Tag Archives: Daily Outfit

a purple mini and a striped tee

in the Nagano region

Hello!  We recently spent nearly a month overseas in east Asia, specifically South Korea and Japan.  I’ll write a bit more about our trip in a future travel wardrobe post, but for now I’ll just be focusing on the two new things I made to wear for our holiday…

First up! a new mini skirt.  I find a little stretchy fabric mini skirt to be an extremely comfortable and practical garment for hiking in a winter environment… which is why I make a new one practically every year, ahem.  I’ve actually promised to myself to branch out into different patterns this year but that promise was made after I’d made this, honestly.  Because yes, it’s yet another old favourite that pops up here with mind-numbing regularity, the Paprika patterns Jade mini skirt pattern.

I used a bright pink jersey that had been given to me by my friend N when she cleaned out her own stash.  I actually already have a pink mini skirt from last year that’s still in very good condition, so I made this new one with a view to dyeing it immediately afterwards.  I’d decided upon purple, thus the decision to use a purple zip which I happened to have in my stash too.   I’m pretty happy with the very good colour match after the dye-job!

btw, I don’t always put a zip in the Jade but it’s usually a good idea.  Also, I always have to substantially change the shape in the fitting stage, bringing in the waist by a good 15cm or so, which necessitated a redrafting of the waistband.  Over numerous iterations of this skirt, I have found it a good idea to line/interface the waistband with a non-stretch material for longevity, since otherwise it will eventually stretch out.

looks lumpy here but that’s because of the shaped waistband, which won’t sit flat nicely

I added a cotton pocket inside the skirt, this cut from an old worn out shirt of Sam’s.  I’ve found some sort of pocket a useful addition to the skirt pattern previously although I haven’t used this one yet, in spite of wearing the skirt quite a lot already.  As it turns out I always wore it with other garments with it that had more convenient pockets so didn’t need it.  The Jade pattern is not ideal for pocket addition at all, but I’ve still tried to force one upon it a few times now.  I’m confident that it will prove useful in future wears, though.

The other new garment is a T-shirt, made from a blue and white striped jersey also from N.  You may recognise it from G’s T-shirt in my previous post.  For mine, I used our own Carolyn & Cassie Pinjarra pattern, sizing up because the fabric doesn’t have much stretch.  I actually didn’t have much opportunity to take a photo of the T-shirt on our trip because it was rarely warm enough to wear it by itself!  plus for some reason taking pictures of my outfits didn’t take a lot of priority in my mind.  Is this a good sign?  Am I maybe getting more mature?!  All pictures featuring the Tshirt are pretty ordinary quality, haha…

 

Anyway, both these pieces are obviously comfortable and nice to wear, and feel like really good new basics for my wardrobe.

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a checquered tale of a checkered dress

I’ve made a simple little dress…  Now I have to admit that such apparent simplicity is actually the anticlimactic outcome of a long, convoluted sewing-and-unpicking, journey which I’m a little embarrassed to relate.  This is one of the failed projects from 2024 which I mentioned in my roundup, and just recently got around to fixing up.

I’d bought this quite nice, slightly spongy, heavily textured cotton check a long time ago now,  almost certainly from a Melbourne trip.  I’m pretty sure it was Tessuti and further have a feeling it was reasonably expensive thus why I really wanted to make something worthwhile from it.

Iteration Number One:

I started out making the Original Digby Cleo dress.  This is a lovely and feminine design, which involved stitching a LOT of self-made, bias-cut channelling for lengths of elastic, to mimic the look of a shirred bodice.  I had high hopes and the result was very pretty, but sadly in the end it was just too young-looking to suit me.  Cassie modelled it for me for these pictures here, but didn’t really want it either, and I wanted to make the fabric into something I could wear.  Out with the unpicker!

Taking off all those long (long) lengths of bias cut channelling took quite a long time, made even more painful with the memory of how carefully I had stitched them on in the first place to perfectly line up the channels with the lines of checks, as well as switching up threads depending on whether I was stitching on a black row or a cream row, this additionally making it more difficult to see the stitches I was unpicking.   I know, I wonder about my own sanity too, sometimes…

Anyway.  Iteration Number Two was essentially the same dress sans the elasticated channels.  I reused the same shoulder straps to be a halter neckline and allowed the otherwise unaltered dress to hang like so.  I actually quite liked it like this and wore it with a little T-shirt underneath a few times.

