Tag Archives: Curtains

little black dress

I’m so behind on blogging! so this is part one in what I hope is a serious attempt to catch up… so I made this little black dress a little while ago… it’s light and floaty and breezy so really it’s a summer dress.  And I’m wearing it here on basically the coldest day of the year… ha!  But I do like it styled like this for winter! so I guess… good?

The fabric: which I appreciate you can’t see at all in any of my pictures, because of its matte-ness and it’s blackness, sorry! anyway; it is a lightweight crisp fabric that has a very slightly bumpy, seersucker-y quality to it… I’m not sure if it’s silk or cotton or linen but I’ve a feeling it is a combination of two of those components.  I bought it in Fabulous Fabrics quite a long time ago for another project, that I’ve completely forgotten what it was so I decided the fabric was fair game, eventually!  I’m seriously trying to use up my stash this year… yes I’ve probably said that million times before but I’m really serious this time.  I think I’m doing quite well! because I’ve bought just one piece of new fabric all year.  I really want to buy some more lovely fabric that I am really really keen on… but am trying so hard to be good about this!

Anyway, the lightness and crispness of this black fabric was perfect for this design, so I’m very happy I had it and it was pretty much the perfect size piece too… so it worked out really well.  Oh, the design!  Well, it’s the Fibremood Dolly pattern, which is big and floaty and has huge, gathered sleeves, so it’s very trendy, I think.  I do like it though!  I really like the neckline with a little tie to pull in a gathered V neck.  It was so cold on this day I actually wore it for real with my mustard cowl, and also my shearling coat as well as the usual underpinnings pictured, brrr.  I’m excited for when I can wear it all summer long!

Oh ok, so I’m just going to slip another extra thing in here…. did I mention our wonderful youngest son Sam has become engaged to his beautiful lady, Lainey?  We’re so happy and excited to welcome this lovely lady into our lives, she’s the most gorgeous girl and has willingly and happily acted as a model for our little pattern company a few times, so her face has definitely been seen around here before!  Anyway, they recently moved into their own house and asked if I would mind hemming their lounge room curtains.   Of course I hate hemming curtains, but it was absolutely lovely to go and hang out with them while I did it.  It took an entire morning basically and we chatted away and it was a really nice morning in the end.  So I didn’t hate it at all in the end.

pinterestmail

Big baggy pockets…

… with bonus skirt.
It is an unusual skirt, admittedly.  That’s OK.  One description could focus on the fact that it is softly creamy in shade, ever-so-slightly crinkly in texture, interestingly layered in construction, and easily breezily comfortably summery as a whole.  Another could point out that it is made of flippin’ curtaining off-cuts for crying out loud, and features ginormous flappy saddlebag things.  Well let’s not over-romanticise, hmmm?  But I like it, nonetheless.  And I don’t mind curtaining fabric; in fact, one of my most useful and reliable favourites is another curtaining skirt..
I started out with Vogue 8363, a plain, waist-banded pencil skirt with simple variations; and altered it to make it a bit more A-line, cutting the side edges like so; both front and back.  And then added my little added designer-y flight of fancy in the form of those big wrap-around bags.

They are basically sacks; like envelopes or pillowslips, that are sewn within long long extensions of the narrow waistband.  These cross over at the centre back, wrap around my hips and tie loosely at the front.  The skirt closure is the regular kind, by invisible zip in the centre back seam.  
I was inspired by this skirt.  Does anyone else have a go at actually doing something with their pins?  I have pinned LOTS of things, but have only followed through on nutting out making a few.  I have big BIG plans for making tonnes of things from my random unbridled pinnings; but the same ol’ story; so much inspiration, so little time.  And there’s only so many clothes that one can in all good conscience add to one’s wardrobe.  Striking a balance is key, my friends, striking a balance.  However I do feel pretty good about this particular skirt since it’s pretty much a freebie; made from the off-cuts of Cassie’s curtains.  I’d found the absolutely perfect thick calico curtains on super special in Spotlight.  Correction; the fabric was perfect but the top had been made as pencil pleat curtains, which I loathe and detest with a fiery passion.  So I bought them too long and cut off the tops, keeping the hemline intact, and re-sewed the top edge with my preferred triple pleat curtain tape, so they match nearly all the other curtains I’ve made for our house.  And was rewarded with a few pieces of leftover fabric… which I have now put to good use  😉  Double, no… triple win!

