I don't know what else to call this dress.
I've made it over and over again. I've worn a couple of them to shreds.
I'm 5'2" (158cm) and cute was the default mode for many years. shakes head. I'm 59.5 in years, so that's less interesting to me than it used to be.
I blew through making this one, so no photos. It's cute. |
There's not much to say about this dress. It's drafted from my bodice block, and it has a front button cut-on facing, a 60-64" circumference tube skirt gathered at a slightly higher waist, no darts, short sleeves that have a pretty high armscye, and patch pockets.
For coffee 'go' mugs.
For coffee 'go' mugs.
The pieces all run the same direction this way. Particularly if you turn this upside down. Or stand on your head. |
I have been buying for this in 2 yard lengths to be able to match the fronts. This is needed more or less depending on the pattern repeat size.
The Sewing Woes has a 23" inch repeat, which is a beast and eats up yardage. Luckily it's mostly on grain, so I'm not digging myself a deep hole for later.
I cut one front, iron the facing over, and then match it up on the yardage.
The Sewing Woes has a 23" inch repeat, which is a beast and eats up yardage. Luckily it's mostly on grain, so I'm not digging myself a deep hole for later.
I cut one front, iron the facing over, and then match it up on the yardage.
I use the front piece and match the center front line with the piece flipped, make sure it's got enough fabric for it's facing, and then cut that.
I clip a notch at where that front facing folds over on the top facing.
When in doubt, I leave as much space around pieces for wiggle room. I can always trim back the excess.
Directions: I sew the collar facings to stabilize that open collar curve ASAP.
Then it's endless fiddling with making the front opening match up properly.
Unfortunately, the printing is not consistant across the Woes yardage, so I had to choose what I needed to be perfect and what I could live with.
My acceptable error rate is ......uh, I'm no Peter Lappin.
http://malepatternboldness.blogspot.com/2018/07/how-do-you-like-my-octopus.html
The rest just follows: shoulder seams, sleeves, side seams, attach skirt.
I add the pockets last.
i did get to use the nifty selvage on the facing on this one.
Sadly, the buttonholes have become the problem child of the sewing room.
Lots of picking and redoing.
It took me many years to realized I would be much happier unpicking and redoing, rather than shrugging and moving forward with the errors. I do thank Peter Lappin's blog for that; it is worth the effort. Until it's not.
This is the automatic buttonhole when I follow the directions.
Lots of picking and redoing.
It took me many years to realized I would be much happier unpicking and redoing, rather than shrugging and moving forward with the errors. I do thank Peter Lappin's blog for that; it is worth the effort. Until it's not.
I did hit the button stash hard for these.
These magenta kids don't all match each other. This is probably the only thing I will ever sew that they will go with, so I went with them. The yellow will audition again, I know.
I do love pawing through the buttons.
I might have a lot of them. This is only one jar. (the 'cheezy plastic button' collection)
great dress - love the comic print.
ReplyDeleteLove it! One of these days I really should bite the bullet and draw up some blocks...but I find it so booooorrrriiiiinnnngggggg
ReplyDeleteIt seems really dull, but you probably already have a bodice that fits you. There ya go. I regret not investing in a tonne of tracing paper.
Deleteoh, oh, oh. so much cuteness, I luv it. I can't believe you get all that out of 1.75 yards! Just my style too...except longer sleeves. Genius.
ReplyDeleteThank you. The thing that amazed me is that I've managed to keep that yardage even though I...have grown wider. Much wider. I always needed to piece the skirt as the backside has always been wide. Since I did not get taller, the yardage stayed the same.
DeleteI would trade that for taller.
I take that back. I'd rather be taller.
DeleteThat dress looks so great on you!
ReplyDeleteAppreciated the time you take to describe your sewing in detail, too.
:-)
Thank you. I like sewing and I like writing about sewing, but I find its easier to take photos of my sewing process than myself in the clothes. I guess I'm making a virtue out of a necessity (the lighting in this house is just dead awful). But thank you. They are fun to wear.
DeleteLove both dresses, but the whales are superb.
ReplyDelete