Tag Archives: Random Life Stuff

ootd blog

It might be a good time to introduce a new thing I’ve been doing lately… well, a new blog actually!  It’s a daily outfit blog, with basically a no-frills photo of the ootd *, and when applicable, the ootn *, with a very brief summary of the day’s weather for an indication of how weather appropriately I am dressing.   I created it at the beginning of the year and have been updating it daily, and had considered keeping it private; but then I just thought, oh, what the hey.  I actually like looking at daily outfit blogs myself but then I am a bit of a nosey parker about other ladies’ outfit choices  πŸ˜‰
Last year I drew all my daily outfits in my Fashionary, which was both fun to do and also I think turned out to be quite helpful for the end-of-year analysis of my style preferences and how well my sewing is serving that, and as well I just really enjoy looking back through my little book at the year of outfits.  I was inspired by The Makeshift Project, and actually I still enjoy going back and looking through Natalie’s blog every now and again.
My new blog won’t be like a real fashionista’s personal style blog since almost everything I have is home-made and my style is quite, um, maybe unaccessorised? would be a good way to describe it?  I’m going to continue to wear as much  of my own handmade clothing as I can, although there might be some specific situations this year in which I am unable to be completely strict about that rule.  Like right now for example!!   
I will use it for analysing my style and wearing habits again.
It’s currently called Handmade by Carolyn too, since, well I dunno, I guess I’m a creature of habit and pretty unimaginative, but maybe I’ll change that if something more interesting occurs to me  πŸ™‚

*  #ootd; outfit of the day: #ootn; outfit of the night

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2013, a retrospective

Separate from my rather nerdy previous post, on the last day of the year I like to reflect on my favourite posts, one from each month…
January

February

March

April

May

June

July

August

September

October

November

December

A sewing summary…
Number of garments made, counting each set of 1 bra+ 2 undies as one garment: 64, including 9 items for family
Knitted garments: 4 hmmm, it’s been a slow year for knitting (blush) However, it was nearly all from stash; the only new yarn I bought was for my Hunter Miette and I think I redeemed myself by knitting it up straight away
re the Stashbusting:
Garments sewn from new fabric: 20
Knitting from stash: 3! out of the 4 things made πŸ™‚
Garments made from stash fabric: 31
Not exactly drastic reductions in the stash, but it gets me an A+ in my stash-busting pledge πŸ˜‰
Refashioned garments: 9 Another 3 were rejuvenated with dye


Favourite garments: Faux leather jacket I might not have worn it a tonne yet but I really LOVE it and am rather proud of it πŸ™‚ I also really adore my Panellist dress.
Any fails?: I just haven’t worn my bright roses top at all. There’s nothing wrong with it and I don’t hate it or anything. I just don’t reach for it *shrug*
The biggest thing for me this year was doing a screen-printing course; I LOVED it, and have printed eight pieces of fabric; seven of which have been sewn into garments already. My favourite self-printed project is a toss-up between my poppies lingerie set and the beach-y polka dot dress.
So that’s it for another year! Thank you so much to everyone who reads my blog and takes the time to comment, I am so very grateful and appreciative of all you gorgeous sewing- and fashion-loving peeps. We who sew tend to do so on our own, so the big ol’ fantabulous internets has been pretty good for our socialising, yes? πŸ˜‰

See y’all in 2014!

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The Year of Handmade; a summary

So for this past year I chose to forego all RTW clothing and only allow myself to wear things that I had made myself.  All my clothing, including underwear, bathers and raincoat, hosiery and socks; everything had to be sewn or knitted by me.  The only exceptions I allowed were shoes and boots.

I drew each of my daily outfits in my Fashionary, thus keeping track of the wearing tally, if you like, of each item of clothing.
So, the quantitative assessment:  I’m slightly embarrassed to admit that yes, I analysed all those funny little paper dolls, itemising all my clothing worn this year along with adding up the number of “wears” that each item received this year.  I plugged my results into an excel spreadsheet, which is to say that I sure don’t expect anyone apart from me to be the slightest bit interested in the nitty gritty, of course!  I just did that bit for fun. 

But to summarise, the most worn items in my wardrobe this year are:

White Tshirts, by a country mile.  I have 3 identical white Tshirts, and each one alone got more wear than any other top in my collection.  Skirts: my ivory curtaining skirt (left) ; my refashioned, little denim skirt (right), my midnight blue, over dyed corduroy A-line skirt (centre).  Re-dyeing that blue skirt really did give it a fabulous new lease on life, elevating it to the third most frequently worn skirt in the wardrobe.  (left) Oversized peppercorn cardigan and (right) chocolate cotton cardigan.