Details:
Skirt; a modification of Vogue 8363, thick calico curtaining fabric, my review of this pattern here
Top; the loose drape top slightly modified, from drape drape by Hisako Sato, white crinkly cotton jersey, all details here
Sandals; Franco Burrone, from Marie Claire boutique

pinterestmail

Curtains…

I have been sewing curtains!
This is our central hallway, an area that has been curtain-less since… well, since ever.  It has a very big and long window, which is fabulous for getting plenty of natural light inside.  But it did need something insulative for these really hot hot days of summer.  And we have no carpets in the house, which is perfect for keeping the place cool, but also means that soft furnishings are even more essential to soak up noise and add softness visually to the architecture.
Luckily our taste in home furnishings runs to very unfussy, plain and minimalist.  Even so, I have been steadily and craftily procrastinating for yonks, devising lame reasons as to why I could not get on with it.  High up on my list of excuses was the lack of a curtain rail.  Then about a year ago, my husband put up a curtain rail.  A quietly guilty period followed.  Occasional pleas for curtains were deftly fended off.  I had to be imaginative in this respect, you understand; had to think on my feet.  A lack of fabric was not the problem, since in a whimsically optimistic moment during a Spotlight sale ages ago I had actually purchased enough curtaining fabric for the entire house.  It has been sitting in a big roll underneath the stairs, taunting and mocking me with its whole still-unmade-into-curtains state.
Sewing home wares is not a joy to me, and particularly curtains.  Mostly because they are unwieldy and I have to commandeer the dining room, kick everybody else off and out and carry my machines over and set up on the dining room table since my little bench in the laundry where I usually sew could not possibly cope with the massive swathes of fabric.  Also, curtains are boring.  But while sewing together massively big rectangles in straight seams might seem easy and without any challenges doesn’t mean one should get blase about it… I had a wake-up call when I was distractedly overlocking the fluffy selvedge edge off a vertical joining seam, not paying enough attention, and on checking it later noticed to my horror that, underneath, I had overlocked a massive tuck of curtain into the seam…..  noooo!  But I was incredibly lucky…  The tuck was a narrow one and the fabric in it had avoided being sliced by the overlocker’s knife by a scant millimetre…. seriously!!  I unpicked the tuck and all was well….. phew!  That was a warning… and I sat up and took much better care from then on….!
The curtains are not super fabulous.  They are OK.  I think you can tell by looking at them they were not made with much love…  The best thing about them??? they are finished.

Oh, technical details; each side has two and a half drops of fabric, hems are 10cm and the top is triple pleated…. and no, I did not pose the pussycat.  She happened come over at the right time and I took advantage of the fact that she matched the decor….
pinterestmail

Lounge room curtains, 2

This is the second set of curtains in our lounge room, opposite the other pair here.  As this window faces the street I made these curtains first, the other set was made a little further down the track, er OK a lot further, maybe a year?!  I know, how lazy am I…!
So, observant readers will notice straight away; this set is of chocolate brown chenille, as opposed to the the other curtains which are crimson.  This is partly because I don’t like my rooms to be too matchy matchy; I’m partial to a mishmash of household items each with their own inherent story and beauty that doesn’t necessarily relate to the item alongside it, all in one room.  Our family has collected furniture and decorations over years, as sentiments, funds, whimsy and holiday souvenirs have dictated, so my decorating style reflects this; there is no perfectly co-ordinated “House & Garden” perfection around here.  But that’s how I like it.

