Category Archives: Uncategorized

I’ve been pruning…

… and a day of tidying up the garden leads to one very happy outcome.  No, wait, make that two very happy outcomes… the first being of course a nice, newly neat and tidy garden.  The other is lovely big new FREE floral arrangement for the house!  Doesn’t everyone keep the prunings for a really big and dramatic floral extravaganza?  Seriously if, like me, you are not a prima ballerina, then this is the best way to get gratuitous and regular fabulous floral displays happening in your house.

My outfit today serendipitously matches the new floral arrangement; so I took another arty, hand-held, looking-down-to-my-toes shot of my outfit, like Kirsty did the other day too.  I’m thinking we should start a Flickr group together, and call it Selfie Foot-Shots, or the Navel-Gazing Fashion Bloggers Society, or something… 

Details:
Dress; Burda 8511, details here
Sandals; Misano
Nail varnish; Glamourpuss, BYS
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Drape-ity drape

I have made a new top and a new skirt!  and am combining the two new garments in one post; since they kinda go together so well and all, and actually the skirt is so… well, bland and basic that frankly it doesn’t deserve its own post. My top is a modified version of the loose drape top, pattern no. 1 from drape drape, by Hisako Sato.  I used a soft slightly crinkly white cotton jersey, bought from the Fabric Store in Melbourne during my most recent trip.  Regarding the design; I really loved those lovely soft drapes of that front and back neckline, however, like JenC noted in a comment, this top made up as per the pattern is a … er, raaaather revealing garment.  As in, very very revealing.  The photographs in the book have been carefully selected, but it’s plain to see that the model is a hair’s breadth away from being topless.  And more, the top would be falling off one’s shoulders, only like, all the time
But I thought it would be pretty easy to alter the pattern to be less revealing while still maintaining the essence of those beautifully soft falls of fabric at the neckline.  I took out a good 20cm in width from the horizontal line of the front drape, and close to 30cm from the back drape, re-drawing in the armhole and side seams to be the same as the original, tapering out to the same hemline, and keeping those neckline edges cut straight on the cross so as to keep the self-facing as part of the same pattern piece, on a fold.  Terrific design feature btw, for those frightened of finishing knits this is an excellent easy way out!
Reducing the width has given me a top with the same flavour that attracted me to the original, but with coverage… yes, I may have some nice lingerie now, but I don’t want to be modelling it out in public for everyone on the street!
The side seams are flat felled, and I hand slipstitched the facings and armhole bindings in place for a smooth clean look on the outside.  I also added lingerie straps to the shoulder seams inside to prevent the top slipping off my shoulders, since in spite of taking out a whole lotta drape it is still that kind of design!
And I’m very happy with the result.  Such a cool and elegant design.  I can see this being lengthened very successfully, to make a simply gorgeous little cocktail sheath; how lovely would that look? 
The skirt.  Less exciting.  But ironically, its the bland and boring stuff that often turns into the amazingly useful and versatile stuff too, though; don’t you think?  The skirt is self-drafted, and identical in every way to this charcoal skirt from a few years ago, that has been utterly indispensible for layering and mixing and matching in my handmade wardrobe.  Indispensible, I tell you!  I used a piece of mystery fabric, part of the bundle given to me by my friend C from her late mother’s stash, and it is also the leftovers from this little Pattern Magic jacket.  Thus qualifying it for an itty bitty stash-busting garment!  Actually the top was also made using an itty bitty piece of fabric, less than 1m, but since I bought that fabric only three months ago I don’t know if it truly qualifies as “stash”  What do you think?  How long should fabric be in the stash before one can safely attribute it Stash Status??  One month?  Six months?  More than a year?
But the skirt is a definite stash-buster… goodness only knows how old that fabric is.  This grey side is the reverse side to that I used for the “wearing a square” jacket, a smooth, blue-grey colour, with a double-knit look to its texture.

Details:
Top; modified version of the loose drape top, pattern no.1 from drape drape by Hisako Sato, white cotton
Skirt; my own design, blue grey double-knitty type of stuff.
Sandals; c/o Misano

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Un-stashing

How awesome is this Sew-asaurus Rex??!!!!!
I’m sorry, but this button is just too cool to pass up and I just had to have it on my blog… well, anime, you see.  Renders me helpless to resist.  Fortunately it has a great sewing-related concept behind it too….   oh I’m so in.
This is the brainchild of emsewcrazy at Tumbleweeds in The Wind and Cindy at Cation Designs, and the artwork is by Jen Sy.