My army jacket was the second most worn item in my wardrobe this year… love that thing!  My ivory cotton cardigan and the blue bell-sleeved top also came in pretty high.

Dresses, from left; the Aquarius dress, Japanese cotton sundress and the sew bossy dress.  Statistically, the sew bossy dress squeaked out on top, but actually all of my dresses got a heck of a lot of wear, even my winter dresses; with “wears” spread pretty evenly across the board.  I wore 28 dresses this year…  sounds like a LOT I agree, but actually 9 of this number have already move on to either the scrap bag or the Good Sammy’s.  None of these three, but.
Jeans:  The frequency of wears for my jeans is quite low; I’m very much a skirt/dress wearer, with tights for winter.  I think I really only need a new pair once every two years or so.  The purple flares got the most wear.

Shorts get about the same wearing frequency as jeans.  My hot pink linen shorts are firm favourites, which is interesting since they felt like a very whimsical and possibly crazy addition to my wardrobe at the time!   2013’s two favoured scarves were both simple, unhemmed pieces of jersey knit, for summer a light and breezy ecru, and for winter, a long long raspberry.  Please tell me, if a rectangle of fabric is enough to keep me happy then why o why do I knit so many scarves?
Tights; two pairs of plain black wool tights, and my paprika tights got a lot of wear too.

Um, underwear; yes, well all of that got worn too…
Obviously some of my more recently made items did not get a look in, and their usefulness will not be apparent until after next year; but this can’t be helped at this point.

Now for the qualitative assessment:  Going into this project, I wondered whether I would feel needlessly restricted by not allowing myself to wear RTW this year.   That was dumb, since I have absolutely masses of me-made clothes and didn’t feel lost for choice, not at any time.  However, and these thoughts have been with me from the very start of my totally me-made journey, ?four? years ago: I do admit to ebbing waves of uncertainty about my sanity.  I mean, making all my own clothes seems both silly and masochistic sometimes, even to me, a battle-hardened convert of several years.  When I look at and admire other ladies’ outfits it would not even enter my head to judge them on whether they made it themselves or not, and yet, I do judge myself quite severely on this basis.
But whether it’s good/sensible or not, I’m in the habit of making all my own now, and would find it hard to buy clothes in a store.  I would feel too guilty, believe it or not.  I’ve successfully brainwashed myself.  I’m in two minds whether or not to actually act on this.  Whether to continue as I am, or to rehabilitate myself, so to speak… maybe see if I even am capable of buying something.  
Yes, I do realise how very silly that sounds.
If I’ve proved anything at all to myself, it’s merely that making all your own clothes can be done.  Be your own sweatshop, yo.  I am.  I can, and I did.  Which has precisely zero significance at all, to anyone, anywhere.  And yet I feel strangely proud of myself, nonetheless.
Will I keep this up next year? well yes and no.  
NO I will not be regaling the blog with fashionary pictures any more.  And I will be happy to welcome back into my life some of my old RTW items I’ve had for many years.  That amounts to some Metalicus Tshirts and a petticoat, a handful of Country Road camisoles and a few cashmere cardigans, all very high quality items and all years and years old now.  I also have a few scarves that have been given to me as gifts by family, that will enter rotation as of tomorrow.  Black tights!  The two woollen pairs I wore this year have both sprung holes in the toes.  I think I could spoil myself and just buy these from now on, at least.
However, YES, in that I think I will continue to keep tabs on my clothing next year too… just because I found it really interesting and a useful  exercise in future wardrobe planning.

The final paper dolls…  πŸ™‚

15th-20th December
from left:
white top “b” from shape shape, white linen shorts
polka dot dress
pistachio linen top, “map” skirt
Sagittarius dress
sew bossy dress
“white trees” top, little denim skirt

21st-26th December
from left:
grey/green layered skirt, white PM Tshirt
map skirt, top “b” from shape shape
sew bossy dress
giant polka dot dress
red dress
“white trees” top, hot pink linen shorts

27th-31st December
from left:
pistachio linen top, map skirt
sew bossy dress
top “b” from shape shape, embroidered yellow shorts
Sagittarius dress
red cotton dress

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Melbourne; a travel wardrobe…