However, after about six months of this I finally realised what the fabric really wanted to be. I believe fabrics do tell you what they want to be, even if it takes a little time.  Some are shy and take years to let you know, but you just need to trust in the fabric, let it sit there quietly, and it will eventually let you know what its final form should be.  Out with the unpicker once again!

In the end, Iteration Number Three, the final iteration, was very straightforward to achieve.  I settled upon a modified version of a dress from the Japanese pattern book Stylish Dress Book by Yoshiko Tsukiori, specifically dress R.  My final version is more narrowed at the top end, and with the yoke also narrowed in width and the neckline substantially more “filled in”.  I also left off the sleeves through having absolutely no more of the check fabric anyway, and finished the armscyes with self-made black bias binding.  I removed the original inseam pockets – and a big thank you to past me for overlocking all the raw edges separately from each other! – and repositioned them appropriately for the dress’s slightly new form.  The yoke is black cotton denim, cut from the leftovers from my wide-leg jeans from last year, and lined with plain black poplin.  I did decorative white topstitching just for fun, and added a completely frivolous and not-useful-at-all coin pocket to the front yoke, also for fun.  I also reused the “made in 2024” tag that it had from its inception.

Small anecdote; I’d ordered new “made in 2025” labels from the same place Intensely Distracted, back in December.  They were taking a long time to arrive, and I was just starting to wonder what on earth had happened to them when they finally showed up 2 days ago.  Attached to the envelope was a big green “Opened for inspection by ABF” sticker, also inside was a little note explaining that my goods were opened and inspected by Australian Border Force and found to contain no problematic components so were being forwarded to me in full.  Amazing that this very innocuous packet of sew in labels was suspicious enough to get yoinked out for a personal inspection…

Anyway, the dress!  I’m so happy with its final iteration.  I feel like such a bold check is most perfectly suited to a very simplified style like this, much more age appropriate, not too fussy and a lot more me.  And it feels so lovely and light to wear.  I absolutely love it!  I first wore it just the other day, when I took my oldest grandson Arthur shopping for his 5th birthday present.  I know, 5 already!  I can hardly believe it.  We had such a lovely morning shopping together, just the two of us, choosing something he liked.  It was so funny because he liked literally everything! and it was actually quite difficult to narrow it down to just two things.  Then after we got home we spent a bit of time playing with his new toys and it was such a nice time.  I love being a Granny!

 please excuse the totally gratuitous Clara pic…

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pool

how beautiful is this fabric?!  My daughter Cassie designed this very pretty, inviting and perfectly summery scene and of course her proud mother had to buy some.  The name of the print is “public pool”, available in her Spoonflower shop here, and the fabric is a very nice lightweight cotton drill.  I’d bought it several years ago, before my self-imposed fabric-buying ban … I have bought a few pieces of fabric from Spoonflower over the years and love using their fabrics; it’s a little expensive but the quality is really good, and I really love it!  I still have a few more of those pieces hanging around in my stash. #embarrassing

I finally decided on a little skirt and naturally chose our own Meelup pattern, my current favourite.  I apologise for being repetitive, but I just find it very easy to make, super comfortable to wear, and I love the pockets so much.  This is one of the four unblogged projects from last year that I mentioned, actually from about April or May or somewhere about there… but I didn’t get around to wearing it straightaway because winter was almost upon us, let alone blogging it, then decided to leave it until summer.  But then I sorta lost track of blogging for a little while in there.  Anyway, here it is.

