Sunday, October 20, 2013

#5 - Vintage Challenge - Channeling Lucy Ricardo!


I am also linking up to Patti's Visible Monday!

TOC:

Rules for Challenge 5

Sewing a garment from a vintage pattern is challenging. The pintucks, pleats, and precise fit can be difficult to master. Choose a vintage pattern and modernize the piece. You can modernize your piece with styling, embellishment, or fabric.

You will be judged on difficulty, craftsmanship, how fashion forward your look is, and FIT!

Take your time, you will have two weeks to make it perfect!

What Makes a Vintage Pattern Vintage?

When this challenge was assigned, I asked the folks at FabricMart to define vintage. I was told that any pattern more than 20 years old qualified as vintage. Given that this is 2013, any pattern created before 1993 qualified. I own plenty of patterns from the 80s and early 90s, particularly by Issey Miyake.

I was pretty sure that the judges had something different in mind, based on the reference to "pintucks and pleats" and the emphasis on fit. (Can you imagine trying to judge someone based on the fit of most classic Issey Miyake patterns? lol)

I decided to focus on a 1950s pattern, so I jumped onto Etsy and started searching. I found a pattern in a classic design from 1953, Simplicity 3931, that had never been used.

(Bless my pattern hoarding fore mother!)

I was born in the late 50s. Growing up, I enjoyed the show "I Love Lucy". This dress reminds me of what Lucy Ricardo might wear in that show.

This pattern features six partially sewn shoulder tucks. These tucks are echoed in the six pleats of the front skirt into the bodice, and are also echoed in the ruching at the bottom of the sleeves. For fitting, there are two back shoulder darts, two back waist darts, and three darts in the back of each sleeve. I also added side-seam bust darts.

Lots of opportunities for fit and fiddly sewing!

Sizing

I think that most people know that there have been several shifts in pattern sizing since the "olden days". My Simplicity pattern, which was from 1953, uses these measurements, in inches:

  10 12 14 16 18 20 40
Bust 28 30 32 34 36 38 40
Waist 23 24 26 28 30 32 34
Hip 31 33 35 37 39 41 43

For comparison, here are modern measurements used by the Big 4, in inches:

  10 12 14 16 18 20 22
Bust 32.5 34 36 38 40 42 44
Waist 25 26.5 28 30 32 34 37
Hip 34.5 36 38 40 42 44 46

Note that they renamed size 40 to size 22.

I choose patterns for the top-half of my body (including dresses) based on my upper bust measurement and then I do a full bust adjustment (FBA). My upper bust is 36", so I buy a size 14 in modern patterns, but I bought a size 18 in the vintage pattern. My full bust is 41", hence the need for an FBA.

Grainline

On most modern patterns, the grainline is parallel to the center front and center back of the pattern. Unless the garment is on bias, in which case the grainline is at an angle of 45 degrees from the center front or center back.

But this pattern surprised me. The grainline for the back bodice is parallel to center back, as is the norm. But the grainline for the front is not parallel to center front. The grainline is not on the bias either. It is closer to (but not quite) parallel to the neckline, which puts it at an odd angle. There are two advantages to this. First, the neckline will be less prone to stretching. Second, the tucks at the shoulder lay more gracefully (especially in a woven fabric) when a bit off grain.

Very interesting.

First Attempt - FAIL!

After making four muslins of the bodice, perfecting the fit, I cut my first version of the dress. For this version, I used an interesting polyester chiffon I found locally. This unusual fabric is a bit uncharacteristic for me, but I wanted to try it. The red polyester chiffon is a mottled red color, with bits of yellow mixed in. And it is stenciled with enormous metallic gold designs. I believe it is hand stenciled, as each stamped image is a little bit different. I thought I could use the stenciled designs in an interesting way by fussy cutting them.

I was wrong.

I am documenting this fail for a couple reasons. One is that I know my readers love to see my fails. That's ok. No hard feelings. ;)

The other reason is that I'd like to share some of the construction techniques that I used.