Woooh!!  I’ve been such a mad but very happy sociable-whirly butterfly lately… firstly I had the very great pleasure of spending a few days with the lovely Yoshimi during her visit to Australia; we had a terrific time generally popping about; shoe-shopping, beach-going, eating- and tea-drinking, canoeing, koala-cuddling, and of course tonnes and tonnes of chatting!  Thank you so much for coming to visit me Yoshimi, I throughly enjoyed spending time with you and am honoured to count you as a dear friend  πŸ™‚
And then! last weekend I went on a fabulous long weekend jaunt over in Melbourne with Mum and Cassie, and was thrilled to spend one delightful morning with Julia Bobbin and Jorth! two totally gorgeous girls who are both just as lovely and as funny and as delightful company in real life as you can imagine they are from their blogs.  Thank you so much for meeting with me, girls; I had such a nice morning tea with you and it was great fun sitting and chatting, of course we had tonnes to talk about, sewing bloggers always do!
So, a trip to Melbourne, the fashion capital of Australia, but also the capital of roller-coaster-like weather, requires some careful wardrobe consideration.  I needed my clothes to cope with the weather plus leave plenty of room in the suitcase for fabric shopping… ahem  (blush)  well, Christmas is coming up soon!! that’s my excuse  πŸ˜€
Time away
5 days
Where to:
Melbourne
Season:
the last days of spring/first days of summer.  The forecast was kinda crazy, ranging from almost winter-y all the way through to height of summer-y.  We had one rather fresh morning of 9C with a brisk, almost arctic wind, and also one day with a sweltering maximum of 38C.  Amazing!
Expected activities:
lots of city walking and morning tea-ing, shopping and a couple of exhibitions.  Wining and dining each night
Colour scheme: mostly soft spring-y shades of ivory, cream and blue, with a floral dress and apricot and orange playing a supporting role.  Silver!
What I packed: (each garment is linked to its original construction post)
(left to right; top to bottom)

watercolour floral dress
powder blue silk tunic and petticoat
apricot Alexander McQueen kimono coat/top
clementine cotton blouse
ivory silk blouse
ivory rope and caramel leather belt
little blue denim skirt
ivory skirt
white Tshirt, for underneath the kimono top
silver sequinned skirt
grey/beige linen blouse with tie waist
calico cotton knitted cardigan
caramel leather wedges, red thongs, white bathers, ivory evening shoes, pale yellow bag

It might seem like too many outfits for the number of days, but some days called for a casual and/or formal and/or weather change partway through

Thoughts:  so the half-empty suitcase plan worked; I came home with a suitcase bulging with masses of gorgeous fabric to make Christmas presents for my family, and a little bit for me plus two new pairs of shoes… um, also for me (blush).  And I managed to neither freeze to death nor to pass out from heat exhaustion but still look reasonably and appropriately attired, thank goodness.  Woot!  Actually I had thought that I over-packed; but it’s always good to have some leeway, just in case.  To prove that point, the hem of my floral dress snagged and partly fell down on the first day.   Yes, I totally could and should have bought some thread and fixed it but I just lazily shoved it aside for when I got home.  Bad me.
I wore my sequinned silver skirt ensemble each evening, boy I love wearing that skirt!  Feels so crazily over-the-top and indulgent and very not-me.  Love that.

My caramel leather wedges are so comfy and go with everything, and it’s important to have a bag that can works for both day and evening, I think.

It’s really hard to estimate just what Melbourne is going to feel like weather-wise, sometimes the numbers just don’t convey it.  The first day was 25C but it felt freezing thanks to that morning low of 9C.  A pair of jeans would have been great right about then, as well as to wear on the plane…  but everything I took went well together and got worn.  
And a blast was definitely had!
Now I have to get cracking on that pile of fabric….  πŸ™‚

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A horse, and other news

The lovely Yoshimi the Flying Squirrel will be literally flying! and over here!  She has revealed her travel plans, so now I may say something too…  I am thrilled to say that she is coming to visit me on her way to the bloggers meet-up in Melbourne.  I will be so happy to see her again, and am super excited to show her around Perth!  I’m planning for, and hoping that she will have a really wonderful time here, and I know she will have an absolutely brilliant and fun weekend at the Melbourne meetup with TJ and Maria and all the other Melbourne gals too.  Exciting stuff!  πŸ˜€

