Tag Archives: Own Design

Cool neutrals

(Can I just start by saying that I looked back over a few of my old comments and people have written such kind and uplifting comments; thankyou all so much!  Especially about my daughter’s ballgown, yes I am so proud of her, and some of the beautiful things you had to say truly brought a bit of a tear to my eye!  It was very thoughtful, thankyou…)

Today dug out my favourite pale pink skirt for an airing.  I love this skirt.  Although pale pink isn’t strictly a neutral it seems to work as one with this skirt here.  When I conceived this skirt I had a kind of creative mental maelstrom going on where I worked feverishly on the design with no thought to passing time and it all came together perfectly and was exactly how I envisioned it.  The skirt has eight layers, four at front and four at back; the six under layers are attached to the lining separately, graduated and all slightly angled and offset to each other, it’s actually kind of clever and now I don’t quite know how I did it myself.  It all just seemed to happily brainstorm together and worked out just right. Very rewarding…
I’m wearing it today because it’s practically cold in Perth … 27C!  
Also I just felt like dressing elegant.  After a coupla days of casualness I just wanted to up the ante for a change and look like a lady.  So it was out with my beloved neutrals and hopefully channelling the sort of beige loveliness that calls to mind the careless cool of a previous era…..
Please note below the incredibly artistic reflective pool shot, in which one can contemplate with crystal like clarity the classy layered fashionableness of one’s ensemble… and be reminded that one should really skim the leaves off the pool before one’s photo shoot next time…

Details:
Skirt; own design based on Vogue 7303, from pale pink silky damask
Top; Tutte, from Mid 70’s, gift from my parents
Camisole; Country Road
Shoes; from an op shop
Nail varnish; Litl Boy Blue, Artmatix
Bag; Gucci

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Felted table runner

A few years ago my friend L, who’s enormously artistic and creative gathered a few like-minded souls about for a felting workshop.  We all met at D’s house, loaded with buckets, soap and bubble wrap and launched into an extremely fun morning making these scarves?/table runners?/ unspecified decorative thingys?  I think we intended them to be scarves, but mine ended up too wide and shrunk lengthwise too much.  I did wear it once as a sort of wrap around my hips over an all-black outfit and it looked kind of chic like that…  
However it’s full-time position is on the coffee table in my front room for visitors to admire (ha ha) as it goes perfectly with the decor; bit of luck there…  (the photo below is obv not in my front room, just to avoid a flurry of corrective commentation; the light was better outside…so!)
It’s made mostly of dyed unspun merino, but has a few swirls of various knitting wools and some beads embedded in there as well.  Over time some of these beads have worked their way out and been found lurking in corners and under sofas and I’ve reattached them with a few firm stitches.  Inevitable for something that has become the favourite sleeping place of a certain naughty puss-cat….

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Brown dress saved

OK.  I have to confess that I took this dress out of my reject pile yesterday with every intention of cutting it up for refashioning.  Firstly I put it on for the before photo.  I paused.  Looked at it again.  Thought it looked OK, actually.  Felt pretty damn comfy, too.  Also, in the searing heat of yesterday afternoon I felt cool; big plus!  So the dress was saved at the eleventh hour from a brutal slashing…
Previously I dubbed this dress as the Bouchee dress, (you know, Bouchee are those elephant shaped chocolates?…)  I think the last time I posted about it I was wearing a little cardi which possibly didn’t suit this style of silhouette… anyhoo, it’s back in my wardrobe for a while.  When my husband saw me in it this morning he said I looked nice in brown, and he liked this dress, what more encouragement do I need to keep wearing it?!
It’s based on McCalls 4454, a camisole pattern that I really like, which has just been elongated, some godets inserted into the skirt, a handkerchief hem created, and some huge decorative pockets added to cover up some discoloured patches (the fabric was originally discounted and in the remnant bin because of these faded patches)
So yesterday afternoon I hunted about and found a different garment to refashion for this week, I’ll post about it on Friday when I do my Wardrobe Refashion post…
Still haven’t quite finished my trench coat.  Have to locate a belt buckle today… and a zip for my refashion project…  I guess its off to Spotlight, sigh…

Details:
Dress; own design, based on McCalls 4454, brown embroidered cotton
Shoes; Micam by Joanne Mercer, Hobbs shoes
Necklace; gift from my friend K
Nail varnish; Litl Boy Blue, by Artmatix

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Happy New Year!

New Year’s Day is a time to reflect on your life over the past year and to dream up a few resolutions as to how to do it better next year…  Hmm, well apart from the usual suspects; get fit, keep in better contact with loved friends and family not in my immediate orbit, eat more healthily (not so much chocolate and more salad)… I’ve not got much to wish for, things are good and I feel very optimistic about the coming year.  
I suppose if I’m to hope for anything at all for 2010, it is for a calm, restful and peaceful year, and that is reflected in my dress today; calm, restful and peaceful colours, but with sparkly shoes for a tiny bit of pizazz…  I made my necklace during my beading fad a few years ago.  I’ve worn it only periodically as its kind of showy for my tastes… but I like how its mass of pearl beads are kind of like bubbles in a glass of champagne, sort of celebratory, which seems appropriate for New Year’s Day.
Today the boys of my family are going sailing together and I will walk on the beach, afterwards we are visiting friends for a BBQ.

