Tag Archives: Craig

Grey shirt, with some floral

I have made a shirt for Craig’s birthday  🙂
Burda 7767, again.
Looks kinda plain from a distance? well, up close it can be seen the shirt has a secret floral surprise!  

I’ve seen a few shirts in up-to-the-minute menswear boutiques with some panels and parts cut from contrasting prints like paisleys and florals, and wanted to make something like this for Craig.  Thing is though, he’s a fairly conservative dresser who would give major side-eye to anything full-on floral…. too scary!  so to ease him into the trend gently and painlessly I just sneaked it in, in innocuous spots, for facings and mostly inside parts.  Meaning at a casual glance you only get tantalising glimpses that it is not just a boring old plain grey shirt.   Fortunately this was acceptable.  Phew!
I’m really pleased with how it looks!  It’s always a bit nerve-wracking choosing fabrics for the menfolk, they can be so easily spooked.  The floral is a little hipster, it’s true; but I think the soothing presence of all that grey cotton broadcloth makes it ok for a man like my husband.  

Both fabrics are from Spotlight, and I used the soft floral Japanese cotton wrong side out to get a softer, pleasantly faded and muted effect.  This is used for all facings: the collar, collar stand, pockets, button and buttonhole bands, sleeve hems and yoke.  The variegated pale/dark grey buttons are from Fabulous Fabrics.
I gave the left breast pocket a pen division, because apparently he actually uses it.

All the seams are flat-felled, and I used my own tutorial to get that sleeve cap curve sitting down nice and flat around the shoulder.  

At the lower edge of the side seams I tried something new, and finished them with a lapped flat-felled split.  I really like how this turned out; it’s strong and looks both neat and smart and I will use this technique for a lot more shirts in future  🙂

Details:
Craig’s shirt; Burda 7767 with minor modifications, my review of this pattern here

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the paper doll project

(I’ve pledged to wear only clothes handmade by me this year and to sketch my daily outfits in my Fashionary.  I’m calling this the paper doll project)

4th-9th July
from left:
mustard dress, f-leather jacket, black tights, hand-knit socks
mossy green top, ivory curtaining skirt, paprika tights, cream hand-knitted scarf, hand-knit socks
strawberry jeans, white Tshirt, lt grey hoodie, hand-knit socks
leopard print Tshirt, little grey skirt, spiral leggings, hand-knit socks, army jacket
army jacket, grey thermal, black Tshirt, navy corduroy skirt, beige scrumpled leggings, hand-knit socks
white Tshirt, black corduroy jeans, peppercorn cardigan, hand-knit socks

10th-15th July
from left:
panelled corduroy dress, black wool tights, grey wool coat
leopard print top, Pattern Magic gathered hole dress, paprika tights, hand-knit socks, army jacket
black Tshirt, chocolate cardigan, sludgy little skirt, swirly leggings, hand-knit socks
emerald corduroy skirt, grey top, grey wool coat, black wool tights
white shirt, little lt grey skirt, peppercorn cardigan, beige scrumply leggings, hand-knit socks
sew bossy dress, chocolate cardigan, denim-look tights

16th-20th July
from left:
raincoat!, navy corduroy skirt, white Tshirt, red hoodie, paprika tights, hand-knit socks
crochet Granny squares skirtarmy jacketblack wool Tshirt, black wool tights, hand-knit socks
grey LS thermal, grey/black Tshirt, purple jeans, army jacket, hand-knit socks
emerald corduroy skirt, calico cardigan, green PM top, grey/black striped Tshirt, hand-knit socks
petrol corduroy skirt, paprika tights, red hoodie, raspberry scarf, black Tshirt, hand-knit socks
Servalan dress, grey wool coat

Brrr! it has been so cold lately!! and I have gleefully re-discovered my army jacket and been wearing it a whole bunch of times…  O how I love that thing!  It’s fabulous how I can slip it on over a little Tshirt or short-sleeved dress and it instantly renders any little summery thing winter-appropriate.  Big love for thick winter parkas.  And it has even been cold enough to get out that Granny squares skirt again, saving it from white elephant-dom 😉
We went to our sci fi do on Saturday night, and Servalan got out and about again and had intergalactic geeky fun… her first outing was to Supanova with future grrrl a few weeks ago.  This time Servalan let her hair down and boogied like a boss.  You know a party is running hot when the smoke detectors go off and the fire engine shows up!  Chewbacca hanging off of a fire truck is not a sight you see every day.