I’ve committed to using at least two pieces of fabric from the stash per month, for the year.  Hmmm, OK.  I’m sure I can gather the strength to cut into and potentially ruin 24 pieces of my lovely fabric … eek!     And do I even have 24 pieces of fabric??
One also has the option of abstaining from purchasing any new stuff too…  well I’ll give that one my best shot but definitely no promises there.  Well, what if I see something utterly awesome????

We have monthly themes to work to.  Ordinarily I kinda suck at themes; any sort of sewing to someone else’s say-so actually.  But January’s theme is itty bitty stuff, like using up the little itty bitty bits and pieces of leftover fabric in your stash that are not enough for a full project by themselves.  Well, a good quarter of my wardrobe probably comes from scraps and bits of leftover fabric, so I’m pretty happy to go with that one!
In fact I churned through the bits and bobs part of my stash during the week; came up with some likely looking candidates and got a-snippin’ and a-clippin’ : results very soon …. stay tuned!

Some housekeeping notes: for several months now, and still; I am having a whole world of trouble with leaving comments on some WordPress blogs… if you might reasonably expect some return comments from me, then please check your trash comments; mine may well have popped directly into there.  If you “un-spam” my comments then the problem should be fixed, for me too!

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paper-dolls…

10-15 January

I’m kinda excited about the paper-dolls; the nerdiness and and childishness of it really appeals to me.  And the stats… monitoring my handmade wardrobe, what I am wearing, how I’m wearing it and with what frequency…  omg; the latent geek emerges.  Of course there are so many more important things in life to be monitored.  But this blog has never pretended to be particularly d and m.  Just the trivia, my friends, just the trivia.  The fun stuff  🙂
Thank you for the compliments on my drawing, but seriously, y’know I really wasn’t kidding when I said my drawing skills are not all that crash-hot.  My paper dolls only look good because of the Fashionary …. you see, the figures on each page are already drawn in for you, naked, in very faint red dots.  All you have to do is draw in your clothes.  The line drawings on pattern envelopes can be quite helpful for that bit.  Then you just dot-to-dot draw in the rest.   And then colour in.  Yeah.  Everyone’s opinion of my drawing skills is dropping dramatically, right?
I bought my Fashionary, and also one for Cassie here.  And btw, this is not an endorsement; I received no freebies and I paid full price for both  🙂
It’s been super humid and muggy here lately, a by-product of tropical cyclone Narelle off the coast.  The weather girl informed us that we reached our minimum of 27C in the middle of last night and then the temperature started rising and was over 30C by 2am!  Sooo hot!  The rest of today was hideous, as you can imagine!
It’s been a while since I wore these sandals and I love the brightness of the turquoise and aqua set off against the sludginess of my eggplant purply brown dress.  This photo is re-visiting how I sometimes used to try to take somewhat arty outfit photos; looking down from high at my toes, trying to get all the colours and textures and the gist of the thing in one shot.

Hmmm.  😀
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Sweet nothings

Recently I received the Very Inspiring Blog award from pdiddly, janessewandtell and also from EmSewCrazy, thank you so much Pauline, Jane and Emily!

But I just had to laugh a little bit…  my 2012 round-up post attracted a comment, Anonymous of course, that read something like this…

Congratulations.  I think your blog is the most up your own ass (sic) blog I’ve ever come across.

My typical knee jerk reaction is to spam those mean-spirited comments, only now I wish I hadn’t because in retrospect it’s kind of hilarious, isn’t it?  Maybe I should make up a button and all.  Except I have absolutely zero skills in the button-making department.  Would anyone like to receive that blog award?  😀

Anyways; inspiration, inspiration… now I do know you’re supposed to write stuff about yourself here, but: well since I am taking part in the cloth habit Bra-sewalong masterminded by Amy at the mo’ my brain is stuffed full to overflowing with thoughts of lingerie! and I thought I would share with you some of my current favourite inspirations instead… some colourful and funky, some cute, some eclectic, some ethereally beautiful, all have something to give one some great ideas, yes?

