Tag Archives: Top

A pretty little thing

Cassie made a top.
I know, yes; it really does say handmade by me at the top of this blog and I did not make this lovely, but wait; there is a logical explanation…
I am posting it here mostly to show the fabudabulous Merche, because a short while ago she very generously sent Patrones no. 7 magazine over to me; muchísimas gracias Merche!  And Cassie’s top is the first cab off the rank…   The pattern is number 20, a little camisole blouse with a shirred back and a shoestring strap threaded through the top of the bodice to gather it up.  It closes with an invisible zip in the side seam.  Cassie elected to cross over the straps at the back, but otherwise the blouse is made up just to pattern.
She used a very lightweight cotton from Potters Textiles; thank you to Vanessa for alerting me to the Potters sale last year!  This is the first time a Potters Textile has appeared on my blog here.  Ack-choolly….  🙂 this is the very first Patrones magazine I’ve got my clutches on, and the very first make from it, using the first piece of fabric I bought from Potters Textiles and the first time a Potters fabric has appeared here on the blog…  
So this pretty little top represents a veritable avalanche of firsts… woot!

Cassie also made her own skirt, using Butterick 5488 and cotton denim from Fabulous Fabrics.

 below left: t’ back view, and below right; her invisible zips are looking pretty fantastic imo…
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Blood Orange

Is it a given that all my Vogue
1247 tops will have citrus-y nomenclature enforced on them? 
First clementine, and then blood orange……. aaaaand theeeeeeen?
We shall see, we shall see about that….   ;D
Anyhoo, it was always a given that there will be more of these tops in my life.  Now the weather is warming up beeeayoutifully I dug the pattern out again…. there really should be some sort of award for best pattern of the year or something.  Oh, that’s right! there is and this pattern is!
Fancy that!
So, what you may not realise straight away, but
which I shall hasten to enlighten you asap, is that this is not just the same
pattern as my first clementine version, but actually the very same fabric too.  Yup, the very same!  Except that it has been dyed with iDye in Brown, … to imbue the original pinky-orange with the deep, rich, sophisticated mahogany that awaits one inside a blood orange.  The warp and the weft; originally a light pumpkin and a bright neon orange, picked up the brown dye to become nutmeg brown and burgundy respectively…
This same fabric also played a supporting role in
this post too, providing an appropriately, complex-ly colourful backdrop to some also dyed underthingies.
Now it has shed its one
dimensional role as just a prettily colourful piece of fabric folded in the stash,
and join instead the brave new 3D world of Things One Actually Puts On.
So, fronties; backies.  Because of a lack of fabric I cut the back pieces on a centre fold.
The pointies meet up just exactly as they should…
all French seams-ies…
Lingerie strappy thingies…. These were a gift from
the gorgeous Yoshimi.  Thank you
Yoshimi!
I didn’t realise at first, until I was filling in
the details bit I always put at the end of every post; that the skirt I am wearing
it with here is in with the same pattern as the top, and is also dyed with iDye in
Brown too.  Hmmm, predictable,
repetitive, stuck in a rut; or what?
Maybe I need to get me some new patterns, or new
dyes, or new ideas or something…
Kidding of course,  This pattern is da bomb!  This may not even be the
last version to be seen here on the blog this year….  stay
tuned!
Details:
Skirt; Vogue 1247, red cotton velveteen, ombre dyed
with iDye in Brown, details here, and my review of this skirt pattern here
Shoes;  from Misano
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Welcome to the fold