In current doings, I’ve been mucking about with fabric paint again today…

I bought this lightweight mustardy-chartreuse silk in ?Tessuti’s? I think? during my girly trip to Melbourne with Mum and Cassie last year and it’s been burning a hole in my conscience.  I’ve reeeeally wanted to make something interesting with it but couldn’t think what and it was fast becoming too precious to cut up.  Finally I’ve thought of something… hopefully this will turn out cool in the end.
My initial grand plan was of a more realistically shaded horse, with sharply defined edges outlining rippling equine muscles and tendrils of mane billowing gorgeously in the slipstream…  those pie-in-the-sky ideas had to be abandoned when experiments revealed that the paint bled like the blazes on this silk.  Oh well.  Embrace the limitations, and all that!  And a serendipitous one; since the splodgily abstract nature of my print brings to my mind the markings of an Appaloosa horse.  Ok, I’m happy!
The technical blahdy-blah…
I drew my design, gave it a grid so I could enlarge it to a good size to fit my piece, and then traced it onto the fabric using water soluble pen, although tracing probably wasn’t necessary in the end.  I mixed a hefty blob of black fabric paint into about 2 cups of water, in a plastic spray bottle… just one of those cheapies you see in the gardening section of the supermarket for your seedlings.    Some experimenting was necessary to determine a good ratio, giving a solution that was thin enough to spray without clogging up the nozzle, and yet had enough paint to leave a mark on the fabric.  
Cut out my stencil and sprayed away.  I also sprayed the other pieces; and as lightly and as thinly as I could, painted in some mane and body contouring streaks with a paintbrush, separately.
 This will be appearing in wearable form, tout de suite… 

In other sewing news, I have decided that I might quietly do a stitchers guild SWAP this year.  I’ve bought a few Australian Stitches magazines over the years and, like lots of people, Lynn Cook’s wardrobe planning was always my favourite bit.  I discovered that following her example was an established sewing blog thing-to-do last year, with rules and a time frame and a competition as well!  man, I’m so behind the times  πŸ™‚   
Anyway, I’ve really admired everyone’s SWAP wardrobes, and thought that maybe my own rather random sewing efforts could do with a bit more planning…  so sensible! a new concept for me  πŸ™‚  I might not actually enter my SWAP into the official competition… I mean, you are only allowed to make one thing before 26th December, whaaa???  don’t know if I can wait that long!  But I do like the whole idea of following the rules and making a co-ordinating mini-wardrobe.  So I’ll see how I go.  The stash has been raided for some likely looking candidates and I’ve sketched out a plan of attack…
The horse-y fabric may or may not become the first “thing”  πŸ™‚

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Thoughts on hem lengths; linings and slips

One of my wardrobe renovations performed lately was to shorten this skirt by a good several inches; a super quickie reno, but one that nevertheless completely transformed this skirt for me from something that almost caused me to shudder whenever I happened to catch sight of myself in a shop window reflection, to something that I have been wearing with a lot more pleasure and more confidence in how it fits nicely in with my style now.  Although I made it to wear this winter, it didn’t really “go” stylistically with any of the tops and cardigans, heck not even any of the shoes and boots that are the mainstays of my current winter wardrobe.  When I trialled pinning it up a few inches; hey presto, problem instantly solved.
I do have this theory that when it comes to skirts we all have a personal Ideal Hem Length; that is good for YOU, and it could be a bad idea to mess around with it too much.  For me, I think I prefer winter skirts to be EITHER about 10cm (4″) above the knee, OR quite long at midi-length, like roughly 20cm (8″) above the ankle.  These are lengths that just look better with all my tops, all my shoes and that suit my personal style.  Obviously I reserve the right to change my mind about that one, at any moment, according to any and all fleeting fashion whims.
Good thing I can sew for myself, hmmm?  πŸ˜‰

I had already finished the lower raw edge with violet bias binding, so to unpick and re-stitch it up a coupla inches higher was an ultra quick renovation…  and the extra length is still there, should my wardrobe tastes migrate to embrace the aesthetics of different hem length.

now that’s a nice deep hem!

And now to another topic, slightly related…

Kathleen wrote a comment bringing up the topic of skirts; specifically, to line or not to line? That is the question! which I thought worthy of further exposition.

In the photo above I am actually wearing a full slip underneath my outfit, not that you can see it, which is the point really!

I line the majority of my skirts but not all of them, and it is always something to consider, how do you choose which gets lined and which does not?
I’m sure we’re all familiar with the horrible experience of your unlined skirt slowly and inexorably riding up your stockinged legs, as if driven by some strange evil impulse of its own… which is why a lining is a good idea.  But for many of us in hot climates a lining can be a pesky thing that clings hideously to your sweaty legs for most of the year.  So what do you do if you want a bit more versatility, for your skirts to see more active duty, to be an all-seasons item as it were?