Orange – custom tailored lingerie; source
Mimi Holliday, source
VPL source
Stella McCartney, source
source not found
Marni source
source not found
anthropologie, source
Roseanna, source not found
If you haven’t yet; do these lovelies inspire you to attempt your own lingerie??
I am passing the Very Inspiring blogger award onto:
I have been making some weird looking things… not very inspiring stuff I’m afraid.
This is my meagre progress in the sew-along so far  😉 3 tester bras.  At least I think I have correctly identified my size at last.  
Because of one rather weird result I got in one online bra-size calculator, which I didn’t want to just dismiss summarily without giving it the smallest benefit of the doubt; I also made up a 32C tester, the top bra pictured above.  Well, it was utterly ridiculous on me.  I quietly left that one out of the Flickr group!!  The other two are 34A (what I thought I was) and 32A (what I am).
And I have made my two pairs of matching undies already… they are now sitting on my sewing bench just awaiting their bra!
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Yellow pleats. please!

 

Yes, my title is swiped
shamelessly from Issey Miyake’s famous 1993 collection, but I reckon that is OK
since this is an Issey Miyake
design  😉

And you’ve probably noticed that it is yellow.  A yellow top.  Very yellow.  Quaite
quaite yellow.  As yellow as.
I’ve just been feeling very yellow-philic lately.  Don’t bother to look that word up, I
just made it up just then.
“Philic”, meaning “attracted to” of course.
Oh, you’re welcome.
Don’t ever say this blog is not ed-you-cational!
I’ve been hunting for yellow fabric for ages…. and it just
doesn’t ever seem to be “in”.  And
I don’t mean pastel primrose yellow, which is inexplicably always represented but which is too dreadful on me: I wanted intense!  Saffron
yellow!  Fierce yellow!  Bold yellow!
Finally I spotted this satisfyingly ferocious, yellow silk
in the Fabric Store, in Melbourne, during our trip away last September, and
snapped it up!  Then came the decision
of what to make it in… a decision swiftly and easily made when I laid eyes upon this Issey
Miyake pattern, Vogue 1142.  My
yellow silk is that very flimsy and flighty stuff, the sort that slithers
across the table with the slightest breathe, so I knew it would be a good
choice; not too bulky when tripled up with this pleat-tastic design.
Oh, another
made-up word.  Honestly….
I wrote a pattern review, below, but there is a kinda major issue with
making up this pattern that I thought it worth mentioning separately… the
pattern instruction just says “fold pleats in place, and press” and then those pleats are not even mentioned again, like bob’s your
uncle and that is all that is needed.
Hello? The sharpness and evenness of those perfectly spaced
pleats is only, like absolutely integral
to the visual success of the design imo.
Wouldn’t those merely pressed-down pleats simply wash out with the very
first wash??? Or, even just fall out on their own, with wear?   And then your top will just be a
formless flowy thing; which admittedly could still probably look quite pretty, but
will not be the tiniest bit sculptural and would have lost all the character of the
original.  I really like the sharp sculptural
lines of the one on the cover.
Accordingly I took the precaution of edge-stitching each and
every pleat down immediately after pressing.  This step was fiddly, and accounted for the bulk of my time
to make the top; but I think it is essential to keep those pleats nice and
crisp for forever: so therefore it is worth it.  In fact I just hopped over to Pattern review to check out
the other reviews and noticed that no one else mentioned how they
tackled the permanency or lack thereof, of their pleating; and I am curious as
to how their pleats fared in the wash??

 

Some deet shots; there is a heck of a lot of topstitching in this top;

edge-stitching on the outer folds of each pleat and the inner edges too,

the side seams are flat-felled in wide seam allowances

there is strategic stitching, artfully placed on the outside
of the pleats, to fuse them together

and also bar-tacks at the vulnerable side-seam/armhole
point as well as the upper edge of the side seam split, to add strength to spots that are subject to strain during wear.

Details:
Top; Vogue 1142, yellow silk
Shorts; Burda 7723, white linen, details and my review of this pattern here
Sandals; Misano

 

Pattern
Description:

Loose-fitting
pull-over top has pleats and stitched hems. Wrong side of fabric shows.
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?

Ohh,
the instructions are very easy to follow…
In my opinion a lot of extra top-stitching is essential in order to prepare
this garment to stand up to normal washing and wearing.
What
did you particularly like or dislike about the pattern?