I lined it with a pale green polyacetate lining fabric, a long term stash resident.  Rather than photos, I actually made little making-of video, for fun, and Cassie made the last frames with our pattern cover cleverly transitioning in like that.  I like making videos but it does take up a lot more time obviously. I really admire people who can make them so effortlessly and would really like to be better at it.  If I can l’ll try to improve myself in this area.  I hope you enjoy it!

             https://youtube.com/shorts/URnHXyaBYpM           

Deets; I’m wearing it above with one of my Booragoon tops, and clogs I made myself using a kit from Leather Needle Thread

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pink gingham

hello! I’m pleased that I made productive use of the Christmas break and managed to make a new thing…

I used the very last of my “made in 2024” tags in the little breast pocket.  Honestly, the dress was actually cut out in and partially made in 2024.  So, 2024 or 2025?  It’s kind of a “saddle” project really, spreading itself from last year to this one.  I think I can use the tag with a clear conscience. 🙂

I used our own Carolyn & Cassie Pattern Co. Yallingup dress pattern, which I love wearing during summer. It’s the perfect breezy casual beach dress, imho.  I used a rather intense hot pink gingham-printed Japanese cotton, bought using a Fabulous Fabrics birthday voucher from my friends.  Also, please excuse me while I go and correct my recent retrospective post, I forgot that this fabric was also purchased new last year, whoops!  At least all my purchased fabrics got used in the year they were bought.

I laid the dress pieces on the cross, and the front overlay on the bias, and used some of the leftover bits to cut extensions to the front overlay so the ties are a bit longer, about 10cm or so.  I really like them this longer length.

As per our pattern, I flat felled the side seams, which I always think looks really nice.  You can see here that I used red thread to sew the dress up; this is because it was in my stash already and I didn’t want to buy new thread.  I thought this would be fine, and it is really.  I hand-stitched the hem.

A casual passerby would never see any of the bias binding finishes on the inside of the dress, but these give me a lot of joy too.  I bias-bound the pocket edges, and the back neckline and armhole edges are bound according to the pattern.  Gingham makes the prettiest bias binding! Because of this I actually cut up the entirety of the leftovers and made it into bias binding that I can use on a future project, so please look out for that!

It was hideously windy on the beach this morning which makes the above pictures a realistic portrayal of my day, however it does make everything look a little wild.  Thus, a still picture where the dress is not being blasted to bits.  Honestly, the things I do…

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Maldives; a travel wardrobe

hello!  So as hinted in my new bathers post just recently, we have been on an absolutely gorgeous holiday to the Maldives… this is our third visit, each time as well as this time staying on Velassaru.  I know, I know, there are lots of other islands in the Maldives and maybe we should be more adventurous but we just love this charming little place; as well, our theory is that if it’s not broken then there’s no need to fix it!  As usual, I’m compiling a little summary of my travel wardrobe…

Time away: 7-8 days

Where to: Velassaru, the Maldives

Season; mid to late October, the tail end of the rainy season

Expected activities: not very much at all! lots of swimming, lazing around and reading

Colour scheme; white, blue and pink … really just the prettiest and lightest summery colours in my wardrobe

What I packed;

from left to right, top to bottom, everything is linked directly to its own “making” post…

denim skirt, raspberry cardigan, white top, floral dress, pink dress, beach coverup

large polka dot dress, small polka dot dress, navy/white dress (not yet blogged, and wow, I cannot believe I forgot to blog this dress!), blue floral dress, orange polka dot bathers

light blue shirt, yellow shorts

blue bag, pink thongs, white sandshoes, 2x white sockettes, white hat, raspberry crocheted hat

not shown, nightie and a selection of underwear, my toiletries bag

My daily outfits;

Thoughts;

After two of basically the same holiday then you’d think I’d have got it right by now!  I took a different light summer dress for each day, and this is a good strategy for a very warm, beach holiday like this one.  I absolutely love all of these dresses and so I felt happy and fresh and comfortable in all of them.   I also learnt my lesson from last time and took a pair of light sandshoes for our daily (gentle) exercise routine, for which I also wore the day 1 (pic 2) dress because it was already a bit sweaty by then.  I don’t have a dedicated “exercise outfit” but sometimes I wonder if I should make one… ?

For the flights I went for comfort and warmth, but not too much warmth.  The plane is always cold, but then you’re dying from the heat immediately as you alight in Male, so one’s outfit choice must always comprise some compromise!  I did opt to wear my new shirt over my plane outfit coming home, just for that little bit of extra warmth.