Details:
Dress; Burda 8071, cream broderie anglaise cheesecloth
Petticoat; Metalicus
Cardi; coffee and white net, my own design
Shoes; Anna, from Marie Claire shoes
Necklace; my own design

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Heat Wave

It’s just about trying to stay cool today.  Really.  Hair in a messy bun and as light clothing as possible.
We saw Avatar with Sam Worthington in the lead role last night (cinema packed with people trying to get out of the heat).  Stupendous.  Wonderful to see a local boy up on the big screen looking good.
Off to the fabric store (20% off sale!) now to spend lots of money…

Details:
Dress, own design by me, adapted from McCalls 4453, red polyester chiffon (with sparkles!)
Thongs (flipflops); Mountain Designs

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Merry Christmas!

Merry Christmas to all!
Got up at the crack of dawn to pop a 6kg turkey in the oven, followed by prezzie exchange, off to the beach, then the family descended on us for lunch!  Phew!
Was given a new camera for Christmas, and I’ll be spending this evening studying the instruction manual… should be producing high quality photos pretty soon, haha…
For now, here are some of the images of my Christmas (please excuse funny unfocused photo of me at right.  Methinks the cameraman had had a few too many…)

Other details;
Dress; Simplicity 3745, white spotted cotton voile with lace trim
Sandals; Anna, bought at Marie Claire shoes
Nail polish; Santorini Sunset, Napoleon
Earrings; self-made

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Ball dress, my greatest pride!

My daughter’s school ball has been the biggest social event in her life so far, and I was thrilled and honoured that she wished for me to make her dress for her.  We had a wonderful time together; planning and shopping for fabric and generally bonding in a girly way.
She had a firm idea of what she wanted, making it much easier for me; the challenge in this process was for me to make the dress to fit her vision of how she wanted to look.  Fortunately she loved her dress!  She had seen a Gucci dress in my Vogue magazine that she wanted for her look, with the skirt to be fuller.  I studied the dress and eventually decided that the best way for this to work would be to make the bodice as a corset with a long waist tie/train to nip in the waist, and with a separate skirt.  This immediately caused a few hassles and she emphatically did not want a skirt and a top, but a dress!!!  I had to promise that it would look like a dress and no one would be able to tell it was a skirt and top.  I think I achieved this successfully.
The whole process was deeply satisfying to me, both as a seamstress and as a mother.
I used as a basic starting point Simplicity 9775, although this was drastically altered to fit my daughter’s shape and the complex style of outfit we had in mind.
I firstly drafted the skirt and overlay and a whole lot of geometric “petals” in paper and fitted and arranged them.  I then realised that the model wearing the dress in my Vogue magazine was probably over 6 ft tall, and the arrangement of petals on the original dress was not going to fit on my 5 ft 4 daughter at all!!  So I recut and rearranged until finally coming up with a dress and design that looked just right for my daughter’s frame and suited the fuller style skirt she wanted.  I also put a petal design on the train, as I wanted for it to flow and mingle in with the skirt overlay to become an artistic folding of layers to draw and please the eye.
The corset caused some angst (for me).  It was very important to me that the folds in the three joining pieces (the front and two backs) corresponded exactly to each other, as well as the folds conforming to her body shape to best effect.  So, wider folding over the bust and narrow folding at the waist and even narrower in the small of the back.  I folded and fitted and folded and fitted into the wee hours of several mornings, and then some.  This, along with the applique of the petals, took the longest time.  I probably spent a week on just getting the folds of this corset just right!
The dress is entirely of silk, fully lined (obviously!), and the corset is boned.  The corset closure is by hidden hooks and eyes.  I toyed with the idea of covered buttons and silk ribbon loops, but decided the folding of the bodice should close cleanly with nothing to interrupt the sculptural effect of the folding.
The green shot silk has an orange weft (warp?), so gleams with a bronzy-coppery glow under lights.  It looks gorgeous with my daughter’s strawberry blond hair.  And as we all know, the shades of ivory/cream/white are almost endless!  We both thought this particular shade suited her peaches and cream complexion very well.  The underside of the ties/train are black, like the appliqued “shadows” of the petals.  I think these splashes of black just set it all off and added a tiny touch of severity and sophistication to the gown.
I have since entrusted it to our local dry-cleaner, and she has worn this to another ball.
My finest achievement…
Photo below is from Gucci Spring/Summer 08, www.style.com, see here 

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Casual shopping chic

Blah blah; shopping and Christmas preparations on the agenda today.  Came home yesterday to piles of mail and a to-do list a mile long, plus a few parties on the horizons, it’s back to happy chaos in our house!
In the wardrobe department I am now planning for autumn; and I have a few sewing projects waiting in the wings and plenty of ideas about what to do next.  My mother brought along a fantastic DVD for us to watch while away; a Threads magazine production with great sewing tips by Louise Cutting, a lady who is a full bottle on all things sewing.  She had a great new way of sewing collars that eliminates the front seam altogether that I plan to try, I’ll give details when I try it out…
Anyhoo, today being a day of errands and chores I’m just dressed for shopping and looking smart but functional.  I’m wearing my linen pants, drafted by me from my favourite jeans, and my light summer cardi made out of a double layer of net sewn together at the shoulder, side and armhole seams.  I’ve included a close-up of the front area to show how the front edges were finished with grosgrain ribbon simply zigzag stitched in one seam.  This is a wonderful little top for very hot days as it looks quite chic and funky and covers your shoulders while still being very light.

Other details:
Pants; white linen, self-drafted
Camisole; Country Road
Cardigan; coffee and white net; self-drafted
Necklace; souvenir from Murano, Venice
Sandals; Vicenza, from Soletta shoes
Sunnies; RayBans

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