I
absolutely love the design concept; the way a
couple of almost-rectangles can be tweaked here and there before being… well
to put it frankly; pretty much slapped roughly together, and magically become transformed
into a rather romantic, artistic and very unusual blouse.
Fabric
Used:

Very
thin and slippery silk
Pattern
alterations or any design changes you made:

After
pressing each pleat in place, I edge-stitched each and every fold of each pleat,
to make it a permanent fold.
Yup.  Each, and.  Every.  Fold.  To not do this would be to lose all those pleats with the very first
wash.  And since I spent about five
minutes carefully measuring each fold
before pressing; losing them was not an option I wanted to consider!
In
fact I cannot understand why the permanency of the pleats is not considered and
addressed in the instructions…
Would
you sew it again? Would you recommend it to others?
Yes, I
probably will want another one of this summery and airy little top sometime.  I recommend this top pattern to the meticulous seamster who craves romance and drama in her wardrobe, but still likes to be comfy.
Conclusion:
It is super comfortable
and very forgiving to wear, and nicely easy breezy for summer.  On top of that, it is a delightfully unusual, undeniably cool and
very funky garment.  I feel rather
artistique in this top   🙂

 

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the paper-doll project

I’ve been thinking about things for the year ahead.  Apart from continuing to make all my own clothes, I mean… that’s a given  😉
It’s fun to set little goals to think about and complete.  I like list-making and box-ticking, if that explains anything.

So, this year I am going to wear only my own self-made clothes, and sketch the outfit I am wearing each day in my Fashionary.  I’ve written before how much I enjoyed and was thoroughly inspired by Natalie Purschwitz’s journey, and this is kind of a homage to her Makeshift project.  Although Natalie made her own shoes as well as her clothes; which blows my tiny mind!!   So needless to say, making my own shoes is way beyond me.  Actually it’s probably impossible in Perth.  
However I can do the clothes! and document them.
I’m calling this the paper-doll project.

1-9 January
The outfit on the right was drawn on white paper separately and then stuck on with stickytape afterwards… this is because my first attempt at drawing that skirt underneath looked horrendously weird.  Awful.  Since I completely suck at drawing.  I’m hoping this project will change that.
However, I did like the way the white paper stuck on top made my outfit look just like it is; an all-white outfit, and not just like I had forgotten to colour it in.  So I started drawing all the other white garments on white paper, and sticking them in for other days.  
So practice makes perfect and hopefully my drawing skills will improve and…  oh, who am I kidding; I just like fiddling about with paper and scissors and coloured pencils and sticky-tape, doodling fashion-y type stuff.   Playing fashion designer!  I loooooved paper dolls as a child.  This is fun!

The hairstyle on each paper-doll is the hairstyle I had for that day too.  Since I basically rotate between three hairstyles; ponytail, “out” and messy bun (day 8) then this shouldn’t be too challenging to draw  🙂
The other reason I am doing this:  well, apart from fun, and does there need to be any other reason, really?? of course no.  But I started out using my Fashionary as a brain-storming and planning tool for my future creations.  But it didn’t take long for me to notice something of a downer; only about half the things I’d drawn as a firm “yes” for a future project, actually end up looking like I initially planned.  I’ve found that by the time I finally get the fabric and the patterns out and get going I’ve often mentally moved on and incorporate a whole host of little changes!!  There is no point in showing examples here, suffice to say they are many!

It’s cheering to see the creations that did get made but the drawings of things that might have been but are not and never will be; are a bit sad, like wasted space and wasted effort.  This year my Fashionary is going to reflect the clothes I actually am making, and choosing to wear.  🙂
(I didn’t put in any links to the construction posts with photos, but I can do that if it is useful to anyone 🙂  )
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Bra sew-along….

… woops, better late than never!
With all my crazy pre-Christmas sewing, followed by the stiflingly hot post-Christmas coma period, I totes forgot to post that I am taking part in Amy’s Bra Sew-along, over at cloth habit….
Join us!
Now, I have made a few bras for myself already but I’m ashamed to say that the most perfunctory of measuring sessions was employed before I decided on same size I’ve been buying for years and years and years and years (“and years”, recurring) since I’ve always felt perfectly comfortable in them…. yes, I know, lame excuse and how lazy, right?  So I have a selection of nice and comfy 12A’s (34A) in my drawer….   Well, in the spirit of “gettin’ serious” about mastering the perfect bra I did three separate measuring sessions in each of the following 85b International bra size calculator, the Berlei bra size calculator, and the Victoria’s Secret How to Measure page… that’s nine measuring sessions; and in each case came up with 10A (32A).  Hmmm.  No wonder my bras were lovely and comfy if they’re all a tad too big!
So for the sew-along, I am going to be brave, and try out the smaller size…
I will be using KwikSew 3300

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