Tag Archives: Sienna

Lack of Tshirts

More correctly, I do not have a lack of Tshirts, but just a lack of me-made Tshirts.  And after a few experiments I feel this dress really looks best over a form-fitting knit Tshirt and not over a blouse.  So here it is again, this time over my striped Tshirt.  I’m not sure the dress is as successful over a print as it is over a solid coloured Tshirt… what do you think?
Anyhoo, it should be obvious that I adore this dress and have worn it a lot over winter and hope to continue wearing it over these cooler early cool days of spring too.  This should go some way to assuaging my disappointment that it is too warm to wear my new crocheted skirt already, and I had been looking forward to showing it off at least once during self-stitched September!   This is often a minor problem with me, though naturally, not such a problem that I am not massively thrilled about the warmer weather!  But, with my sewing and knitting projects at this time of year, I am partly stuck in “winter” mode and still envisaging projects suitable for the cooler weather, when really it is too warm to be wearing them for very long…  why do I keep doing this?  How do you go with thinking ahead in your seasonal wardrobe planning?

Details:
Dress; the “gathered hole” dress form Pattern Magic by Tomoko Nakamichi, made of a grey wool mix, details here
Tshirt; self drafted, navy and white striped jersey, details here
Tights; Metalicus
Shoes; Francesco Morichetti, from Zomp shoes

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Taking advantage of one’s surroundings…

I received a comment on my photo yesterday in the Self-Stitched September flickr group that read in part that my ensemble looked perfect “mostly due to the beach background” LOL!  *
Well I’m afraid the beach is going to steal the show again today because when I am fortunate enough to be staying by the beach then I see no reason not to make full use of nature’s beautiful offerings, particularly when one is simply logging a mere outfit.  I’m not vain enough to believe my sewing creations are going to elicit any Wow! factor all by themselves!
So, today; I am using another little ploy for when one’s jeans have shrunk a tad, just roll them up a little bit and voila, the ankle-freezer factor has been happily disguised!  Now they look as if they were meant to be like this…  Another plus is that one can wade, which is as far as I will go in at this time of year.  Shams asked if we swim at this beach, and yup we sure do! but it is still a tad chilly for full immersion.  But the feel of cool salty water lapping about your ankles, and soft and squishy but still slight abrasive sand underfoot is always such a deliciously blissfully healthy feeling for your feet, don’t you think?  I think it beats any foot pampering offered at any beauty spa, any day!
My half-zip-front parka is one I made about five years ago, and so it might be outdated but I still love it.   It is self-drafted, but a completely slavish imitation of a Marni design from their Spring/Summer 2007 collection, so I feel I’m borrowing a bit of designer-style austere chic when I don this… .  I really like how the high bunched up collar turned out.  It’s basically a double layer rectangle cut to fit the neckline, sewn in, then with a lace inserted between the two layers and exiting through some tiny buttonholes to tie it loosely.  It does have some piecing on the front, and all the seams are double topstitched, but it is probably hard to see it in this photo.

Details:
Parka; self drafted, a copy of this one at right, from Marni Spring/Summer 2007, black cotton
Jeans; Burda 7863 with modification, rust coloured stretch corduroy, details here
Sandshoes; Country Road

*Actually I’m sure the comment was intended to be a nice comment but I just couldn’t help but laugh when I read that bit…!

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Lace, as beachwear

 

I’m not much of an outfit planner.  I’m more of a grab-something-clean and put it all together there and then as the fancy takes me.   A bit random but I’m OK with that.  So, packing on an already busy day for a weekend away I sorta just grabbed a few various separates with the thought I would work it all out when the time came… which is undoubtedly not very sensible and one ends up with some strange choices at times.  But I have far from classic tastes and like to play with weird ensembles… why?  well because it is fun!
Take this ensemble… The chambray shirt, made using a man’s shirt pattern, and little white sandshoes; well they are just super casual full-stop.  The juxtaposition of the housewifeliness of these items against the completely opposite, rather sexy, boudoir-y vibe of black lace is an odd one that satisfies my taste for the occasionally absurd in my apparel.
The black lace skirt with blue lining used to be dressy in the first flush of its youth, a few years ago, but now? Well the poor old thing has been put out to the sartorial equivalent of the pasture, often stepping in for very casual duties, like gardening or vacuuming out the car, or washing the dog.  It might not scream “beachwear!” but it’s really very comfortable and easy to wear.  And when it comes to the beach, as long as the footwear is appropriate then anything goes!  Right?  Right!
Details:
Shirt; Burda 7767 modified, cotton chambray details here
Skirt; my own design based on the basic shape of Vogue 7303, layers of black lace with randomly stitched on black border lace strips and gunmetal blue lining
Sandshoes; Country Road
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Seafoam linen shirt, with smile-y faces

