Tag Archives: Trousers

Sasha trousers

husband is off waiting with Clara and calling me; haven’t I finished taking pictures yet?

Hmmm, I know how this seems; I’ve only just written a post where I say how I am busily focused on solely making things for other people, as Christmas gifts and then here I am popping up with more things made for ME… haha, well there is a perfectly reasonable explanation, and that is that I actually made these trousers a few months ago and am only just now getting around to taking some pictures and writing about them.  See?  Perfectly reasonable!

Pattern; so this is the newly released Sasha trouser pattern, by Closet Case patterns, named for the impossibly chic Sasha of  secondo piano…  Heather contacted me asking if I would again be willing to test the new pattern for her… would I?! well yes, of course!  I actually love testing patterns, I can feel like I’m doing something useful and productive and actually even helpful? one can only hope… Instead of the embarrassing truth that I’m clutching at any old excuse to nip into the sewing room and selfishly indulge in my favourite hobby once more, hehehe.

Fabrics; a blue stretch denim, thickish; and a thinner, maybe a bit too thin? grey-green stretch gabardine, both from Fabulous Fabrics.  Yes, two pairs!  actually the blue pair is really the first pair I made and is an earlier version of the pattern, the grey pair is my second pair and is the final version of the pattern how it’s been released out into the wild.  I really love my blue pair though so I’m still going to wear them  🙂

Pockets: the blue are in blue linen, a leftover scrap from my stash that was initially a toss out from my friend L; and the grey are in some the leftover floral from this shirt I made for Craig last year, and also some StarWars fabric leftover from when Cassie made some boxer shorts for her boyfriend.  Love me some crazy pockets!!!

Thoughts; so what to say? what you see is what you get here… this is a very nice pattern for a pair of very nice, sleek and elegant, slightly tapered, slightly low-waisted trousers.  One of my favourite features is that smart flat front which I always think of as vaguely menswear-inspired, rightly or wrongly; and I absolutely LOVE the menswear look on women.

Lately I’ve kinda been in the habit of having my trousers a little more high-waisted, but I do think this lower-waisted look does sit and look better when one has a little bit of a tummy.

The trousers are satisfyingly equipped with a plethora of pockets; four, in fact.  Two welt pockets on the back, I have to say these are super well-engineered, and intricately explained in the instructions.  I can see the sample ones have button closure under the welt, which mine don’t have so I think this must have been an add-on after the testing process.

And two slanted hip pockets, I absolutely adore these, they’re totally perfect.  Toss in the un-topstitched waistband/belt loops and hidden button and hook/eye closure, and it all adds up to quite a tailored and “formal” looking pair of trousers, perfectly suitable for business or office wear.

I mean, not that I’m an expert on office wear; but you know.   In my sadly inexpert opinion, I think these would make great work pants.

just imagine I’m walking into an important office building in the city instead of a blank wall…

Also, they’re stretchy so they are also perfectly comfy and fine for doing a spot of gardening…   We went down to our beach block to prepare it for bush fire season and the weather was a little cold… and none of my other “gardening” duds that I’d taken down were actually warm enough so I ended up wearing these all weekend.  They were awesome.   So comfortable! And practical!  Hardy!  I wore them to scramble about on all fours most of the weekend, pulling weeds, raking, and loading the wheelbarrow.  And going to the rubbish tip!  I lead such an exciting life!

obviously you can wear them to the beach too.

All details:

Trousers; the Sasha trousers by Closet Case patterns, stretch denim and stretch gabardine (pattern 1, below)
White blouse with lace; my own design from heavily modifying NewLook 6483, details here  (3)
Ivory/caramel clogs; made by me, details here
Brown blouse; MN 2004 (Sudley) by Megan Nielsen patterns with my own modifications, details here  (4)
Cream, cowl-neck tee; the loose-draped top from Japanese pattern book “drape drape” by Hisako Sato, details here  (2)
Tan low-heeled shoes; made by me, details here
Black high heeled clogs; Dimattino, from Zomp shoes
below; I’m also carrying my Kelly raincoat

1,2,3,4

      