I didn't want any of the gold motifs on the front bodice, so I fussy cut to avoid the stenciled areas.

Tailor tacks galore, especially as I cut each layer separately.

I couldn't avoid the golden stenciled areas on the sleeves, the back, or (of course) the skirt.

I placed the stenciled motifs at the bottom of the sleeves. The sleeves also feature 3 darts at the back. You are instructed to work a tiny round buttonhole, by hand, in the center of the sleeve, several inches above the hem. Once the sleeve is completed and hemmed, you sew a tiny bias tube and insert it through the button hole. You draw up the string and it creates a ruched effect.

The sleeve pattern, showing the back darts and the location of the buttonhole.

I actually like little fussy details like this.

Mostly.

I draw the line at working a tiny hand buttonhole in chiffon.

I experimented with my Prym grommet maker. (I love that thing.) I ended up inserting gold-tone grommets in the location for the buttonhole.

I did make tiny bias tubes, each one about a foot long. (The pattern didn't specify the length, only that the width of the cut bias strip should be 1".)

After the sleeve was constructed, it was time to sew the hem. I decided to make a tiny 1/16" hem, by machine:

  1. Sew a row of stitching 1/4" from the raw edge.
  2. Turn the raw edge to the inside, pushing the row of stitches just to the inside.
  3. Stitch another row of stitches, 1/16" of an inch from the edge.
  4. Trim the raw edge as close to the stitching as possible.
  5. Turn the edge to the inside, enclosing the raw edge completely. Make this turn as narrow as possible.
  6. Stitch another row of stitch, 1/16" from the edge.
Step 4: Trimming the raw edge as close to the stitches as possible.

The tiny hem completed. You can also see the installed grommet and the bias tube.

Finis. A thing of beauty!

Once the sleeve was completed, I sewed a row of ease stitches into the sleeve cap. I used the technique where you firmly hold one finger behind the presser foot as you stitch this row of stitches.

This trick causes the fabric to bunch up a bit under the presser foot. Once you remove the sleeve from the machine, the sleeve cap already has shaping - making it much easier to set the sleeve into the armscye.

Finally, I wanted to stabilize the waistline of the bodice. I started to use a twill tape, but it showed through the chiffon so I used a strip of the fabric selvedge.

For this version of the dress, I modified the skirt a bit. I shortened it by about 10" and I removed the front pleats. But cutting out the skirt proved to be a real problem. I could not find a way to cut out the motifs that looked good. I tried a lot of things, but I didn't like any of them. I finally cut the skirt panels on the bias, and the motifs were symmetrically positioned at the bottom and at the top of the skirt panels. I didn't love this either, but it was better than anything else. It wasn't perfectly symmetric, as the motifs were not perfectly registered and stamped.

By this time it was Sunday night of the first week. I sewed the skirt together and attached it to the bodice. It was late, after dark, and I wasn't too happy with the dress, but I try to withhold judgement until the light of day, so I went to bed, grateful that the project wasn't due on Monday.

I woke up Monday morning, took one look at the dress form and I knew it was a complete fail.

Horrible.

Awful.

This was a Tim Gunn-style "make it work" moment and I knew I had to start over.

I re-read the challenge instructions and ran to the local fabric store at lunchtime. I decided that, this time, I would modernize the pattern by using a knit. I found a beautiful teal blue rayon knit. I brought it home and threw it into the washing machine.

That evening, when I took it out of the dryer, I knew it would not work. It was too lightweight. It would cling to every lump and bump.

Back to the drawing board.

Monday night, in the dusky light, I started combing through my stash. I was starting to feel gun shy about this pattern, but I was too far down the path to try and obtain a new pattern.

I was starting to feel desperate and I came upon this great fabric in my stash. I had purchased it locally some months ago, as did several of my friends. In fact, Jillian just made a jacket using this fabric, and you can see a sneak peek on her blog.

And, just so you can enjoy the atrociousness of this first effort, here are some pics.

At least it fits!