For most of each day I was just in my bathers(pic 5) and beach coverup for swimming and sitting by our private pool and the ocean outside our own cabin each day… I don’t really wear my bathers out and about on the island like a lot of people do, because I’m shy that way.  I know it seems counterintuitive since here I am posting my bathers on the internet like this! but well, I hope you know what I mean.   And then I would wear actual clothes for the times we were amongst other people, like our breakfast session in the island cafe and then from 5pm onwards, which was the time we wandered over the beach bar for our happy hour drink.   I became particularly fond of a mocktail called “pink sand” which was a divine mixture of pineapple juice, crushed mango, pink passionfruit juice and pulp, strawberry juice and coconut water. Mmmm!

what did I see other people wearing;  a new category!  speaking for myself I absolutely LOVE checking out other peoples’ outfits so I know I’m interested!  First of all, observed nationalities during our week were; Russians, South Americans (sorry, cannot be more specific since I sadly cannot tell the difference between Spanish and Portuguese, but did see one Argentinian football t-shirt in there), Swiss Germans, South Koreans, Italians and Chinese.  We were the only Australians.

I’ve noticed men generally wear the same global mens’ uniform of shirt/T-shirt and longish shorts combo, no matter what the nationality.  If a couple has booked themselves in for a “beach shoot” then he will invariably wear a white linen shirt and white trousers.

Women, however, are a completely different kettle of fish and fashion-wise the sky is the limit … for the aforementioned “beach shoot” the woman will almost always be in something almost like a ballgown.  In case you’re interested; no, Craig and I did not do a beach shoot!

For everyday beach and poolside wear, women will be in anything from lace and jewelled caftans, floorsweeping  maxi dresses and palazzo pants, giant sunhats and giant sunglasses, chiffon, silk, lace etc… to more ordinary, what I would call “normal” summer wear like shorts and blouses, or pretty light dresses, and all the way through to near nudity!  I’m not judging at all btw!  I love that everyone can just do their own thing.  I also noticed some women who had a different bikini with a different matching beach coverup for every day.  I personally don’t think I could do that, it seems kind of extravagant? even though I myself normally swim every day I still have just one pair of bathers.  Though honestly, is having a different dress for every day really any different?!  I don’t know… food for thought.  A debatable concept!

Trending note: lace coverups and neon, solid-colour bathers seem to be quite popular.

Anyway.  I shall now sign off by boring you with some of my favourite Velassaru views…

coming back from dinner our little cabin always looked so cosy and welcoming… and can I just point out the tiny fairy lights embedded in the bottom of the pool?  So cute and pretty!

breakfast time views…

could never tire of this view from our cabin …we spent our days meandering between the pool and the ocean and the deckchairs and then all over again…

nom nom…

this unsuspecting heron probably plays a starring role in about a million holiday photos… #naturalborninstamodel

definitively NOT a ballgown. #kindaboringeh

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Innes nice?

… so I made another thing recently… well two actually, but only one really, in the end.  The first was Not Good…

Hello Innes dress, and welcome to my wardrobe… a pattern by Homer & Howells.

That was 2020 me blogging, now handing over to 2024 me, today… I’m shocked, really, that I have so far failed to blog about this dress, that I made about four years ago now… why did blogging slip my mind? I have no idea. Anyway here it is, finally.  I decided to take it away with me on our recent beach holiday away and of course it was divine to wear over there…  The only fault that I think I am going to rectify straight away is that it doesn’t have pockets.  Which is silly since its roominess could so easily accomodate some.

I really love the subtle sweetheart neckline , and of course the chic length.  I didn’t have enough of the white so added a panel of other fabric to the bottom, to get the proscribed length.  Fabrics are a white cotton/linen mix, and a remnant of navy blue, slightly metallic stuff, both fabrics are I think originally from Fabulous Fabrics.  I’m pretty sure Mum gave me the blue fabric.

Below is the first, tester version of the dress that I made… I used a sorta nasty pink and purple satin that was also inherited from Mum.  I think she also inherited it from someone else at some point and never used it for obvious reasons.  I used it to test the pattern and wore this version as a nightdress for a season.

I just want to say here, how much do I miss that white wall space in our old house?!  SO MUCH!

… and here is my better version again, out in the wilds (haha) of the Maldives!  worn with my raspberry crocheted hat.  I actually crocheted that very hat during our previous holiday to the Maldives!

