Remembering

A lot of us are going to be remembering today the terrible events of 9/11 ten years ago, and what they were doing that day… this is a rambling recollection of my pretty ordinary life on that day.
We were living in Pennsylvania, USA at the time.  We had been there for about three months… Craig was doing a teaching exchange at a teaching hospital and our young children were booked into the local school..
To explain, Perth is a great place to live, but nothing ever happens in Perth.  This is a very quiet and laid-back little city.  A lot of young people from Perth are dying to leave, just because it is so quiet (and nearly always move back home as they get older for the very same reason…) Craig and I were still in the young category who wanted to be somewhere exciting.  And we were in America! of all places.  Fed on a childhood diet of US sitcoms and TV series and Hollywood movies all our lives, we had been brought up brainwashed into believing America was the place everything happened.  It seemed everywhere we turned there was something famous, somewhere where something amazing or fabulous or eventful and interesting had happened.  We’d only seen it in the movies but now we were visiting those places, seeing it, experiencing it, living in it!  It seemed so awesome and exciting and overwhelming and we were there.
We had met lovely people and made friends.  I was homesick but I liked the little town we were living in, and I loved the friendly happy people.  They were so welcoming and kindhearted.  We even entertained thoughts about a more permanent move… too early to make any decisions but we were talking about it.
So.
The children had just got off to school, Craig was already at work and I was doing a bit of housework before my usual jog/brisk walk.  The phone rang as I was about to head out.  It was my brother, checking to see we were home and OK.  He had seen it on the evening news in Perth… this was about 9.30am Pennsylvania time… I turned on the TV just in time to see footage of the second plane.  I didn’t go out for anything at all that day just stayed glued to the TV; my family all rang at some point to check we were OK, they had also heard about a plane missing over Pennsylvania which ?I think? I’m not sure now, was information that was kept from us actually living there…
My children came home from school, and I immediately switched the TV off, thinking naively that they wouldn’t know about it, and I wanted to protect their young sweet minds …. naturally their teachers had had the TV on in the classroom all day also.  My eldest son, 11 years old, asked if the people jumping out of windows were going to be OK.  I just said, no, darling.  I felt a tiny twinge of anger at the complete lack of censorship, but was too confused and blank with the horrors of the day to think about saying anything to their teachers.  Anyhow, any small petty feelings I might have had about my children’s innocence seemed completely and utterly trivial by comparison.
The day was surreal… we were in a country in which events such as these were a common silver-screen occurrence.  Stuff like this does actually happen in the US, according to the movies.  We had seen all this sort of thing in the movies before, we had seen planes crashing in movies before we had seen people running terrified down the streets of New York in the movies before, we had seen horrendous dust clouds in the movies before.  It was kind of hard to grasp reality.   I vacillated between feeling bizarrely like it was all a movie or something else dreamt up by the land of smoke and mirrors, and then back again to reality.  When the reality did set in I just wanted my children to be back in that country where nothing ever happened.
The next few days, or weeks? it is hazy now, but I do remember all planes were grounded.  There was an anticipatory fear about what would come next.  No one knew.  My mother wanted us all to come home immediately.  I wondered if this was the start of a war; the president certainly said they were at war, and here we were, there.  When the crashed plane was discovered in Pennsylvania, that was a fresh horror.  I’ve never been so geographically close to a major plane crash like that in my life.  That event was tragic enough on its own but sadly and awfully overshadowed in the media by the massiveness of the other attacks.
(Oh, and we didn’t leave, not until our time was up.  I’m really glad we didn’t.  Also in case you are wondering, Tim does remember the day well, Cassie only vaguely, and Sam has no memory.  Tim remembers a girl crying and being taken out of class because her father worked in one of the Twin Towers.  I heard he got out OK.)