It's no better as a duster. In these pics, I am wearing the dress over a tank and tights, but I was planning to make a slip using a vintage slip pattern I had purchased

Modernizing the Pattern

The fabric that I ended up using is a very beefy, stable ponte knit. It has a rubbery feel to it that is most unusual. In fact, it feels a bit like neoprene, which is being used more and more in very high-end, very $$$$, RTW. It is a very unlikely fabric for a dress, but I played with it, seeing what would happen if it were tucked, pleated, and darted.

I realized that it would work and that I might actually like it. I was never sure that I would wear the red dress (or had any idea where I might wear it), but I knew I would wear THIS dress. And it fit the challenge instructions, which suggested that we modernize the pattern with styling, embellishment, or fabric. How much more modern can you get than a neoprene-like KNIT?

And please don't think that, because I used a knit, that I didn't fit this puppy. I fitted it like crazy. More about that in the next section.

Alterations and Modifications

As I mentioned in a previous blog post, I made 4 muslins of the bodice.

Original pattern piece. I've drawn the lines for the FBA.

When I ordered the pattern from Etsy, I thought that the detail at the shoulder consisted of gathers. I twould be a trivial thing to rotate a bust dart into gathers. When it arrived, I realized it was not gathers, it was three carefully positioned, partially sewn, tucks.

These bust tucks are positioned in such a way as to remind me of a suspension bridge.

How appropriate. :)

The muslins I made were as follows:

  • The first muslin was straight out of the envelope. I wanted to know what I was dealing with.
  • Muslin #1, made from 99cent lining fabric. It is snug through the bust and the waist, and too wide in the shoulders. (Hey, you can see my new green iPhone 5c!)
  • For the second muslin, I decided to add a dart for the FBA and then rotate the dart into a 4th tuck at the shoulder. Because the pre-existing tucks were angled very specifically, I re-angled them a bit, to accommodate the new tuck.
    Fourth tuck.
    Wow, this failed.
  • I started over. For the third muslin, I created another side seam dart and this time I rotated it to the pre-existing tucks - increasing each one.
    Increasing the pre-existing tucks.
    This approach worked, after a fashion. But I felt that the resulting tucks became too bulky and less elegant than the original version. Sigh.
  • For the fourth muslin, I finally accepted that I was going to have to leave the dart as a side seam bust dart. This approach worked, but lacked elegance and finesse.
    Side seam bust dart. The waist has also been increased by 1" and the shoulder has been narrowed by 1-1/4"

The alterations I made to this pattern were actually fairly minimal. This surprised me. In the end, I only added a 1" FBA, increased the front waist by 1", and narrowed the shoulder by 1-1/4". I also lengthened center front by 1-1/2". That was it! I constructed the skirt (with pockets) exactly as designed, with six front pleats. I even used the length of the skirt, as designed.

Front, sans belt, so you can see the fit
Back, sans belt
The red version used standard Prym grommets. The beefy ponte required a heavier grommet, so I got out my heavy-duty grommet setters and did some experimenting. I ended up using my size 00 grommets and setter, which makes a hole that is approximately 3/16" wide. For this dress, I sewed the strings that are inserted into the grommets using 1" strips from a solid black rayon lycra knit.

Conclusion

I am so glad that I made this dress using this fabric. I wore it today and received several unsolicitations. It is very comfy and it does feel like "me", despite the fact that it is made directly from a 1953 pattern. And, I have to admit it, I really enjoyed using a vintage pattern. I can see the appeal. For one thing, it is *beautifully* drafted. There are such subtleties in the drafting that I do not generally see in modern patterns.

I may even make more vintage patterns in future! (And no one is more surprised than me, to say this!) :)

More Pictures

I am wearing the necklace I made in the first challenge as a bracelet

Twirling!

Look Ma! It's a suspension bridge!!

Pattern

Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Sewing Competition Update and Craftsy Award Voting


Vote for me for Craftsy's blogger awards!

WOW!