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blue Issey Miyake trousers

To complete my Issey Miyake trilogy; the trousers.
Pattern; Vogue 1693, an Issey Miyake design from 1986.
I used a navy blue cotton drill from Spotlight, buttons from Fabulous Fabrics.
Hmmm, navy blue again.  Can’t explain it but I’m a bit mad for it right now.  Navy; so hot right now!
When I finished these and popped them on; I felt quite happy and positive about them, thinking they looked pretty sharp.  A bit reminiscent of sailor’s pants, which pleases me a lot.   And wide legs are IN IN IN.  One of my favourite pieces in the Paris autumn/winter collections was Dries van Noten’s super wide leg pants; slouchy, relaxed, oversized trousers in the plainest of plain khaki cotton chino.  So comfy, so practical, so unfussy, so damn chic.  I saw, and I wanted!
So I strutted out confidently to my husband to show him, anticipating a comment along the lines of, hey super cool pants! or something like that.  Ha! his reaction: hmmm VERY eighties, aren’t they?  His tone was not the tone of a man who thought the eighties had anything worth resurrecting, fashion-wise.
*pop*
Bubble burst.
Hmm, well, yes; no denying that they are, most definitely, eighties.  A full-on ridgydidge piece of authentic eighties, right here.  But I’m an eighties girl.  Owning that.  And anyway I reckon this shape is pretty NOW too!

In eighties speak we used to say gauchos, but the hip n’ happening term now is culottes, whether rightly or wrongly?  They are very wide at the waistline and pulled in with four big pleats, held into place with buttoned arrowhead tabs to nip in and define your waist, so have that little something different and interesting about them.  They also have satisfyingly deep slanted front pockets, like all the 80’s and early 90’s Vogues used to have.

Some technical bizzo:  the instructions left some parts a little bit shonky/half-done; I went back and unpicked a few spots so I could re-do/overlock to neaten it up inside when I realised that was the case…  Also, the construction of the waistband was a little strange, and so I modified it slightly; instead of hand-stitching the short edges of the waistband facing, I wrapped it around over on the outside of the waistband and front, machine-stitched the side seams, then pulling the front back through so the front is all nicely enclosed between the waistband/waistband facing.  This results in it all being far more securely stitched together.  I still fell-stitched the lower edge of the facing though.

Finally though, I couldn’t be happier with the finished product! so I’m deducting just one point for the dodgy waistband construction issues.
Happiness factor; 9/10

Details:
Pants; Vogue 1693, navy blue cotton drill
Top; Nettie Tshirt with breast pocket, Closet Case patterns, details here
Shoes; bensimon, from seed boutique

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not quite so baggy, blue pants

Remember these trousers below? well, they’ve had a little makeover!

before…

These are the tapered trousers from “she has a mannish style” a Japanese pattern book by Yuko Takada.  Renamed “She Wears the Pants” for the English version of the book, in spite of the fact that there are very few patterns for pants in there.  Bad re-name, imo.  Very misleading.
Anyway, this wasn’t a drastic re-vamp, but to my mind they look waaaay better now.  I removed a tonne of dropped-crotchedness from these trousers; and I realise that’s not an actual word… and now things are a lot more streamlined and far less, er, nappy-like, perish the thought.  
Pre the re-do, I was all happy and “how cool are these?”, and then the second time I reached for them… well an “o my gawwwwd” lightning bolt struck.  It was like; I’d had a fun first day, wearing something new and cool and funky and out-there, but now I just wanted some nice pants, thank you very much.  
I had to Do Something and just grabbed my unpicker… *inner screaming* JUST DO IT!!!!!!

Capricious is my middle name, don’t you know.   Anyway, I capriciously ripped open the crotch and almost the entire of each inside leg seam.  Followed by some non-capricous, actually quite careful experiments; pinning/trialling new crotch curves within the constraints of the existing curve.  Luckily the legs had enough cloth area that I could get a nice new curve that I decided was reasonably flattering to my be-hind, ahem.  I ended up cutting away a big wedge off of each inner leg edge: 5.5cm from each of the front inner leg top edges, and a whopping 8.5cm from each of the back inner leg top edges; in each case tapering all the way down to nothing at the lower hem.  And re-sewed it all up again. 

that taper goes nearly all the way down to the lower hem

Everything else is still the same, including this back belt that I really love.  It’s a nice feature to the back, and cinching in the waist to define it is a good idea in an otherwise rather loose and baggy style.

And now?  I’m satisfied  🙂

Details:
Trousers; tapered trousers 13 from the Japanese pattern book “she has a mannish style” (also known as She wears the Pants) by Yuko Takada, modified, blue cotton corduroy
Top; Nettie bodysuit by Closet Case patterns; burnt orange stretch, details and my review of this pattern here
Scarf; a kit from Ivy and Maude (now Calico and Ivy), knitted by me, details here

Sorry for the slightly blurry side and back view photographs… only upon setting up did I discover that the battery was flat in my remote, meaning I had to set the self timer and sprint out in front of my camera!  I think it didn’t know what to focus on!  However, consequently I was far more economical in my picture taking; these three are literally the only ones I took.  Probably a good thing, and maybe it’s what I should always do!