In a further small step towards overcoming scissor-phobia in the face of precious fabrics; I have made a new tunic top.
This is the top from Vogue 1309, and I have made it in a hand-painted silk dupion from Fabulous Fabrics. The fabric is pretty
fabulous, yes?  The strong uninhibited
strokes of dark chocolate and slate grey are so visually powerful and exciting.  They bring to my mind an abstract
representation of a windy stormy day; clouds streaking
across the sky, grey boughs bending in the wind, dead leaves whipping from the
ground and through the air.  Please note I took advantage of an appropriate weather moment for my photo op in honour….  🙂
I did not hand paint this fabric myself.  I have painted my own fabric in the past, but in this case I bought it all ready to go. It was ostensibly a
Christmas present from my husband, from last Christmas, last year, lol.  And ever since I opened my present (surprise!)  I’ve been on
the lookout for a worthy pattern … and when I clapped eyes on this Issey
Miyake pattern I instantly knew they would be perfect together, a match made in
heaven.  The pattern even
stipulated silk dupion, as if the designer knew that I had a piece of wild silk
dupion just awaiting a wild tunic pattern.  The times I actually obey those “recommended fabrics” instructions
printed on the pattern I can count on the fingers of one hand.  Hmmm, exaggerating there, I might be up
to a few more hands by now… but those times are still pathetic minorities;
small shining lights in a long rebellious history of sartorial disobedience.
Above: at left; the front and at right; the back.  The fabric was er, quaite expensive and I only had one metre so I had to join pieces to get out that huge front/back piece.  My fabric was 150cm wide, and I cut the pieces on the cross.  The joins can be just seen at just about shoulder blade level, on each side at the back (above right)
Above: side views right and left.  At right can be seen a small section I stitched down at the back to remove some of the blousiness across the back waist section.  I was fortunate to find a zip exactly the right length… this is a pattern in which if your zip is not the perfect length you DO have to adjust the pattern pieces to exactly accommodate your zip length.
This is a pretty challenging pattern … but I adore a
sewing challenge so I was like a pig-in-mud the day I made this, contentedly humming away to myself; totally in my happy place as I fiddled about, nutting out
those instructions.  The
construction of this is like a puzzle; each separate piece of the puzzle is simple and
uncomplicated in itself, but the process as a whole is not clear
or easy and the top does not go together intuitively.
I’ve written a pattern review below, but it’s worth
mentioning separately a couple of little tips I used to make things a tonne easier
for myself…
The markings on the pattern are small circles, large
circles and squares, and these are also marked from A to G inclusively.  You will
NOT be able to put this pattern together successfully unless you can identify
all of these on your pattern pieces… so I wrote all the markings (for example) OA, OB, oB, etc, designating large circle A,
large circle B, small circle B, etc, on
small squares of paper and pinned them to the exact spots.  Once this idea had occurred to me, it made
the whole seam matching process a heck of a lot easier.  A heck of a lot!!
I also attached a safety pin marking the “back” of
the piece… this might sound too trivial to even mention it ….but I found that safety pin to be enormously helpful! since the front and the back
of this top are almost impossible to distinguish for much of the construction.
Finishing tips: the pattern left a few raw edges in obvious places ie, the neckline!  which looked a little messy imo, so I hand stitched a narrow hem along these to finish.  I also applied a few strategic hidden hand-stitches inside the V-neck to hold those two sides firmly and modestly together.
I hand-stitched lingerie holders to inside the shoulder straps, these were a gift from the lovely Yoshimi, thank you Yoshimi!

Details:
Top; Vogue 1309, hand-painted silk dupion from
Fabulous Fabrics
Jeans; Burda 7863 modified, white stretch denim, details here
Shoes; c/o Misano