I just learned I have made it to round 2 of the voting for the Craftsy Blogger Award for best sewing blog! I threw the button on my blog a week or so ago but I didn't mention it, so I am grateful to those of you who voted!

The other three blogs in my category are totally new to me, but they look interesting!

Round 2 of voting has begun. Please consider voting! (You can click the badge above or on the right to vote.)

Let me update you a bit on the Vintage Challenge.

  • As I mentioned on Saturday, last week I made 4 muslins to perfect the fit.
  • I bought fashion fabric.
  • I cut into the fashion fabric.
  • I mostly completed the garment over the weekend.
  • It was ATROCIOUS. (A failure due to choice of fabric AND pattern changes.)
  • I thought about plan B.
  • I bought more fabric.
  • I machine washed and dried the fabric.
  • I realized that the new fabric would NOT work.
  • I combed through my stash.
  • I found another fabric that I think will work. (I hope.)
  • I cut some of the pattern and started sewing.

That's where I am now. The garment is partially cut out and partially sewn.

I've been stress eating.

Rats.

Lots has been going on in my work life and personal life, causing me some stress. In fact, so much so that it's been hard to fully focus on the sewing competition, but I will be buckling down!

Saturday, October 12, 2013

Next Challenge


Thanks so much for your votes and support in challenge #4! Though I can't respond to all of your comments, please know that I read and value each one! (And some just crack me up!)

I made it through to the next challenge.

Challenge #5 has been posted. And, let me tell you, the competition is heating up. Though, in all honesty, I don't feel that I am really competing with other sewists. I am pushing myself and it's been great for my mojo. I really enjoy seeing what I can do with a challenge, even though I sometimes cringe on the first read through.

Let's take challenge #5, as a case in point:

Sewing a garment from a vintage pattern is challenging. The pintucks, pleats, and precise fit can be difficult to master. Choose a vintage pattern and modernize the piece. You can modernize your piece with styling, embellishment, or fabric.

You will be judged on difficulty, craftsmanship, how fashion forward your look is, and FIT!

Take your time, you will have two weeks to make it perfect!

This is definitely not my challenge! I am glad we have two weeks to complete it. I believe we were given an extra week because we have to secure a vintage pattern and, it's true, mine took several days to arrive. It arrived on Thursday and here it is, Saturday morning, and I have already made 4 quick muslins.

Yes, FOUR.

Why so many? I'll give you a clue. I have something that my competitors lack - a very full bust. And, despite the hype from movies and TV, that's not as much fun as it sounds.

I've been experimenting, and some of my experiments have not been an unqualified success.

Nevertheless, I am feeling hopeful and focused. And maybe a bit hungry. Time to run to the grocery store.

And, because I don't like to leave you empty handed, here is some eye candy. I was sent this link by a blog reader, and it's in French, but you can enjoy the pictures. If the item hasn't sold out, you can click and see more detail. (I forgot to ask S if I could share her name, so I won't for now. If it's OK, S, I will update the blog post. And thanks!)

Tuesday, October 8, 2013

Please vote!


Voting is up! Please vote for the LBD challenge!

You can read more about the dress, and its construction, here.

I also want to give a shout out to my photographer for this challenge! I usually take photos myself, with my tripod and remote. When I finished the dress, on Sunday around 5pm, I dressed up and went outside to take pics. I usually walk around the corner to a nearby easement (alley). I set the camera up and realized that the battery was dead.

The sun was starting to set, so I went to Plan B. I called a neighbor and asked if she could take some pics with my cell phone. (My former cell phone died last week and I had just upgraded to an iPhone 5c which takes pretty good photos.)

Stacy was a trooper! She quickly finished making dinner for her teenager and then she spent a lot of time and energy helping me out. Having a willing photographer who got into the process made the photo session a lot more fun!

THANKS, Stacy!

We have started on challenge #5. I won't reveal what the challenge is but I will say that for this one we have two weeks. So there will not be a reveal this coming Monday.

Have a great week!

Monday, October 7, 2013

#4 - LBD Challenge - Studs Galore!