A few asked about Craig’s outfit… well I was all set and quite keen to make him something and then he decided to go as Neo.  Well do you know how much it costs to make a full-length leather coat, even a fake leather coat.  No? well twice as much as to hire it, that’s how much, and yup! I checked out the offerings and did the sums to find that out, and was just like, oh man, really?!?

 Neo; source

Plus it’s important to be able to admit when a sewing project is going to be masochistically difficult and have a very small fun factor, yes?  
So he hired one.   And looked tres cool…

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Bright roses, tops n tights

Y’ello  🙂
I’ve been making stoof.  Please bear with me while my photo-taking catches up…
Firstly, my new top of stretchy cotton sateen.  I must be dreaming of spring already, I think!
This is a stash-busting success story.  I fell deeply in love with this autumnal gold/orange/scarlet/khaki rose-print fabric from Tessuti’s in Melbourne last year, and threw down my credit card with blithe abandon.  So my colours!  Close-up, the print has that slightly scratchy spotty appearance of an old polaroid.  Love it.
Difficulties arose when I got home and had to come to terms with the fact that for some dumb reason I had bought only 70cm.  I have no excuse for this insanity. Yes, I was an idiot.  I’m blaming that state of mad fabric drunkenness brought on by places like Tessuti’s.  Note to self:  get at least a metre from now on.
So I made a simple little pull-on Tshirt top because fortunately you don’t need much metrage for this style.  This is the bodice from a dress pattern, Burda style magazine 08/2009, 128; elongated a bit.  I have made this pattern up twice before, firstly as a dress and then as a top just like this one, so I already know how much I love this flattering boat-neck style.  It has bust darts in the front and two long vertical darts in the back for shaping.  No zip or closure is needed because the neck opening is wide enough so that you can just pull it on over your head.

I could not make the sleeves as long as the pattern intended, as in my previous two versions.  This is the very longest I could get from out of my meagre piece.  I would really prefer them to be about 12cm longer, but meh.  I can cope.

Details:

Top; Burdastyle magazine 08/2009; 128 modified to be a top, stretchy cotton sateen, my review of this pattern here
Skirt; Burdastyle 10/2010, 136 (the Karl Lagerfeld skirt) lengthened, black suiting gabardine, details and my review of this pattern here
Shoes; Django and Juliette, from Zomp shoes
Some notes on the finishing details for this top:

The neckband is finished with facings.  I always always under-stitch facings on a garment that I wish to look sorta dressy, or just not-so casual.  Top-stitching always makes things look a bit more “casual” imo, and often you want an edge that smoothly and cleanly rolls under to the inside, with no top-stitching or anything visible on the edge.  Under-stitching (the red stitching in both photos below) always provides a nice clean and minimal look on the outside; and safeguards against facings popping up and out.

After under-stitching, the facings are stitched to the sleeve cap seam allowances just inside the previous sleeve cap stitching, and stitched-in-the-ditch down to the shoulder from the right side of the garment, to hold them firmly in place.  

But wait, there’s more…

While I am really enjoying wearing my crazier leggings and tights, I guess we all agree that plain black tights are kinda the most useful type to have, and a must for winter, right?  So I made a second pair identical in every way to my previous pair.  I am wearing these in the photo above too.
And I have made two little Tshirts too, one for me, and one for my husband, both self-drafted and custom-fit, using the very last of my 100% merino wool stash, bought from the Fabric Store in Melbourne last year.  Now we have matching his-and-hers thermal tops, haha.  Quelle romantic, non?

Random picture of the neckband, constructed using this method.  Appearing here for no better reason than for me to feel good about the increasingly better finish I am achieving nowadays.  The centre back is still a wee bit bobbly thanks to the extra thickness of fabric in the joining seam there, but it’s getting there.  Practise is benefiting the quest for perfection!
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White Christmas; Craig’s Christmas shirt