Pattern
Description:
Pullover
tunic has front and back cut-in-one, no shoulder and side seams, upper right
section, left panel, square armholes, left side back zip, shaped hemline,
stitched hem, unfinished and continuous bias finished edges.
Pattern
Sizing:
American
sizes 6-14; I cut the size 10
Did
it look like the photo/drawing on the pattern envelope once you had finished
sewing it?
Yes.
Were
the instructions easy to follow?
Well,
this pattern is not rated Advanced/Plus Difficile for nothing!  There may only be three rectangular
pattern pieces, well three once you have pieced three smaller paper pieces to
make the one ginormous front and back piece; and each step in itself is a short and straightforward seam…. but the construction of this top is not an
intuitive process and you really have to keep your wits about you.  I really had to stop and carefully check and
double check my markings for each and every step.
The markings are large and small circles and squares, variously marked from A to G
inclusively, and it is imperative to be able to identify them on the pattern
piece.
I
ended up writing on small squares of paper (for example)   OA, OB, oB, etc, designating
large circle A, large circle B, small circle B, etc, and pinning these at the
appropriate spots.  I highly
recommend other seamsters do the same! 
Once I took this step, things were streamlined and it was massively
helpful.  I also attached a safety
pin to the “back” during construction and just this simplest of things helped a
bunch when it came to working out which was the front and back and left and
right too.
What
did you particularly like or dislike about the pattern?
I
absolutely love the funky avant garde styling, and the challenge of putting
together a few plain and simple shapes to make a remarkably un-plain and
distinctly non-simple shape.
I
didn’t like how one ended up with some raw edges in obvious places, like the
neckline.  I hand-stitched a narrow
hem along all the raw exposed edges.
Not a dislike, just an important note to others making up the pattern; your zip does have to be exactly the recommended length, otherwise you must make adjustments to your pattern pieces to suit.
Fabric
Used:
Hand-painted
silk dupion
Pattern
alterations or any design changes you made:
After
completing the top, I hand-stitched a narrow double-folded hem along the raw
exposed edges at the front neckline crossover, the armhole edges and at the
back crossover, and applied a hidden few hand-stitches to hold the V-neck together at the centre front.
I
stitched a small section down at the left back to tame just a little of that
blousiness, this was just a stylistic choice on my part.
I hand-stitched lingerie holders inside the shoulder straps.
Would
you sew it again? Would you recommend it to others?
I
think I need just one of these ultra-distinctive tops in my wardrobe, but I
would not rule out sewing this one up again in my lifetime.  I recommend this pattern to the
advanced seamster who craves both an avante garde wardrobe and a sewing
challenge.
Conclusion:
Well,
I totes adore a sewing challenge and I sure got one here… 🙂 plus a unique top that is comfortable to wear
as well as interesting to look at. 
I call that a big win!

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Full Moon, restyled

Wow!  As soon as I saw the re-styling suggestions in my comments I realised how right you all were… thank you!  I can see now my outfit was a wee bit on the frumpy side.  I guess I was being a lazy blogger; trying to kill two birds with one stone by forcing the two new things; the top and the skirt, together in one outfit and one post when they did not really want to be together… so I have taken your excellent advice to heart.
I agree, the Full Moon top does seem to appear far less weird and look a whole lot better worn with no Tshirt and a little skirt  :))
Thank you again!

Details:
Top; the Full Moon top, drafted from p12 of Pattern Magic 3 byTomoko Nakamichi, various lightweight black fleeces
Skirt; my own design, charcoal jersey knit, details here
Shoes; akiel, from an op shop

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Full Moon, from Pattern Magic 3

I have made a new …. er, thing.  A top?  Yup, I think I have made a new top.  Maybe it’s more of an experiment than a top really.  One of the drafting exercises exploring how the placement of apertures governs the drape of the circular pattern piece…  from p12 of Pattern Magic 3 by Tomoko Nakamichi; Full Moon.  The companion piece in the same vein is the Crescent Moon top, posted here.

I made it using some more of the fabric stash given to me by my friend C from her late mother’s stash.  Two different black fleeces; slightly different shades of black and slightly different degrees of fluffiness, and I joined smaller pieces together in unobtrusive places to get pieces big enough to make the top.  One of the pieces I used wrong side out since it closely mimicked the right side of the other fabric.

Here is the thing… it may not get worn a whole bunch.  I have prepared myself for no one reading my blog to like it.  It has suffered some knock-backs already: no one in my family likes it.  Actually, everyone loathes it  😀  I put this on the first time a few mornings ago and wandered out into the kitchen… and my mother, staying with us, asked incredulously if I planned to wear this out.  I replied in a small voice, yes… and well, to cut to the chase I have been forbidden to wear this while I am out with my mother!  Yikes!  I can’t believe I’m middle aged and am still wearing stuff that my mother doesn’t approve…  I’m still a fashion rebel, yeah!!

But my feeling is that it is not that bad.   As a top: the pouffiness presents a dressing challenge, true; it is a sihouette that is not particularly figure flattering, which in our body-conscious world translates to not very fashionable, and so is rarely seen.  Except in circles who are really interested in sartorial innovation.  But I think that over-blousiness on a top half can be successfully counteracted by wearing a long and slim-line lower half.
The diagonal drape-lines achieved by skewing the waistband and the neckline is interesting and quite attractive, and I can imagine this concept being incorporated beautifully into a skirt design.
Oh, and btw my skirt is kinda new, to me anyway.  My mother made it for herself but it has shrunk in the wash, so I have inherited it.  I had to take the waistband off and take it in at the side seams to fit me, but I think I can allow myself to wear it since it is handmade by Mum.  The pattern she used is Vogue 8561; the fabric, a stretchy lightweight denim from KnitWit.  Coincidentally, also used inside out!  Cute, yes?  I really like the one lone little asymmetrical, disproportionate shield-of-arms pocket.  That is a very nice detail.
Thank you Mum!