The answer is of course, a separate slip or petticoat.

I chose to make this skirt without a lining because I wanted it to be transitional thing, to wear on both winter-y days and warmer bare-legged days too.  And on cold days when tights are on, as above, I have a few slips, or petticoats that I can wear underneath, that do the same duty as a lining.  In the outfit above, I am wearing a pale blue silk petticoat, chosen because the colour went with the rest of my outfit, not that you are supposed to see it! but still, just in case  πŸ™‚ I like my colours to “go”.  So when re-hemming the skirt I was careful to hem it to a length that I could still wear my petticoats underneath it.

It’s always really good to have several petticoats or slips on hand from which to choose.  I have eight full slips or petticoats in total, half of which could pass as little summer dresses if worn with extras: this pale blue one, a pale pink one, a beige one (easily my most useful one), a cream broderie anglaise one and a black one, shown long here but I have since re-hemmed it quite a bit shorter, and also three long and full-skirted ones, in yellow, pink and a white Metalicus one.  I don’t have any half-slips… but then until I started listing them for this post I didn’t realise just how many petticoats I actually had and maybe I have an abundance already!
So, in summary: To Line, or to Slip? that is the (paraphrased) question…

Later edit: for those looking for a pattern; the lovely and clever Sherry of pattern scissors cloth (I miss her!) designed and uploaded the Ruby slip, a pattern for a simple bias cut slip with the option for a lace bodice, and also generously provided extensive and super helpful instructions.  Available for free download here  

Details:
Top; Vogue 1115, blue denim details and my review of this pattern here
Skirt; Vogue 8363 heavily modified, green cotton corduroy, more details here and my review of this pattern here
Petticoat; Burda 8071, pale blue silk, details here
Tights; self-drafted, blue denim-look jersey, details here
Shoes, Francesco Morichetti, from Zomp shoes
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photo maisonette

Hello!
My friend Yoshimi and I have a new venture; photo maisonette, a daily visual diary of our two different lives in our two different worlds in Japan and Australia.  The new blog is inspired by the wonderful site 3191 Miles Apart, a site which has changed a lot since it started, but initially was a wordless site where two friends regularly posted side by side pictures from their two different lives.  I loved the idea! and our blog will be along those same lines… a photo a day, from our two individual perspectives.  We are not collaborating on the ideas for our photos beforehand, nor will we be writing any explanation behind them; but hope that our pictures themselves tell their own complete story and illustrate what our lives are about.
Yoshimi cleverly suggested the name for the blog “photo maisonette” which I think beautifully captures the idea … of course in English a “maisonette” is a small house with one flat on each of two floors, two individual occupants occupying each floor.  So there is an upstairs person, and a downstairs person.  Similarly, our “photo maisonette” will have two stories; the upper story belongs to Yoshimi, and the ground floor is mine.  
We hope you enjoy visiting our new blog.

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knots and leopard

Further to the subject uppermost in my mind lately; badmomgoodmom left a link in a comment to her post on the theft of content in blogging, an extremely interesting article, well-researched, thorough and informative.  I’m a newbie at understanding all this stuff, and badmomgoodmom explains it clearly and succinctly.  
Other helpful articles I read on the subject are here and here, those links provided to me by ElleC.
Before all this I had no idea that blog-scraping even existed, let alone that it was such a huge problem!  I guess I’ve led a very sheltered little blogging life so far, just imagining everyone was just like me, quietly plugging away in their own little world, talking about things that are near and dear to their own hearts, things they are passionate about.  In a not-for-profit kind of a way.  I know, how naive, right?  I am learning, boy am I learning!  To find out that content theft often relates straight back to that really annoying Adsense crap you see on some blogs is an eye-opener.

In happier…? well, in decidedly more mundane and less nefarious happenings, anyway; later on I am walking this big ball of fur in to have her shots.

min 10C, max 23C, fine and sunny
Details:
Dress; using a design from Pattern Magic 2, sand coloured silk/linen mix, details here
Cardigan; part of a self-drafted twin-set, of leopard print stuff, details here, and see this leopard twinset styled in 6 different ways here
Shoes; c/o Misano
Today, my family is wearing the following me-mades, this shirt and this shirt
Craig’s shirt; Burda 7767 modified, white cotton, details here
Sam’s shirt; Burda 7767 modified, striped stuff, details here and my review of this pattern here
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