A new linen shirt for Craig…
Burda 7767, again.  I didn’t even fold up or put away the pattern after making my “army” shirt, just laid out the fabric and cut out this one straight away… efficient, or what?!  My middle name, hehe…
Do you like the smile-y face pocket flaps?  Yes, this was sorta planned…  I don’t think Craig has cottoned on that he is sporting two smile-y faces on his chest yet, he might refuse to wear the shirt if he thinks something is too fashion-y about it…  But I like little “touches” and this one amuses me.
The lower edges of the pockets have a corresponding curve like the flaps, and the cuff edges are curved to match, and also have double buttonholes and buttons.  Those, and the fact that the lower hem has been extended and curved, are the only variations to the pattern here.
I felt a little guilty about this whole project, because the linen was part of the small stash comprising four lengths of linen that we bought with the very intent of me making shirts out of it for Craig about two years ago… and I did use three of these lengths just for that purpose.  But this rather divinely shaded seafoam-green length sat there and sat there and I couldn’t bring myself to get going on the promised shirt.  It looked so desirable and so right for … well, for me.  I was deviously planning and re-planning about a zillion things NOT of the menswear variety, that I could make using this linen; things would fit very nicely into my wardrobe thank you very much, and I even commenced a bit of a campaign about how this colour was actually a bit feminine, wasn’t it, hmmm? and how Craig now had looooads of linen shirts to choose from and might prefer something else, and how the linen would be reeeeeally much better suited to something else, like say… something for me.  And my sweet husband is so good natured he unselfishly gave up his linen shirt rights just to make me happy…  And I did feel happy for about one minute.  Then I felt mean.  So I set to and made him the promised shirt.  And now I don’t feel mean.  And d’ya know the good news, there is actually a largish chunk of leftovers, maybe enough for something to fit me after all.  And I have a clear conscience.
Maybe there is a moral there, something about good feelings and peace of mind.  Attainable to those who don’t wilfully and selfishly steal their loved ones fabric.  Yah, something real deep and meaningful and navel-gazing like that.  But I’m not sure the goodwill will extend to me not appropriating the shirt every once in a while.  After all, look how well it goes with my first self-pedicure of the season?  I think this shirt deserves to be worn with my nail polish, don’t you?

Details:
Shirt; Burda 7767 with minor modifications, seafoam-green linen

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Thoughts on washing…

(Trying to get back into the swing of taking my own photos?  Mebbe…)
Something that is amazing about where I live is the ferocity, combined with the brevity, of storms.  It’s funny, my dog is quite protective of me when we are walking during a storm.  She sticks close by, is constantly checking over her shoulder to make sure I am still there, and comes running back to sit with me or even try to round me up if I pause to take a photo.  Well she is a sheep dog and rounding up is in her nature…
You will be pleased to know we walked back through our front door dry, if a tad windswept.  It’s a good thing I don’t have a hairstyle to speak of.
One the plus side, the kite-surfers are having a great day, and washing does dry very quickly around here, yes even during the winter time…
On the subject of washing… how often do you wash your clothes?  You might see that the little olive top I am wearing underneath the black one here is the same one I was wearing yesterday over the blue Metalicus one.  I reason that a top worn against my skin is dirty after a day of wear and needs washing, but that one worn over another top is OK to go for another day.  Obviously underwear, socks and tights are washed after one day of wear.  Dresses and skirts I judge by whether I am wearing tights or a top underneath (probably OK to last another day) or if it has been a hot sweaty day then I will wash.  Jeans I wear for two or even (gasp) three days if I haven’t been engaging in particularly strenuous activities or if it hasn’t been a sweaty hot day.  Not that jeans are ever worn on a hot sweaty day actually… The same goes for cardigans; I will do a wool wash for everybody’s jumpers and cardigan every few weeks.  I’m over the preciousness of my cotton trench coat and it now is tossed in the machine on a gentle cycle, probably a few times a year.  My woollen coat I plan to send to the dry-cleaner…  There is a very small population of one in my wardrobe, (er, my Chanel style jacket actually) which I am too frightened to wash, nor even to trust it to the dry-cleaner!  I don’t know what I am going to do about that thing!
What about you?  Do you have a rigid plan of attack to your washing, or a more laissez-faire approach?