Details:
Top; the Full Moon top, drafted from p12 of Pattern Magic 3 byTomoko Nakamichi, various lightweight black fleeces
Tshirt (under); self-drafted, white cotton jersey
Skirt (made by Mum, altered to fit by me); Vogue 8561, blue stretch denim
Shoes; Perrini, had for yonks and yonks

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‘nother hoodie

I’ve been on such a sewing bendahh lately!! making loads of stuff for the family as well as myself.   Must be the influence of spring; new growth in the garden and blissfully warm days lend themselves to thoughts of rejuvenating, renewing; everything in one’s life.  I’ve been cleaning out cupboards, sorting through wardrobes, and adding new clothes to our lives…  🙂
Somebody stop me!!
So I’ve made hoodies recently for Craig and for Sam; and Andrea observantly noted that I do have another man in my life; our eldest son Tim.  😀   I love making things for my boys (as well as my girl, of course) but I feel especially super proud when I see my boys heading out in stuff made by me.  Seems more of a stamp of cool-approval.  imo it is easy to make great girl-y stuff, but it is a much bigger challenge to make stuff that gets the thumbs up from a young man.
I used the same pattern copied from an old RTW one; and size-adjusted for Tim’s lanky build.
Tim looks really handsome in grey, and I still had some of this grey marle jersey from KnitWit.  It is the same fabric I used for my clipped wings top as well as my grey jersey lingerie set.  Luckily; the store has had this in stock for months, which is utterly fab since I’ve nipped back to buy just a little bit more twice now!  I cut out all the hoodie pieces of this fabric and got halfway through construction.  Then had overwhelming and crippling doubts that it was all going to be a bit too unrelentingly pale, featureless and boring, and so at the last moment I re-cut the hood and pocket pieces from a khaki/caramel coloured cotton jersey and used these instead.  I bought the khaki jersey from KnitWit as well, last year some time.
The hoodie has a kangaroo pocket, and the sleeves and lower edge were finished with a long folded ring-band using this method.  Tim wanted the sleeves over-long, so the band method is a good way to add length to a sleeve without having to remove the length required for a hem.  

The hood/drawstring-collar was constructed using this method.

I’m really pleased with the two-tone result.  When Sam saw it he asked for a two-tone one too…. so I had to promise that his next hoodie will be like this too…  (sigh)
And: the very last leftover pieces of this pale grey marle cotton jersey was yesterday subjected to a dye-bath…. hehehe;  and I am super thrilled with how the colour has worked out  :))  Results to appear here soon!

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Stripe-ly

After I had finished Craig’s hoodie, I had quite a lot of leftover fabric.  I had originally bought 2.5m of this lovely grey-and-black striped cotton jersey from Spotlight.  Turns out that this was stacks.  Loads.  Well ahem, I didn’t want to fall short 🙂  When I am making something self-drafted, for the first time; I worry so much about stuffing up somewhere along the line, and so I think I need way more fabric than I usually do.  And buy accordingly.
So I reckon the hoodie only took something like 1.5m in the end.
Unfortunately the remainder was not quite enough to make a second man’s Tshirt.  Just a man’s shirt sleeves alone take up acres of fabric… don’t they!  I mean, who knew?  It never fails to amaze me how a man’s shirt sleeves are each about as big as the front or back!
Anyhoo a second man’s shirt was out; and I already have a grey-and-black striped Tshirt, so I made one for Cassie.  It is just a plain little Tshirt, but we all need plain Tshirts too.  The plainer the better when it comes to basics!

I used my own self-drafted Tshirt pattern, sewn slightly slimmer in the body.  I cut a wide scoop-neck, and sewed the neckband using this method, and the sleeve and lower hems are sewn in a shallow zig-zag.