Details: (seems hugely silly to mention it now, but for the sake of self-stitched September…)
Top; Butterick 4985 with different sleeves and modified to be a hoodie, white lace, details here
Skirt; skirt “d” from Unique Clothes Any Way You Like by Natsuno Hiraiwa, silver grey crepe, details here, and go here to see this skirt styled in 6 different ways
Sandshoes: Country Road

 

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A repeat…

…for real.  (the jeans)
Although I last wore them tucked into my biker boots and this time they are hanging out in all their flared glory…  I love the 70’s bellbottom-ness of them, and with ma skivvy here, and ma dip-dyed wrap thing; well, I think I’m just about ready to hop straight into Hair and this is the dawning of the age of Aquariuuuuus!
However, I suspect I’m a little too grey to fit into that era’s rainbow-hued colour scheme.  I’ve got the 70’s silhouette happening but just not the palette; I’m like a stormcloud-hued depressed moan-groan new millenium version of the 70’s here…
My parents had the Hair record and I grew up being uplifted and moved by the joy of those supremely optimistic songs.  Yup, I wore flares ands skivvys and tie-dyed stuff the first time around, and you know what they say about if you were there the first time around…. (don’t go there the second time around) but I am a child of the 70’s so there is no getting away from that.  Anyhow fashion-wise just about anything goes now, and so if one wants to dress like a monotonal fallout from another decade then go for it, yeah!

Details:
Top; self-drafted, from greige/purple-y knit stuff, details here
Jeans; Burda 7863 modified, black stretch corduroy, details here
Wrap; wrap “f” from Unique Clothes Any Way You Like by Natsuno Hiraiwa, cream knit stuff dipdyed in a mixture of iDye Poly Blue and coffee, details here
(socks, not seen but knitted by me)
Shoes; Francesco Morichetti, from Zomp shoes

Below; recent naughty purchases, am rapidly becoming a pattern junkie…  the two Vogues, completely influenced by shams, whose creations are too terribly superbly tempting to resist emulating; also the Donna Karan maxi from ebay for which I paid ridiculous postage (don’t ask, I reckon Americans charge Australians like they are posting to the moon); and the Burdastyle magazine was completely on a whim.  I think I need help, is there a patternaholics anonymous…?

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A repeat…

… of sorts.  Not a repeat of any actual garments, per se, and btw I am not consciously trying to avoid repeats during self-stitched September at all, because I’ve decided that would be silly.  I just want to wear what I want to wear, y’know?  But I am wearing exactly the same pattern combination as I did last Friday, coincidentally.  That is; the twist top from Pattern Magic; this is the cream version and last Friday I was wearing my charcoal version.  And Burda 7863 jeans; today the purple denim version whereas last Friday I had on my black corduroy version.  So, different enough?
And I whacked the scarf on just because I thought the outfit was a tad bland without it, it needed just some extra bit of colour, or something, somewhere.
I just love this scarf, rapidly becoming one of my everyday favourites and it was fair dinkum one of the easiest things ever… just a French seam joining two ginormously long strips; from a pitifully unwanted 80cm remnant of thin soft jersey.  Just goes to show, whilst much pleasure can be gained from a long-term beautifully constructed garment (and it is a rare seamstress who does not aspire to a sartorial work-of-art every once in a while) sometimes the simplest of things can turn out pretty wonderful too.  So moral of the story; always check out those remnant bins.  There may be a fabulous potential scarf sitting in there with your name on it… 

Details:
Top; the twist top, drafted from Pattern Magic by Tomoko Nakamichi, cream knit stuff, details here
Jeans; Burda 7863 with modifications, purple stretch denim, details here
Scarf; raspberry marle jersey remnant, details here
(also, socks not seen, but knitted by me)
Shoes; Francesco Morichetti, from Zomp shoes