TOC:

Rules or Challenge 4

Challenge #4 had a fun theme! Here are the rules:

For this challenge, be creative and make a little black dress for your perfect night out.

Create a story for us. Are you going out with your husband on a romantic date or a fun night out with the girls? Where will you be going? What will you be doing? Your dress should be able to tell your story.

You will be judged on creativity, craftsmanship, how the dress tells your story, and fit.

What Is My LBD For?

For this challenge, I have made a dress to wear to the Opening Night of the Fall Antique Show at Fort Mason!

One of San Francisco's most popular social events, it also benefits the Enterprise for High School Students (EHSS), a non-profit career development agency serving San Francisco youth. The opening night is a festival of eating, drinking, music, socializing, of seeing, and of being seen. You can view photos of a past show in 2006.

My Little Black Dress, McCalls 6028, features a slim silhouette and is fitted via front and back princess seams, with a slit in hem the left front princess seam. The front yoke, and the back neckline, are embellished with silver-colored, two-prong studs made from nickel and steel - these strong studs required some effort to install. The back is finished with an exposed zipper.

I am also sharing this with Patti's Visible Monday!

Alterations and Modifications

I started with a size 14 (my usual before FBA). My changes were:

  • Narrowed the shoulder by 5/8".
  • I read on Pattern Review that folks found that the neckline is too high on this dress. I found the same. I lowered the front neck by 1".
  • The bust fullness on the princess seam was too high. I lowered it a couple of inches and widened it about 3/8".
  • Shortened the dress by 2", though only 1-1/2" on the center front panel because of the full bust adjustment to the side front.
  • Added a bit to the waist (in the front only).
  • Removed fullness from the hip all around. (I didn't measure.)
  • Used the hem slit in the left front princess seam.
  • Used the sleeve, but lengthened it by 5".
  • Installed an exposed zipper at center back. It was a YKK zipper I'd bought about a year ago from Zipperstop with a large ring pull. It was shorter than the pattern called for and a separating zipper. But it is not the boss of me. ;)

Studs

While I am not a huge fan of "shiny", such as sequins or patent leather, I am a huge fan of the edgy version of shiny: spikes and studs! I own no less than three pair of spiked and studded shoes and boots and I really enjoy wearing them. (Even though the spiked shoes can be a bit deadly.)

I was in my local bead store several weeks ago buying findings for earrings, and I saw the cutest spikes. I tried to buy a few, just to play with, but they had sold out. They had ordered more, they told me.

The first thing I did when I saw this challenge theme was to call them to ask if the spikes had come in.

Nope.

I was starting to figure out a Plan B, when Margy sent me one of her bookmarked links to an online store called, appropriately, Studs and Spikes, so I checked it out.

I was in love!

Late into Monday I was angsting over choose what to order from their bounty! Finally, very late on Monday, I ordered studs and spikes, along with a basic stud setting kit. I specified 2-day air so that they would arrive on Thursday. (One-day air would have been $45 for this order.) Then, on Tuesday, I thought some more. I thought and thought. It's difficult to buy supplies when you don't *really* know what you are doing.

And I couldn't fully decide what I was doing until I could play with the supplies.

It's a pickle, I tell you.

Around midnight on Tuesday, I made another order. This time only for studs in a different shape and several sizes. Again, I specified 2-day air so that the order would arrive on Friday. (Though, of course, I was hoping it would arrive sooner.)

My first order arrived late Thursday and I got busy with samples. I thought I had figured out my dress design (which I had partially muslined) and fabric, but that was now challenged. I started grabbing bits of other black fabrics in my stash and studding those, too.

I quickly decided that, as cute as they were, I preferred the studs on my dress-weight fabrics. The spikes require a very beefy base, such as a firm leather. (Though I will have fun using them on another project, as they are so cute!)

I'm glad I ordered a lot of extra studs, as it took me awhile to figure out the sort of interfacing I needed, and how to get the studs to line up properly. These studs are made from a fairly rigid metal made from nickel and steel. The prongs require force to bend. Also, once I had interfaced the fabric, it was more difficult to insert the prongs.

