls I had to custom fit quite extensively from the pattern, and I think I did a pretty good job here if I say so myself, because the fit is spot on!  We discussed the neckline for G, and settled on a wide, off-the shoulder V neck, which is absolutely lovely on her.

The slightly stretchy, navy blue crepe was bought from Homecraft Textiles? I think? and unfortunately it was pretty awful to work with.  It did NOT want to iron flat and smooth and just seemed to shrink back slowly into a natural, very slight crinkle that just looked like it needed a good press all the time.  So you’d give a good solid press, and an hour later it would once again look just like it had been rolled up in a plastic bag for the last few days.  Also the neckline, despite extremely careful hand-basting and stay-stitching and under-stitching, just wanted to curl outwards, both front and back, in a way that fair dinkum drove me absolutely crazy and almost broke me, to be honest.  I’m pretty sure I shed actual tears over this, at least once, although it’s all a blur now because I had “moments” over just about everything to do with sewing for this wedding #iwishiwaskidding.  I tried everything I could think of to fix the aforementioned curling, ultimately the only thing that worked was a very subtle hand-done gathering stitch along the under-stitching line, which I drew up just very slightly and fastened off each end at each endpoint of the V, front and back.  Sounds like a pretty tacky way of dealing with it, I agree, but I was desperate and in the end this actually seemed to do the trick.  Hallelujah!

I did the narrow rolled hem by hand, which took about as long as you’d imagine  #aLONGTIME The navy/gunmetal blue lining fabric from Fabulous Fabrics is the same that I used for my own outfit, navy blue zip from Spotlight.

When she was dancing she did a few twirls that really brought the dress to life for me and it really made me so very happy to see it looking so absolutely lovely in these moments… so I asked her to do an extra one for me at the end of the evening.  Thank you G, for making this thing look actually amazing!!

 

Ohhh! I also made a tie for Craig! using leftovers from my outfit, so we can be all lovey-dovey match-matchy, hehe #SOnotus  Well, I just thought it would be a nice idea.  And while I had doubts he might actually want to wear it, he did, which I thought very nice of him  🙂

Of course the tie is properly made, with a padding, and an underlining as well as a lining because I do actually know how to make a tie! Also, many years ago I made a free pdf pattern for Burdastyle, it’s not a very sophisticated pattern by today’s pdf standards, but I’m thinking about polishing it off and making it more up-to-date for today’s seamster with much higher pdf expectations!  However it does work perfectly well and my instructions, while sparse, do work! particularly if you’re not a beginner.  Anyway!  I slimmed down the shape because you know, even fashions in mens ties change and the width of that one is… well, wi-i-i-de in a most unfashionable way!

Aaaagh! One last thing, before I forget!  I am sooooooo behind here… this one is not even wedding related?!

I made a new walkies-bag for Clara, to hold all her poo-bags and treats, here she is in all her haughty supermodel glory…  I used the leg from some old jeans, the loop at the top is harvested from the double top-stitched side seam of the jeans so it’s super sturdy; and I also used one of the zips from the large bag of randoms Mum gave me a few years ago.  It’ll be a miracle if I can actually get through that bag, but I’ve made a bit of headway over the years!

Hey Clara-banana!!!

So that’s all! at least until the wedding dress post, and that is going to be a HUUUUGE one, I’m sorry!  I’m afraid that one’s going to take quite some time for me to put it all together… #gatheringstrength

pinterestmail

me-made May 2019

1st – 8th May

so can we even believe this year is the 10th anniversary of me-made May?!! so amazing!  Of course I took part again, because I’m completely unable to resist any sort of wardrobe challenge, and also because I absolutely love it!  Also; I apologise for the following distracted and sort disjointed post because today is the day before our family’s Big Day, and I’m just a little… um, time-poor?!! and just kind banged this one out.  It’s unsatisfactory, I know.  I’m sorry!