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baggy blue trousers

My new trousers are kinda weird.  They are seriously baggy and they have a seriously dropped crotch.  But they feel sooo luvverly on! I think I’m going to like them, in their weirdness, even though I know I look a bit kooky in them.   *shrug*
See, every now and again I’m seduced by an unusual but super-cool Japanese pattern, the kind of cool thing that looks awesomely cool on cool people.  And then am brought back to earth with a bit of a bump when I look at myself in the mirror and am reminded: I am not very cool.
Ah, well I can but try, haha.  The thing is, these are the comfiest trousers evah, as in incredibly awesomely comfortable, as in like wearing an old pair of trackydacks or pj bottoms, kind of comfortable.  Cool people know a thing or two about comfort, it seems.  Well, apart from the ones that wear skinny jeans, obviously.
My trousers are pattern No. 13, the Tapered Trousers from “she has a mannish style” a Japanese pattern book by Yuko Takada, and  I could see from the picture that they had a seriously dropped crotch,  which is just what you would expect in a “woman wearing a man’s pants” style.  So I did something very unusual for me and made a rough muslin.  My husband was a little bemused but Cassie gave them a big thumbs up, assuring me that lots of cool arty kids wear this kind of thing at uni.  This was both encouraging and, um, at my age; also a bit not, ahem!

Whatever, I ploughed ahead regardless; and ta da!
Technical blah-dy blah:
I made them in a deep navy-blue cotton corduroy from Spotlight, and cut the pocket linings and waistband facing from a pair of Sam’s old pj’s from the refashioning bag; nice soft and well-washed, navy-and-white plaid cotton flannelette.  I used a navy jeans zip, and a jeans-style, hammer-in stud for the button.  The pattern had patch pockets on the back, but since precisely zero of my husband’s trousers, not jeans, have patch pockets, I put in double welt pockets instead.  This gives a far more authentic “menswear” look, imo.

My measurements put me at size ML to L, however I found the waist/waistband in this size to be seriously oversized, by 10cm at the very least!! even taking into account that you make a tie with D-rings to cinch in the back of the waist, paper-bag style.  So I removed a tonne of extra width in the waist, while still trying to retain the boofy, oversized pants vibe of them.
I drastically enlarged the front pockets, by about double.  Seriously, the originals were so tiny you would not be able to fit barely anything in them, let alone hands.  I’m used to having to enlarge my pockets on patterns but these were teeny.  I very much liked the way they were constructed, with self-fabric facings and with a French seam to finish.  I think the finished pockets look really nice, both inside and out.

I’m not keen on the way the fly front was constructed, with the fly pieces cut separately only to be sewn back on immediately, leaving you with an unnecessary and bulky seam in the centre front.  I really cannot see any advantage in this, and prefer for the fly pieces to be cut-on.  And will do it in that way in the future.
btw, I have read reviews for this book saying that not all the instructions are given for a pattern; well they actually are but not always on the same page as your pattern.  The book only gives the instructions for doing a thing, like a fly front, once and once only in the book.  For example, the instructions for doing a fly front are given on p71, with the Semi-flare Culotte instructions.  It does mention this in the Tapered Trousers instructions, but since they are in rather small print in amongst the Japanese characters then it’s understandable why people might have missed that.  All the actual sewing instructions are illustrations, very clear and quite easy to follow.
So; in conclusion? I like my new trousers although, well to be honest I am a wee bit nervous of them, being so cool and all.   But I think my street cred will survive wearing them.  Actually, they remind me a bit of pants we used to wear in the early 80’s… omigod, did I just admit to that?!  Eeeeeek!  Street cred in tatters!

I think when you read a lot of sewing blogs and online forums and what-have-you, like I do, you can get swayed by the very popular notion that Fit and Figure-Flattery are the King and Queen of Sewing.  As in, everything has to skim your body just to the perfect degree, not too tight, not too loose, and be perfectly right for your figure type.  Hey, there’s absolutely nothing wrong with that at all; I buy into those rules all the time myself too.  Just that, sometimes it is fun and nice to stretch yourself beyond those rules, to make and wear something that is not particularly fitted, is not particularly figure flattering, and is just stylistically interesting and cool and fun and kinda weird.  And comfy.  Fashion should be fun, after all.  I think it’s ok to try out new and unusual stuff once in a while.

And they are so warm and comfy, I’m going to love every minute that I have them on.  Well, every minute that I’m not worried what people might be thinking.  
Did I mention they are comfortable?

Details:
Trousers; the tapered trousers 13 from “she has a mannish style” by Yuko Takada, navy blue cotton corduroy
Tshirt; Closet Case patterns Nettie, with short sleeves and a breast pocket, in thin white jersey, details here
Cardigan; Miette, hand-knitted by me in Debbie Bliss Donegal Luxury Tweed Aran, in Gold, details here
Shoes; Enrico Antinori, from Zomp shoes

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