I made a shirt for Craig for Christmas too; and used er, hehehe; Burda 7767 again!  I bought some very nice white cotton broadcloth from Spotlight; and the buttons are also from Spotlight.
Actually, this shirt is a response to a rarity; a request.   Rumblings and murmurings about a nice, smart-casual, short-sleeved white shirt have been increasing in frequency and volume for a few weeks, at least.
I tuned in.  I took action.
Most satisfyingly, he was very very pleased when he opened up his pressie on Christmas morning! and he put it on straight away.  Actually, all my boys put their new shirts on straight away.  Cassie put on her new outfit too (hers to appear here tomorrow!!  🙂  )  Most gratifying.  I have to confess; Christmas lunch I looked around, and Dad was wearing this shirt, my two boys and my husband wearing their shirts, and my daughter, as well as (duh) myself; was wearing an outfit made by me. .  My heart just … well, swelled.  Real warm fuzzy moment   (sigh) 
This is a fairly simple version of the pattern.  Simple was just about all I could cope with by this time, since as you can imagine I was fast approaching men’s-shirt saturation point …. And after the hard and heavy duty this pattern has endured over the past few months I think it deserves a nice little rest now  🙂  Time to go bye-byes, good and faithful well-thumbed pattern, wishing you sweet pattern-y dreams and I’ll see you in… oh, sometime in the future, I’m sure ….  if when I can muster a skerrick of enthusiasm.
and (whispers) you can be sure I will be leaping with joy upon some new patterns in the New Year.  Yup.  NEW.  Patterns!  Whoo hooooo!!!
This latest version of Burda 7767 has short sleeves, and two very simple squared patch breast pockets, the left one has been partitioned to have a pen compartment.
For the first time I gave the shirt a club collar by curving the collar points off.

The armscye seam allowances are flat felled; utilising a gathering stitch along the curved sleeve cap to achieve this neatly.  The side and sleeve seams are flat-felled also.

I usually like to add a traditionally curved lower hem to my mens’ shirts; but this time I went with a split side seam.  It is hard to see with the white-on-white stitching; but I stitched horizontally along the top of the split with a tight, closely spaced bar of zip-zag stitching.

Going by the worn worn state of Craig’s current white short-sleeved shirt collection; I am completely confident this one will be getting tonnnnnes of wear!

Details:
Burda 7767 modified, white cotton, my review of this pattern here

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Looking sharp! Craig’s birthday shirt

It is my husband’s birthday, and I have made a shirt for him!

I used my favourite my only! men’s shirt pattern Burda 7767, adjusted for a perfect custom fit; and a gorgeously high quality, striped shirting cotton from Tessuti’s in Melbourne, bought in high cloak-and-dagger secrecy in a moment while Craig’s back was turned during our trip there in September; mwahahaha!!!!  Cannot believe I managed to pull it off actually, a hidden-but-in-full-view purchase; my gosh, but I’m one devious little wife-y.  
Cool as a cucumber, my friends…  Coooool.  As.  A.  Cucumber.  😉
For the white collar, collar stand, button bands, cuffs and plackets and the arrow-shaped cap on the single pocket; I used a very nice white cotton that I bought for my own use from Fabulous Fabrics.  It hurt like mad to have to cut into “my” cotton.  It really did.  Honestly, I searched and searched for white fabric that was a reasonable textural match for the striped fabric but couldn’t find anything by the time I wanted to start on Craig’s shirt.  Can you believe white shirting cotton would be such a rare beast??? well, it is.  Trust me.  I’ve scoured high and low, and it is currently non-existent…

Thus explaining and self-justifying why I pounce upon, buy up big, and hoard high quality white cotton whenever and wherever I see it…. and this is one of my treasures  (hoarsely croaking) ” …. My precious….”
I think the shirt really needed the white contrast bits; in fact I think they make it.  I really wanted this shirt to be a super high quality business shirt, like the sort he could wear in important professional situations, and look mighty spiffy at the same time.  NOT one that would provoke any “oh, and did your wife make your shirt for you then, hmmm?” comments…  🙂  

And I have to admit I am pretty chuffed with it.  Actually I am quite thrilled with how this looks; the fabric, the quality and the finish.  I think this is the best quality shirt I have made so far.
The armscye seams are flat felled inside, and I used my own tutorial for flat felling a curved seam to achieve this neatly.  The side and sleeve seams are French seams.  I bought the little black matte buttons from Fabulous Fabrics also.

for those like me who like checking out the insides…

Details:
Shirt; Burda 7767, striped shirting cotton, with white cotton detailing

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Bread

Have I ever mentioned before that I married a very clever man?  Maybe, but if not then.. I have.  A very clever man indeed.
Well, he married me, didn’t he?
Haha! kidding!
He has done some other clever things too  😉

Including making bread.