I wore 100% self-made clothing each day! including my shoes, underwear and hosiery, and only made one exception of the evening of the 30th when we met Kelly’s parents – our new in-laws! – for an introductory dinner; when I decided to wear my rtw black booties, but I’m going to give myself a pass for that particular special occasion!  Social-media-wise, I joined in on instagram, posting a picture of my outfit each day to my stories with pattern details.  The daily outfits have all been put together in a saved story; Me-Made May 2019 which you can view all in one go, if you should so desire, but no one reading this will probably so desire since all the pics are here too.  Ha!

9th – 16th May

I do feel really bad that I wasn’t able to be as social as I have in the past, not much chatting or commenting because I have just been so unnaturally distracted and super-busy with getting ready for our big day tomorrow, don’t you hate people who brag about being super busy?? I sure do, but for me this month it’s just the plain and simple truth.  But I’m looking forward now to getting full-on back into the happy busy chit-chat in the online sewing community that I LOVE.

17th -24th May

My outfits: a lot of times I just resorted to previously tried and true outfit combinations that I’d worn before and knew that I loved, so just slipped them on without much thought, but I did try to think of a few new combinations.  Some combinations are more successful than others!

I’d consciously tried to wear different garments everyday to mix it up and really get through my wardrobe; and was nearly completely successful!  Only two things got doubled up during the month: my cream cotton cardigan, and my navy blue Miette cardigan both got worn twice during the month.  Oh, apart from my black tights, and all my self-made shoes, all of which got multiple wears.

25th – 31st May,

including the evening of the 30th May in which I glammed up a little

Also: everyday I wore my Me-Made May 2019 pin, that Zoe kindly sent to me and a few of the other OG girls.  So cute! Thank you so much, Zoe!

pinterestmail

box of socks; May edition

 

so I have to be honest and admit straight up that Craig and I have been semi-fighting over this particular sock yarn! we both really really love it and wanted it for ourselves so in the end we went online and hunted down another ball of this wool… #secrettoasuccessfulmarriage

Of course there is a story… I saw this yarn in Japan -of course! Japan has the coolest stuff, I’m telling you… Craig was in the store with me and picking up and admiring various sock yarns too; and because he was being so patient while I browsed sock yarn endlessly I promised that I would knit a pair of socks for him if he just picked some yarn.  I mean, that seems fair, right? a pair of socks in exchange for a trip to Japan?!  yeah I thought so too… hehe… anyway!  I had chosen all the yarn I wanted and I went up and bought it.  A little later, and I’ve started knitting it up, and Craig goes, those are my socks, aren’t they?  and I go, um, nooooooo? and he goes, but that’s the yarn I wanted for my socks! and I go, well I wanted it too, and I tooooold you to put some yarn to the basket if you wanted any!  and he goes well I thought THAT one was for me, and I go, no it’s for me! and then he looked quite crestfallen and so did I because I DID really want to knit a pair of socks for him, that he loved.  And so then in an exceptionally generous gesture I thought, because I too really really love this yarn I said oh, ok you can have them, then he said, no it’s ok, you can have them, and I’m like, no I want you to have them, and he’s like, no, it’s ok… well you get the picture.  So in the end, yeah; we went online and found some more, so very soon we’re going to have matching feet … you know when you’re young and newly in love, and there’s a stage where you dress like each other?? well it’s been a while, and actually I’m not even sure we ever ever went through that stage! but looks like we are going to go through it after all…

 

So this yarn is the legendary Opal yarn, that it seems you can buy everywhere in the world except Australia, grrr… the label reads KFS Kesennuma, colour Forest, or KFS108. and is a really beautiful, verdant array of deep teal, bottle free, olive green, bluey-grey green, and through to a springy leaf green and pure ivory…  I love the way it knits up to mimic a fair isle design, the repeat is just like the yoke of a Scottish or Scandinavian jumper.  It’s my favourite colourway out of all the self-striping sock yarns I bought, because of that clean “evergreen trees in a snowy wintery wonderland” vibe.  I can almost smell the pine needles!

I used my old Patons tried and true basic sock pattern, and carefully arranged the colours to have the heel in all the darks, and cut and spliced so as to have a mostly pure white toe, though just a tiny spray of green at the very end snuck in there too… so pretty!!

the updated box of socks… and I reckon I should have started with a bigger basket!

pinterestmail
Switch to mobile version
↓