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A rare floral moment

Spring must really be in the air for me to think about a print, and not just any ol’  print but a floral one yowsa!  Not that I don’t love florals; I do, but in moderation and in general preferably on other people…  🙂
This is an old dress now, that I first made back here, and I’ve worn it here on the blog before.  In fact I was clad in this very same outfit for my favourite day during self-stitched September last year and the dress was a year old then.  It’s stood up pretty well, I reckon…  this is my darling Mum’s favourite dress of my creation,  and I’ve alway loved how the sleeve cuff/ties worked out and thought they were a particularly serendipitous detail.  
So of course I do repeat outfits, sure.  As we all do…  And especially if I have found a fab combo that really works for me, or in this case a dress that needs nothing further to make it perfect for … well, anything!  Even though this is kinda “pretty” I’m not precious about any of my dresses and don’t take particular care with them.  When I took this to Melbourne I rolled it into a ball and stuffed it in the corner of the suitcase – no ironing!- … today I’ve walked the dog, done the office work, had lunch with a friend, and am now curled up on the couch… when I wash it tomorrow it will get tossed in the machine on a normal wash cycle…  You can do whatever you want with a zipless wrap dress in an easy-care fabric, you see, and it will loyally forgive you all your neglect and continue to look as fabudabulous as ever…  
Digressing for a minute; the phrase “easy-care”.  Music to the ears, no?  Think about it, easy care.  Says it all.  Now, if I wasn’t such a snob about linen, silk, wool and cotton and didn’t keep on stubbornly giving preference to all these delicious and decidedly LESS easy-care fabrics, my life would be oh-so-much easier, methinks… sigh.
I made a pink stretch-y petticoat to go underneath, for a bit of extra warmth, that you can’t see in the above picture but is at right.  Thank you Bessie, for agreeing to model a petticoat for the internet; something I am waaay too shy for!

Details:
Dress; Vogue 7748, but modified quite a lot, floral polyester chiffon, more details here
Petticoat (underneath, and modelled at right by Bessie); pink stretchy stuff, my own design
Tights; Kolotex
Shoes; Django and Juliette, from Zomp shoes

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Cooking schmooking

So, I went there.  I might be a tad cosy in my crochet skirt (and probably look kinda like a cosy too, haha, er a tea-cosy that is!), but I decided that if I was going to wear it at all again this year, then sooner rather than later was the go.  I wanted to get at least a few more days wear out of it while the weather is even half cool enough, and well dang! I’m kinda proud of it so wanted to give it an airing over in the self-stitched September flickr group.  Hehe, such a show-off, hmmm?
You’re wondering what I am doing standing here in the kitchen of all places?  The flickr group is having another fun weekly photo challenge, and this week is to be in your workplace, or doing something that feels like work to you.  Well, to pose in front of my computer in the office felt kind of blah blah predictable… plus I did it during self-stitched September last year.  Oh wait, I posed in my kitchen during that challenge too… oh rats.  
Is nothing ever original any more?

Details:
Jumper; self-drafted, made of an acrylic knit (that was originally grey but I dyed it yellow when I realised how awful the colour looked), details here
Skirt; crocheted using Jo Sharp yarns, details and my pattern here
Tights; Voodoo
Boots; Andrea and Joen, from Uggies in Dunsborough (now renamed)

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Lack of Tshirts

More correctly, I do not have a lack of Tshirts, but just a lack of me-made Tshirts.  And after a few experiments I feel this dress really looks best over a form-fitting knit Tshirt and not over a blouse.  So here it is again, this time over my striped Tshirt.  I’m not sure the dress is as successful over a print as it is over a solid coloured Tshirt… what do you think?
Anyhoo, it should be obvious that I adore this dress and have worn it a lot over winter and hope to continue wearing it over these cooler early cool days of spring too.  This should go some way to assuaging my disappointment that it is too warm to wear my new crocheted skirt already, and I had been looking forward to showing it off at least once during self-stitched September!   This is often a minor problem with me, though naturally, not such a problem that I am not massively thrilled about the warmer weather!  But, with my sewing and knitting projects at this time of year, I am partly stuck in “winter” mode and still envisaging projects suitable for the cooler weather, when really it is too warm to be wearing them for very long…  why do I keep doing this?  How do you go with thinking ahead in your seasonal wardrobe planning?

