Saturday, March 27, 2010

Monday, November 16, 2009

Corset Number 2

I've made one finished effigy corset with tabs and it's too big. I'm going to try it again.
I'm using the Corset Generator from Elizabethan Costume.net.

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Altering a Man's Vest-Mundane

I was giving the task of making a XL vest into a 2X. I have decided to replace the back satin, since it's ripped and I don't have any fabric to change the front. It won't be long enough, but that's not my problem. I will just add an inch to each side seam. Very slippery and when I took it apart, I made a note of how it was put together. Well, it's cut out...here goes.

The internet recommended a book by Mary Roehr on altering men's clothing. Looks great.

DONE! Well, that was fun. It was a case of sandwiching the front between to pieces of back. I found it facinating.

Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Photos of Surcotte





I'm not happy with it.
It lists to the right while wearing, due to some mistake I made sewing the shoulder seams. The side openings are too low, due to my adding 2" to pattern thinking myself long-waisted. The hips are too snug, due to cutting it too small.
The fillet is okay, the barbette is okay, but the veil is too stiff(linen) and white. It looks like a nun's whimple.

Friday, March 6, 2009

2009 Medieval Sideless Surcotte and Cotehardie(con't)

After making this dress, I found an article that said it is rightly called a 'PELLOTE'.
www.virtue.to/articles/extant.html




The italics wouldn't turn off, so I'm starting a new post about the surcoat with nap.
I have made the changes to the shoulder seam., to make it shorter, I cut it too long in the waist. The hip seam is changed to give it the most width, I cut that too small. The bottom facing is assembled and ready to be sewn to the bottom raw edge. I will work on it NEXT WEEK. I will pin the the whole thing near the sides and top edge with safety pins to keep each section aligned with its counterpart. But for actual sewing, I'm going to work with the 6" of fabric in front of me, slowly and carefully with no paper or pins.
I'm not clear on how to finish these seams. The allowance isnt big enough for a flat-felled seam and I DON"T have a serger. If fact, I don't really want to work on this dress. I want to have one, but not make one.

March 17th.

I don't know how it happened, but I've just picked up this sewing project after a break and it sewed like a dream. I just sewed the huge facing to the bottom hem and it went on like a dream.
I've just finished sewing the seam allowance to the facing, right next to the seam. It makes the facing lay nice. Now all that's needed is to handsew the top of the facing to the inside and it's DONE.
I have handsewed the top of the facing to the dress. You caN see the stitches, but I hope pressing will fix that. Anyway, I'm calling this dress Finished. Now to work on a hat.

Hat First Try:
I looked at the Burda pattern and a site I found, http://www.virtue.to/articles/coffee.html
but found them hard to understand. I used a buckram like material from my stash as an interfacing between two pieces of linen for the fillet(ring around head). I used scraps of linen and muslin sewn right sides together, then flipped for the barbette(chin strap). I think it's too wobbly. Could be taller, to hide my head and stiffer.

Sunday, February 15, 2009

Pouch




Here is a pouch I made for a friend. She sent me a picture of someone wearing it. I have never seen these kind of pouches before. I used the pattern to make a prototype. I'll post that later.

I left the top unfinished pending her input. The hole may be too big. It's sitting pretty much upright showing the actual size. More later....

Friday, January 30, 2009

2009 Medieval Sideless Surcotte and Cotehardie


Ah, I'm thinking of starting a new project for 2009. I have purchased the Burda 7977, surcotte/cotehardie pattern and some fabric and trim. I did some sewing for Christmas gifts. I noticed two people are following this blog, gee thanks, I like your blogs too. I LOVE DRESS DIARIES. What an excellent way to sew. Even tho' I'm here alone, I feel the strength and encouragement of all the women who write dress diaries. Thank you, all.
The greenish dress underneath the light colored fabric is a store bought dress given to me by a friend. It fits like the cotehardie, but the sleeves are flared.

BEGAN DRESS ON FEBRUARY 24

The layout didn't suit me, so I made one of my own. I have tweaked patterns before, but never completely disregarded the layouts. This fabric has NAP. After looking it up, I decided it was okay to have the nap going UP. I won't need to smooth this dress much and stuff doesn't stick to it easily SO, it's my preference, right?
I cut the lining pieces (which will be visible when the inside of the bottom edge shows) so the nap is upside down from the front. The wrong sides will be together in the finished dress.
Pattern pieces were laid out this way, on the straight grain, all facing the same direction to get the nap to match:
*dress front went right side up on the fold. Cut 1
*dress back went wrong side up next to it. Cut 2
*godet(gores?) went wrong side up on the fold. Cut it 2 X.

Today I begin sewing and the very first center back seam had to be torn out after just a few stitches. The two fabrics are shifting, like velvet because of the nap. so I'm looking up some tips and probably putting pins in parallel to the seam.
I found this at http://www.fashion-era.com/velvets/velvet_sewing_tips.htm#Stitching_the_Seam_

If you don't have a walking or roller foot or a dual feed machine, scour your wardrobe for some tissue paper and place long strips of tissue paper between the velvet pieces and sew the seams through the tissue. The tissue can be torn away once off the machine.

[Update August 2006 - A reader recently wrote to me ' Please let me offer an additional tool: I've decided that wax paper is my new best friend. I design on it, can affix it to the fabric in a variety of ways, including simply holding it since it does have some grittiness to it, sew right over it, see through it. And, it's easier to remove from the stitches than is tissue paper. It doesn't shred into such teeny pieces.'

So whilst I have not personally tried this method it may work well for you.]

It said to hold the fabric taunt and sew from top to bottom, as it easier to fix the hem if the fabric is uneven.

I tried to turn off the italics but it won't budge.

Ok, I tried the above velvet sewing tips and didn't like any of them. I sewed the seams with mostly NO pins at all, going slowly with a regular foot. Also, I think the WAX PAPER method meant to put the wax paper ON TOP OF the two fabrics, not in between as i did. oh well.

According to me-MISTAKE ON PATTERN?

This pattern has a mistake on it. It calls for 56-60" of trim for the Surcoat, but I used that on ONE side. Also, I didn't understand Fabric I and II, so I'm using the same for both.


Oh baby, this trim is hard to sew down. I'll have to wait and see how it looks after I get the

GODET'S on. I'm going to hand baste them after pinning first, THEN stitching, since it's a bias piece being attached to a straight-ish piece. OI!!

Result: basting first didn't keep it from sliding, the top layer still ended up 1/8" away from the edge.