Now let me explain… we are not foodies, oh nooo!.. although in fact I have been “making bread” for the family for about fifteen years; only I use a bread-maker which is kinda cheating, and not really like making your own bread at all.  So, while I do “make my own bread”, please note the use of self-mocking inverted commas.  Well, you see; Miss Frugality, in her zeal for DIY, went and bought a breadmaker, even though it was expensive and she is allergic to kitchens.  Fortunately it turned out to be so easy even the worst cook in the world could cope, and the cost per use is probably down into the micro-cents by now.  So, the kiddies grew up on that deliciously chewy, crusty, chocka-with-seeds stuff it produced and we quickly discovered we just could never go back to that crap masquerading laughably as “bread” sold in the supermarket, ever again… so the homemade bread habit has continued to this day.  Chuck in the breadmix, water, yeast, press a few buttons, a few hours later, hey presto, a yummy loaf awaits.   Simple as that.  Easy peasy.  And domestic contentment ensues.
But recently my husband read a book “52 Loaves” by William Alexander; which outlined the author’s grail-like quest to make bread the traditional way, truly from scratch.  Very entertaining read, by the way.
My husband, not a man easily impressed, was impressed.  He was like, “Challenge Accepted!!”
Yes, in case you’re wondering, my husband is an inquisitive as well as a competitive man.  On those personality thingie tests, he always comes out as a lion; an A-type; a born-leader; a go-getting, never-admit-defeat, super-intelligent dynamo of doing-ness; or whatever.
Anyhow, he found himself compelled to make bread, too.  The hard way.  And like just about anything my husband attempts, he succeeded.
So.
He started out by developing his own starter.
You begin with blueberries… yes, really.  Why? Well, blueberries are one of the few substances which are still sold today with their protective layer of wild yeast intact.  That white, slightly powdery substance coating the surface of blueberries?? well, that is an atmospheric fungus, a naturally occurring thing, that has been used for centuries by our ancestors to grow the leavening agent for bread.  Nowadays, most of us are lazy and use either dried yeast or a pre-made starter developed by somebody else, but fortunately for the apocalypse-minded amongst us: the materials are still at hand for those who wish to make use of ancient techniques and go the pure unassisted route towards making their own bread.  Can you make your own yeast? why yes you can!

It also occurs on other fruits and veggies, you sometimes see it on grapes and apples here but most of the time it gets polished off before they reach the grocer.

Craig soaked a punnet of blueberries in pure (chloride and fluoride free) water to harvest, or in old terms; “catch” the yeast.  Then he combined this “live” water with an equal quantity of flour, and left it to develop.  After a few days he had a thick bubbly paste with a pleasantly fertile, brewery-like aroma.

This is the levain, and it lives in our fridge.  In colder climates people keep it in a warm spot on the window sill, but we are in a very very hot climate so it would get bloated and whiffy in no time at all on our windowsill!  You need to feed and tend to it every few days to keep it in good shape.  
As you can imagine, in ancient times the levain was like gold in a family; it was their ticket to the staff of life and it was essential for it to be kept well maintained.  The health of a family’s levain was literally the key to the health of the family!
Obviously we are a very fortunate first world family whose survival is not dependent on the survival of our levain; but after all the effort that went into producing this stuff you can be sure Craig is taking blinkin’ good care of it!
He baked the bread on pizza stones.  Fortunately we’ve had these already a Christmas gift one year I think.  
Incidentally I was allotted about one nanosecond in which to take this photograph… something to do with “YOU’RE LETTING ALL THE HOT AIR OUT!“… or something or other…  

and then … bread.

As they say in the ad biz;  Un Serving Suggestion…   

And was it tres delish?  
Oh, oui.  