Details:
Jeans; Burda 7863 modified, black stretch corduroy, details here
Olive top; Cue
Black top; Sexy Woman, found secondhand
Scarf; knitted by me, merino wool, details and my pattern here
Boots; Andrea and Joen, from Uggies in Dunsborough

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Doing what I want…

So I did give it a bit of thought (but not much) before I decided to leap back in and sign up again for Zoe’s new challenge, Self Stitched September 2011!
I know at the end of Me-Made June 11 I was feeling burnt out with taking my own photos like everybody else who participated, but then again if there was no difficulty involved then it wouldn’t be a challenge right?  I like challenges, and I like doing this one.
In the days leading up to the last one (or during, I can’t remember now) I read someone’s blog post that was a scathing criticism of the challenge, and also of the blogs who joined in, which did make me question myself and my own reasons for participating.  Do I lose my status as a “sewing blog” (inverted commas are intentionally ironic, there)  if I joined in a personal self-styling process?  Does taking photos of the clothes I have spent time and effort in making with my own two hands, constitute a shallow or egotistical attitude?  I have decided that it does not.  I’m proud that I make my own clothes, and I enjoy styling and mixing up my own creations in new and interesting ways.  Sure, some of my self-stylings work better than others, and I would be lying if I said that I didn’t occasionally look at some of my own outfit photos and cringe, but the truth is the bad outfits and photos have been very helpful to me.  Like everybody, I have got my favourite garments, which I sometimes hang on to for far longer than I should… well the camera doesn’t lie, and has been the impetus for the tossing of several of my less wonderful garments.
So yah… long and short of it; I’m going there again!

I, Carolyn of Handmade by Carolyn, sign up as a participant of Self-Stitched-Sept ’11. I endeavour to wear all handmade, barring undies and tights each day for the duration of September 2011. That is, I will be wearing undies and tights of course, but not of the handmade variety!!’


so, I’m allowing myself RTW undies and tights… neither of which are well represented in my me-made wardrobe.  I have huge admiration for people who make their own underwear but it is not something I have had time to have a go at, nor much interest in yet.  Too many other garments that I can wear for public display are on my sewing agenda for now!

Details:
Jeans; Burda 7863 slightly modified, rusty corduroy, details here
Top; Metalicus
Olive top; Cue (I’ve had this top literally for decades…)
Scarf; knitted by me, originally a wool kit from Calico and Ivy, details here
Shoes; Francesco Morichetti, from Zomp shoes

(below; random photos I took on our walk today…)

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Easiest knitted handwarmers, ever

So, I mentioned that I had plenty of socks already, but still some sock yarn kicking around… so I turned to another extremity on my person that really feels the cold; my hands.  I am definitely a cold-hand person… and can be relied on to lay a soothingly cool hand on the brow of a feverish sick person, anywhere, anytime.  Nice for any sick people in my life, but nonetheless I am forever engaging in some futile attempt to lift the temperature of my hands above that of a corpse.  This takes form in various procedures; whether it be slowly rotating my hands over the toaster in the morning, making myself a gazillion cups of tea not necessarily because I am thirsty but so that I have a hot china mug to clutch for a short while (warning; this particular hand-warming method greatly increases the required number of visits to the ladies room), walking about with my hands stuck weirdly in my armpits, or sitting on my hands, which by the way is good for warmth but not for maintaining any actual feeling in the fingers.
And yes there are gloves, some pairs of which I do have and are wonderful for warming the ol’ handies, but not when one is doing delicate stuff such as knitting, or working on a computer keyboard and one’s gloved fingers keep typing in such gems such as: “hekoo there., anmd how arte yourd tofdsy?”
Anyhoo, I brilliantly detected this gap in my wardrobe, and set to filling it…