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lux trousers and some more random cushions

hello! I’ve made some more things lately…

Firstly, some new trousers.  I used a new pattern, the Fibremood Lux trousers.  Lately I’m more interested in trousers/jeans etc with a flat front and no pleats… and so the pattern piqued my interest immediately.  I also liked the sleek, menswear vibe that the top part gave, even if the patch pockets at the back and the flared legs didn’t quite fit that vibe.  Easily sorted!

I cut mine with straighter legs… partly to fit the pattern better on my fabric too! and decided to put single welt pockets on the back in place of the big patch pockets.  There are nice slanted front hip pockets as well, and I cut mine a good inch bigger all the way around, to better accomodate my own big flippers…

There’s not really much more to say about the pattern, it’s a kinda basic pattern really; classic and a bit plain but we all need patterns like this in our lives too, hmmm?  The belt loops at the centre are stitched in an “M” arrangement, a subtle detail that is different enough to draw the eye without being too much.

my cute little photobomber!

The fabric is a deep chocolate; cottony-sort of stuff; I’ve had it in my stash for so long I cannot even remember how or where I got it from, let alone the content of it.  It has a very crisp “snappy” hand to it and literally crackles while you walk.  It does crush a little, but irons beautifully, and putting in those welt pockets was a dream!  It is just slightly water resistant, and dries very quickly, so I think it might be a technical fabric of some kind.  Meaning I can wear them hiking if need be …  and that need will probably come up next year, at least once!

worn here with my Fibremood Georgie top and above with my yellow clogs, made using a kit from Leather Needle Thread.  Yes, a 100% memade outfit!

I also have my knitting project for the month to show… I made a couple more cushions.  I know, sorta boring? and a bit crazy too, if that makes sense.  But since I’m using otherwise discarded materials and spending nothing, making stuff like this makes me feel virtuous and thrifty and therefore very happy, so it’s all a good thing!  I needed a smaller project this month after a couple of months of knitting full jumpers/cardigans.  I’m hoping to go back a more substantial project for next month!

Both the bobbly yarns were given to me by my daughter-in-law Lainey, and the yellow yarn was leftover from some socks that I knitted a few years ago.  I also made cushion inserts to fit, using yellow satin and toy filling from my stash.  I remember buying the satin years ago as a lining for a coat, and ended up using a different fabric.  The yellow cushion inserts look really nice in my opinion, since you can see through the bobbly knit; and white would have looked too stark.

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new/old denim skirt

hello!  I’ve made a new skirt, using all bits and pieces from old denim jeans .. or should that then be an old skirt?  Hmmm.. a debatable concept!

I like using old textiles to make something different, however it must be said that old fabric often does look old, and not necessarily in a good way.  In this case, the denim is actually very well-worn and I may or may not subject it to a brief navy blue dye bath, just to maybe jzoojz (spelling?) it up a bit? as yet, undecided…

I used our own Carolyn & Cassie Meelup skirt pattern, and I think this could be one of the first ones I’ve made for myself without a lining?  well, it is just a denim skirt!  The skirt is partially cut from a pair of Tim’s old jeans shorts, and a bit extra from some other, previously cutup, old jeans.

The pocket linings are a lovely cotton lawn, leftover from this old favourite dress…  I picked off the old pockets from the shorts and added them to the back of the skirt, and another one to the right front.  I also made a large, slanted edge patch pocket for the left front, and this one has a totally superfluous coin pocket on it too… superfluous in that I put one in the right hip pocket too.  This brings the number of pockets to a grand total of eight!  Hurrah for pockets!

The hem of the skirt is the original hem of the jeans shorts, and I unpicked a little to sew the side seams, before resewing the original hem in place.  The original topstitching on the jeans shorts was a mixture of navy blue and a kind of dull, mustard-y orange, but all my new topstitching is quite a brighter orange.

The buttons were harvested from off an old cushion here.  The buttons for this skirt don’t matter at all actually since they’re not seen on the outside at all.  Just one more of the things I love about our pattern!

It’s a bit daggy, let’s be real, but I guess I’m an 80’s girl at heart really so daggy is set in stone into my DNA.  I’ll happily wear it as a knockabout skirt on the weekend and when I just feel like slouching around.  It’s fun, very comfy, and I often kinda like that scruffy vibe anyway, hehe.

wearing it here with a Booragoon top and a hand knit cardigan

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