Since the back neckband of a Tshirt is a straight-ish line with not very much curve to it; I’ve noticed that it often does not lie up as nice and flat as I would like and sometimes has a tendency to flip out and down.  This does not occur in the neckband front, the sharper curve of the front edge keeps it sitting up properly.  So I have taken to sewing the seam allowance down to the shirt just a few millimetres in from the back/neckband seam, from shoulder seam to shoulder seam.  This seems to do the trick when it comes to helping the neckband sit up and the seam allowance stay down; and the line of stitching is pretty much invisible when the shirt is worn.

Cassie is wearing the new shirt with a skirt she made herself using Burda 7370.  I have made this same pattern up for her previously too, posted along with my review of this pattern here.

Details:
Top; self-drafted, grey and black striped cotton jersey
Skirt (made by Cassie); Burda 7370, beige crinkly cotton

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Blue-grey hoodie

I have made a hoodie; this one for Sam.  
Sam is my quiet one; he never asks for anything, on the contrary he will firmly and testily deny that he ever needs new clothes or any new belongings at all.  But one of the fabrics in my stash was this beautifully soft jersey; a very fine quality knit in a shade of cool grey/blue that I think really is perfect for Sam’s fair colouring.  So I set about making him something new anyway.
The fabric is part of a fabulous stash I bought at the Morrison remnants sale.  This particular “remnant” was about 5-6m and cost $15.  I know, right?!  That Morrison yearly sale is well worth checking out!!

For a pattern, I used the same old hoodie of Craig’s that I used to draft his new hoodie, altered slightly to custom fit Sam.  Namely, I narrowed the body and shoulders, and raised the height of the hood.  The hood on the original Tshirt is a bit short, not really sized to be actually worn comfortably over a man’s head.  However I know Sam probably will want to wear it up every once in a while, so made it a touch taller than the original.
kbenco and Rachel both expressed an interest in seeing more specifics of that interesting combined collar/hoodie, thank you for the request, ladies!  So I took a few snaps to illustrate how it all goes together…

The hood is composed of two shapes; a hood piece cut less wide than normal, and a U-shaped collar piece, slightly wider at the bottom of the U than at the edges, that forms a combined hood edging and collar.

Sew the two hood pieces right sides together just like normal.

 Sew the two short ends of the U-shape together, right sides together, on each piece.

Lay these two pieces together, right sides together, and sew together around the entire inner shorter edge of the curve.  Turn out and press.  One layer is the outer collar; the other the facing.

Measure and mark for the holes for the drawstring in the collar; mine are situated 1cm below the lowest point of the inner curve, and 12cm apart.

You can make life easy for yourself and hammer in some eyelets, but if you are me and like to make challenges for yourself where none need exist; embroider some nice little eyelets using embroidery thread…
Only in the outer collar layer of course!  snip a tiny X for the drawstring hole.  Leave the inner (facing) layer un-snipped!!
With a double strand of embroidery thread, sew a running stitch circle around the snipped X

Back where you started, commence embroidering tight blanket stitches, situated hard up against each other, around the hole.  When completed, run the thread around underneath the stitching at the back to finish off.

From now on treat both collar layers as one; lay the right side of the collar piece against the right side of the hoodie piece, lining up the top centre seams and ensuring the hood edges join at equidistant points from the centre front of the collar piece.  Stitch together, and press.
Again treating both collar layers as one; lay the completed hood right sides together against the neckline of the top, ensuring centre fronts align and the hood seam is in the exact centre back.  Stitch together and press.

The drawstring is simply a 1m long, skinny strip of the fabric, with the long raw ends folded in on themselves, and topstitched down from the centre out to each end with a wide zig-zag stitch.  The original had fancy cover-stitching to finish it off, not having a cover-stitch machine this is my best it’ll-do.  And a perfectly fine and dandy option too, in my opinion!  Thread it through the collar and up around the hood edging with a safety pin, and tie each end off with a little knot to stop it slipping back through the hole.

The hoodie has a kangaroo pocket and a wide self-band at the lower edge.  The sleeves are hemmed using a twin needle.

Once it was finished and Sam put it on; he quietly, briefly, but spontaneously, mentioned that he liked it.  I count that as a fairly enthusiastic expression of approval of the new hoodie.

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