What worked best was to use one point from a pair of sharp embroidery scissors to make a small slit for each prong. After inserting the stud into the slits, I turned the fabric over while holding the stud so it wouldn't slip out, laid it out on the table, and used the Stud Prong Press to bend each prong. (The Stud Prong Press is included in the beginning stud kit and looks like a flat screwdriver with an angle in it. It also has a wooden handle, similar to an awl.)

Through trial and error, I discovered that to keep the studs secured to the fabric, that I had to bend each prong all the way in so that it touched the metal on the inside. Bending them flat, parallel to the fabric, was not enough - the stud could easily slide off. (Again, I doubt this would be a problem on a stiffer leather.)

I found it necessary to stand over my workspace in order to get the right angle to exert enough force. When I went to bed late Thursday night, my shoulder (which is weak thanks to long-ago bouts of frozen shoulder) was sore from the practice run. By Saturday, my shoulder was throbbing after spending much of the day attaching studs.

My second order of studs arrived late Friday and, by then, I had run to JoAnn's to buy the McCalls pattern, cut out the yoke, and had started studding.

I had to take frequent breaks, but I loved the result! I am sold on these studs, which are beautifully made. I particularly like the pyramid and cone studs, which have an almost brushed finished. The dome studs are more shiny. (I prefer my metals hammered or brushed, rather than shiny.) Adding the studs to the interfaced fabric gives the yoke a hefty drape.

Here are a few pictures showing my progress:

The front yoke is interfaced with a fusible interfacing and all edges are stay-stitched.

Completed - the front

Completed - the back

Interfacing the back neck

Back neckline completed

Conclusion

This is an excellently drafted pattern and I will use it again. I love the stud detail. It is weighty, but in a good way. This will not be my last project with studs.

I am very happy with this dress! I am sure I will get a lot of wear out of it. Because of the stud detail, I will be hand washing it.

More Pictures

Shake! Shake! Shake!

Shake! Shake! Shake!

Shake my booty!

Pattern

Saturday, October 5, 2013

Next Challenge


Thanks so much for your votes in challenge #3! I have made it to the fourth round in the FabricMart Fabricista Fashion Challenge!

I was sorry to say goodbye to Peggy in round 3. I spoke to Peggy by phone after she learned the news, and she has a great attitude about the experience, though she was already on her third muslin for the LBD when she got the news. She is excited to start up her fall and winter knitting, which she wasn't able to do while competing. I have really enjoyed sewing alongside Peggy and thought she went out on a really high note. Her garments, and especially her coat, were wonderful and completely true to who she is.

On to the next challenge, which is a good one. Here are the rules:

For this challenge, be creative and make a little black dress for your perfect night out.

Create a story for us. Are you going out with your husband on a romantic date or a fun night out with the girls? Where will you be going? What will you be doing? Your dress should be able to tell your story.

You will be judged on creativity, craftsmanship, how the dress tells your story, and fit.

Believe it or not, I have never owned a Little Black Dress!

I still don't.

I got a late start on this one and I haven't even cut it out yet. (I did muslin a pattern that I won't be using, however.)

Maybe my "story" is that I'm going skinny dipping!

Don't expect a post from me on Sunday, and maybe not even Monday, this week.

Wish me luck!

And, because I don't like to leave you empty handed, enjoy this eye candy that I found on Pinterest! (Oh, Pinterest, how do I love thee?)

Monday, September 30, 2013

Please Vote!


Thanks so much for all of your generous feedback on my challenge #3 entry!

The FabricMart vote for this challenge is already up and, WOW, there are some impressive entries this week!

Please go on over, check them out, and vote!

We received our 4th challenge this afternoon. Though, of course, one of us will not be able to enter it into the next round. I am looking forward to this one. I hope I got all of my "dithers" out of my system earlier today so I can get started.

And, because I don't want you to leave here empty handed, enjoy this eye candy that Margy found!