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A Man-hoodie

I sew mostly for myself 🙂  Now my children are all grown up they select and buy their own clothes, of course.  It’s a rare occasion for anyone to make a request  🙁 although I do so love it when they do.
My husband also doesn’t ever ask for very much for himself either, so when he does then I pay attention because I know it is because he really really wants it.
He had a favourite RTW Tshirt hoodie thing, and he wanted one to replace it.  The new one had to be as close to the old one as humanly possible, please.  The old one was thin and brittle from washing and all stretched out and sad, and had some stains on it since as it was truly his favourite favourite Tshirt of all time, he has worn it for everything, including the day he applied wood stain to a set of jarrah chairs.  Woops!  And there were holes too.
Finding the perfect fabric for Craig’s Tshirt has become something of a quest over the past few months.  Seriously, I have searched and searched, and so has he.  In the meantime the old Tshirt got even more truly horrible….
When we were in Europe and visiting the occasional fabric store together, I set him the task of finding fabric for his shirt.  Have you ever asked a non-sewing person to choose a fabric for some garment?  It is at these times that one starts to realise that one has actually learnt some fundamentally important things after years of sewing after all… like that a knit is a knit and that a woven is not going to ever do the job of a knit, no matter how gorgeous it is.  He had a thing for the lovely pin-striped linens in Milan and kept choosing these as the fabric for his new Tshirt.  I explained the difference, and sent him back off to look for cotton jersey knits.  He would come back, triumphantly bearing another bolt of pin-striped linen.  Sigh.
I think we had both started to wonder if I would ever make the Tshirt, when I spotted it.  In Spotlight, of all places.  The perfect fabric.  Really nice quality cotton jersey, in a nice manly pinstripe, in nice manly shades of charcoal and black.  Sheer unadulterated perfection!  I couldn’t believe my luck and I reacted like a frog’s tongue to a passing fly…  pow! the fabric was snatched up and clutched in a death grip to my chest and I rushed straight over to the cutting counter (maniacal witch-cackle mentally sounding in my head)
I drafted a pattern by laying down the old Tshirt and drawing around it.
It does have a pretty cool hood actually… I was intrigued when I inspected it closely and pretty excited to see it drawn out flat.  The hoodie has three pieces; the conventional two “hoodie” pieces cut somewhat shallower than normal, and another self-faced front piece shaped like the letter “U”, that becomes a sort of casing/collar on the front.  I really like this feature, and will probably use it over again.  There are two little holes in it for the drawstring, and I finished the edges of each hole with miniature blanket stitches, having newly re-discovered my latent embroidery skills, hehe  🙂

The self fabric spaghetti drawstring is a long strip of fabric; I folded the two long sides in evenly as I was going along, guiding it through the machine on zig-zag stitch.  The fabric wanted to curl in on itself anyway.

There is a kangaroo pocket on the front, and a deep “Metalicus” band around the lower edge.  The sleeve hems are finished with my twin needle.  I stabilised the shoulder seams with strips of Seams Great (thank you velosewer!) and double stitched the neckline seam down to the back for stability and to lessen the chances of the back neckline stretching out.
Now the favourite old Tshirt looks tired and bagged-out and kinda disgusting compared to the svelte new one in nice new firm fabric!  

the clone and the clone-ee

He is very happy with the new shirt, therefore I am very happy too!

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The DNA Tower

Please allow me to introduce to you, the DNA Tower.  
Hehe, I am being sorta touristy on the blog lately! but not completely since obviously Perth has always been the backdrop to my life… 
The DNA Tower was built in the early 60’s, and I have lots of fond memories of my brothers and me having the time of our lives pelting up and down the tower as fast as we could, while Mum and Dad boringly sat with the picnic on the grass nearby.  And since we would come home so tired all we could do was to fall into bed early, then I’m sure the DNA tower was equally beloved by Mum and Dad as well…!
When my own children were little they loved running up and down the tower too, so each whole new generation repeats the same routine.
Nowadays, the tower is much beloved by fitness fanatics too.
So I am enjoying my me-made May photos at the mo’… employing a few Perth landmarks certainly makes the photo-taking, always the most challenging part of the, er, challenge for me, a heck of a lot more exciting and interesting.  And happily this is another spot that is basically on the way home from dropping my son Sam off at uni, which is part of my current daily routine.  He is learning to drive, and guess who gets to be the driving instructor?!

Picture taken around 11am;  Temperature at the time 19C.
Overnight low: 11C; Today’s high: 21C
Fine and sunny

Details:
Top; top “a” from the Japanese pattern book Unique Clothes Any Way You Like by Natsuno Hiraiwa, white cotton, details here
Jeans; Au Bonheur des Petites Mains PLH08002, strawberry pink non-stretch cotton denim, details and my review of this pattern here
Cardigan; knitted by me, the Fitted Cardigan 04, version 1 with the lace edging and three-quarter sleeves, in Jo Sharp Soho Summer DK Cotton; colour Calico (shade 216), details here
Thongs; KMart

In an almost complete hat-trick of me-made sightings in my household…
Last night Cassie wore a cocktail dress made by me, to a party 
Cassie’s dress; Vogue 1105, silk charmeuse

Today Craig again wore again the blue linen shirt I made for him, and Tim wore the shirt I made for him for Christmas
Craig’s shirt; Burda 7767 modified, blue linen, details here
Tim’s shirt; Burda 7767 modified, blue check crinkly stuff (a blinkin’ nightmare) details here

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