pinterestmail

Lounge room curtains, 1

One set of my lounge room curtains!  There is another set, which I will post pictures of next week.  I do try to limit my blogging in some ways, as in, yes, I do post every day which may be excessive but there may come a time when my enthusiasm wanes and you will be left in relative peace from my random sewing onslaughts…  For now I’m steadily working through all the stuff I’ve made, both past and present and with a smattering of my fashion ideas as they occur to me…  I hope this is not too boring.
This is the window facing onto our courtyard and all the flowering plants in it are red, raspberry or pink in colour, so I went with this cheerful and cosy crimson chenille fabric for the curtains to complement the outlook.  Just a simple (huge!) rectangle of fabric two and a half times the width of the window, with curtain tape sewn to the top and triple pleat hooks inserted in the appropriate places… nothing fancy, but simple curtains are my preference.  These have been up for about four years now.  I love the subdued gloss of the polished steel curtain rods at the top and like to see them exposed.  Thus no pelmets.

Unfortunately, being winter there are not many flowers here on my flowering plants, but in spring and summer it is a lovely rosy red view from here!  I didn’t time this post very well with the seasons, did I…?

pinterestmail

Family room curtains

Boring curtain alert: As previously warned I do have a preference for the simple and uncluttered look in my house, so my curtains are not going to win any awards for innovation here… that being said I feel these curtains are perfect for our family room.  It’s not so much the curtains themselves that are interesting (they are not) but the ability they have through their translucency to transform the feel of the room and provide another ever-changing moody ambience to the room; if I could work out how to put a gif on this blog then I would, because this static first picture cannot adequately convey the shifting shadow play of leaves that is cast into the room, nor the liquid rippling of the pool reflected onto the curtains like a colourless abstract moving work of art; its a spectacle that I can never tire of.

When we wish to have sunlight in the room we can open the curtains to look out on our pool and on the backyard trees with the never-ending avian aerial display that exists therein…

pinterestmail

Bedroom curtains

Here are the curtains I made for our master bedroom.  Oh, I did warn you that most of my curtains were simply boring rectangles… so I hope expectations haven’t been raised too high… I expect my curtains to be simple and functional and easy to make.  Tick, tick and tick; these curtains fitted this criteria perfectly.
The one slightly ornamental detail on these curtains is that they have been cut about 1.5m too long, so they spill out on the floor in a kind of drapey pile of fabric, which I like the look of; suggests opulence and plenty in the manner of Marie Antoinette, no?  Well, I like it anyway…  If there is one room in the house where decadence and opulence and self-indulgence can run riot then the master bedroom can expect to be first in line.
Our bedroom faces the front yard and the street, so privacy is an essential, at the same time I simply must be able to have daylight in any room I’m in; this lace back-curtain does the trick beautifully.  When we first hung it up we spent a few minutes racing inside and out reassuring ourselves how invisible (or not) we are on the inside from the street, and I’m happy to report complete daytime screening is provided by these lace backdrops, as long as at night-time you don’t turn the light on and have the green chenille curtains open.  In that case you may as well be on-stage in a theatre…
The curtains are simply moss green chenille rectangles, width two and a half times the width of the curtain rod, with curtaining tape sewn to the top, then triple pleat hooks inserted in the appropriate casings on the tape.  The lace backdrop is simply threaded onto a white pole through a top casing; and the pole perched on top of the curtain brackets.  Easy peasy.
(OK, I did have to pull the bed out quite a way to get this full length picture of the curtains…! usually the bed obscures half of this view)
Today’s random picture below: seen on my walk this morning

pinterestmail

Dining room curtains

Sewing curtains is a real drag.  No seamstress will say otherwise.  Boring, all straight seams, no challenge in it.  And mundane.
Most of the curtains I’ve made have been plain rectangles with curtaining tape sewn on at the top, which then just hangs there in an unobtrusive way.  I like plain curtains.
But for these dining room curtains I did something a little more interesting; I picked up the two bottom corners and the centre of the bottom together, inserted a big safety pin through all these layers, and pinned the whole lot to the central curtain ring.  That’s on each curtain, btw…  Just for something a bit different.  Oh, also, there is no curtaining tape sewn to the top of the curtains, but the hooks are sewn directly onto the top hem of the curtains.  Again for something a bit different.
The little pussycat figurine standing on the window sill was hand-carved by my grandfather.  Often there is a real pussycat there too.

pinterestmail
Switch to mobile version
↓