Here is my pattern for these super-easy handwarmers, suitable for knitters of all levels of ability.  It really doesn’t get any easier than these things…

Yarn; 4 ply, I used Morris Empire Superwash Merino 4 ply
Quantity; 1-2 balls…  exactly how much yarn depends on how far up your arm you want your handwarmers to extend.
Set of 2mm double ended needles
Tension; 28 stitches and 36 rows to a 10x10cm square of stocking stitch

Cast on 60 stitches, distribute so there are 20 stitches over three needles.
Bringing the last stitch on the third needle round to join onto the first stitch on the first needle to start knitting in the round, commence in K2, P2.  Leave the long tail from your first slip stitch hanging loose without weaving in, this marks the starting point of your knitting and enables you to count rows more easily.
Continue in K2 P2 for 8 rows.
From the 9th row, K in every stitch.
Continue for 20 rows.
Row 29; turn and P 60 stitches.  Note for this stocking stitch section, always slip the first stitch purlwise on a purl row, and knitwise on a knit row)
Row 30; turn and K 60 stitches
Repeat last two rows until there are 20 rows of stocking stitch.
Row 50; join the work so you are knitting in the round once more, and continue knitting in each stitch until the work measures the desired length (in this example, 31cm from the beginning)
K2, P2; for the next 8 rows.
Cast off in K stitch loosely, and weave in the loose ends.

Voila, one handwarmer!  Now just repeat for the second one… if you want to get fancy it is pretty easy to incorporate a cable design or something down the backs of each hand, but this is the basic unadorned model to start with.  This is a super easy project that doesn’t require much thought at all, so is perfect for while your family is watching TV or something and you want something mindless to do… and your toasty warm hands will thank you in the winter!

Details:
Handwarmers; my own design, knitted in Morris 4 ply merino, in Imperial Blue (col 424)
Top and tights; Metalicus
Skirt; Vogue 7303 in charcoal suiting, dyed blue by me here
Scarf; a gift
Boots; Francesco Morichetti, from Zomp shoes

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Crocheted granny squares

I know there is a phrase to describe occurrences like this but I can’t think what it is…
This morning I dug out this crochet scarf and put it on, thinking again how much I like it and its beautifully swampy, underwater-y, murky combinations of colours! but especially it got me thinking about crochet granny squares.  This scarf is simply a sewn-together row of large-scale mohair crochet granny squares, and I was thinking idly about how much I would like to make a scarf or something out of the original type of crochet granny squares; those ones that were all kinds of colourful but always black-edged.
So I took the above photo this morning  (I’ve still been taking photos occasionally but not always putting them here), and afterwards, Cassie and I were going along to meet with my mother in the Jo Sharp knit shop, which is a tiny little shop but like a wonderful Aladdin’s Cave stuffed full of divinely colourful balls of woolly goodness…  Of course you guessed it, we walked in and what should I see but straight away!, and that is this rather funky little skirt below, made entirely out of exactly the crochet granny squares I had been daydreaming about.  Bizarre coincidence; magical thinking? that I should select this vaguely granny-squarish scarf and be thinking about granny squares, and then immediately find this rather cool new-age take on granny-scarf couture??  (cue Twilight Zone music)
(image of the Hexagon skirt below from Jo Sharp)

Don’t you just love it?  Old fashioned, unusual, quaint, reminiscent of those awful old op shop blankets like you always saw flung over Rosanne’s couch on the 80’s sitcom?  Goodness, that thing was so daggy as to eventually become quite cool, yes?  No?  Am I on my own on this one?  Well, I guess to my 80’s-addled consciousness the ol’ granny square blanket did assume an aura of grungy chicness anyway….!

So Mum and Cassie did a bit of enabling, and I did not walk out of the knit shop empty handed…   I just bought a few colours to get going along with some blacks for the edging, but I can always go back for more if I need to…  I’m still undecided as to whether to just go for a scarf as per my original thoughts, or to go for the full-on skirt… what do you think?

Details:
Skirt; Vogue 7303 with modifications, green cotton velveteen, details here
Scarf; crocheted by me, details here
Tights; my own design, denim print jersey, details and a tutorial on drafting your own tights here
Top and cardi; Metalicus
Shoes; Francesco Morichetti, from Zomp shoes

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