Details:
Dress; the “gathered hole” dress form Pattern Magic by Tomoko Nakamichi, made of a grey wool mix, details here
Tshirt; self drafted, navy and white striped jersey, details here
Tights; Metalicus
Shoes; Francesco Morichetti, from Zomp shoes

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Pattern Magic 2; wearing a square

This was one of the earliest garments in this excellent book to catch my eye, and as it turns out probably the easiest.
Only one or two basic measurements and very few seams…
While the design is called “wearing a square”, well yes, the pattern piece is a square.  That is if you can be bothered drafting a pattern piece, which I did not…  I just measured straight onto my fabric, marked with pins, and cut out using my big old quilting ruler and rotary cutter to get the straight lines, yes, it is that easy.  However the fabric piece is actually a rectangle; a double square, on the fold. 
My only advice?  Check your forearm circumference measurement, I “drafted with my own measurements” as recommended, but allowed for a few extra centimetres on my sleeves and I am glad I did!  I do not have big arms, but I am guessing there are very few who would be comfortable with a 20cm sleeve on their forearm…  
I find little cardigans very useful, so am very pleased with this one.  The draping on the back and the very subtle drape on the back neckline caused by the straight lines of the garment  are both flattering and unusual.  I decided to go for an open-ended zip for closure at the front, so it can be unzipped all the way if I wanted it hanging open.  But I tried this out and probably won’t, as it has a tendency to slide off my shoulders if it is left open…
It’s a cute little thing, no?  I just love it!  The fabric was given to me by my friend C, part of her late mother’s stash so I’m not sure of the composition.  It is quite thick-ish, and looks stretchy, but is only very slightly stretchy, and has a tendency to fray.  So I finished the lower edge and sleeve hems by overlocking the raw edges, turning under once by 1cm and stitching down, and the neckline edge has a 4cm hem. The fabric has this blue, grey and white marle on one side whilst the other side  is a grey and white marle.  I have plenty left, so might make something with the grey marle on the outside next time…

Details:
Cardigan; the “wearing a square” design from Pattern Magic 2 by Tomoko Nakamichi, made of blue/grey mystery fabric
Dress; Burda 8511 modified to be fully lined, made of tobacco coloured wool mix
Tights; Kolotex
Boots; Andrea and Joen, from Uggies in Dunsborough

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Taking advantage of one’s surroundings…

I received a comment on my photo yesterday in the Self-Stitched September flickr group that read in part that my ensemble looked perfect “mostly due to the beach background” LOL!  *
Well I’m afraid the beach is going to steal the show again today because when I am fortunate enough to be staying by the beach then I see no reason not to make full use of nature’s beautiful offerings, particularly when one is simply logging a mere outfit.  I’m not vain enough to believe my sewing creations are going to elicit any Wow! factor all by themselves!
So, today; I am using another little ploy for when one’s jeans have shrunk a tad, just roll them up a little bit and voila, the ankle-freezer factor has been happily disguised!  Now they look as if they were meant to be like this…  Another plus is that one can wade, which is as far as I will go in at this time of year.  Shams asked if we swim at this beach, and yup we sure do! but it is still a tad chilly for full immersion.  But the feel of cool salty water lapping about your ankles, and soft and squishy but still slight abrasive sand underfoot is always such a deliciously blissfully healthy feeling for your feet, don’t you think?  I think it beats any foot pampering offered at any beauty spa, any day!
My half-zip-front parka is one I made about five years ago, and so it might be outdated but I still love it.   It is self-drafted, but a completely slavish imitation of a Marni design from their Spring/Summer 2007 collection, so I feel I’m borrowing a bit of designer-style austere chic when I don this… .  I really like how the high bunched up collar turned out.  It’s basically a double layer rectangle cut to fit the neckline, sewn in, then with a lace inserted between the two layers and exiting through some tiny buttonholes to tie it loosely.  It does have some piecing on the front, and all the seams are double topstitched, but it is probably hard to see it in this photo.

Details:
Parka; self drafted, a copy of this one at right, from Marni Spring/Summer 2007, black cotton
Jeans; Burda 7863 with modification, rust coloured stretch corduroy, details here
Sandshoes; Country Road

*Actually I’m sure the comment was intended to be a nice comment but I just couldn’t help but laugh when I read that bit…!

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