This delicate feathery ivory lace fabric was a very long term resident in my stash. It’s a tricky customer; sooo cobwebby and so sparse that it has absolutely no structure or form whatsoever and it both stretches and collapses upon itself. For years I’ve wondered what on earth I could do with it. Finally I just decided a simple dress would do, and then tried to work out how its wayward flightiness could be tethered into some sort of “dress” arrangement.
The white lace is from Fabulous Fabrics years ago, and for the bands and collar I used a perfectly colour-matched
ivory swiss dotted cotton voile with sparsely scattered fluffy dots, bought at Potters Textiles
last year. The buttons… ah, the
buttons! They are lovely, antique
mother-of-pearl beauties that were given to me by ElleC… thank you so much
ElleC! I used two of these buttons
previously in this blouse and now this new dress uses the remainder… and, yes! It
was really really hard to cut them
off their little card, but I decided that they are too lovely to sit in a
button tin forever and they deserve to be seen! I think the marquise shape of the buttons is a purr-fect match for that same-shaped motif in the lace 🙂
I had
finagled the number of buttonholes to use every single last one of the buttons
so I was pretty darn devastated when the shank of one broke as I was stitching
it on… noooooo! And a snowflake’s chance in hell of ever finding another one!
So it was oh-so carefully super-glued together before stitching on, however I was still worried about it so
I’ve super-glued it and its
buttonhole together and to the dress.
Now the left sleeve can never
be unbuttoned and I expect I will be obsessively checking to see that that
button is still in place forever and ever after. (sigh)
strip of the same ivory cotton, and the armscyes and side seams are encased with Seams Great, a gift from velosewer; thanks Maria! the Seams Great is a sheer and flimsy creamy-coloured tape and is virtually invisible from the right side of the garment.
I experimented with a few different finishes for the lower edge of
the dress and all my results were just too hideous for words so the lower
hem is simply cut straight and left unfinished. This does leave quite a nice ethereal lightness and floatiness to the
lower hem, and fortunately the fabric will not fray.
narrowed to a finished width of 2.5cm; which is visually more in keeping with
the delicacy of the lace fabric. the sleeves are shortened and I sewed a very
narrow band as a one piece sleeve-band placket, pictured below.
The front bodice was rotated to eliminate the bust dart because the fabric is so delicate sewing darts would have been difficult and they would have looked weird too. I cut the
sides to be a straight and wide A-line from underarm to the lower hem.
Burdastyle magazine 05/2010, 111 modified, ivory lace and ivory cotton, my review of this pattern here
Burda 8071, powder blue silk, details here











































































