Showing posts with label pants. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pants. Show all posts

Thursday, August 25, 2022

Somebody's else's pants fitting Bridal Edition

McCall's 7910 on the left is the pattern we went with for the bridal jumpsuit, and the right photos are the inspiration pics that drove the fabric decisions.

There was pattern alteration and tissue tracing fun

 Remember the phrase "the wrinkles point the way"? We're going to come back to that.
I am made the toile in a pink ponte that I didn't want anyone to fall in love with. I wanted to make mistakes and take chances with this.

Trying it on with the seams on the outside really helps.
Wedding jumpsuit

First try on was way too long in the waist and neckline needed rethink. She is alllll legs.

I sewed other things to break things up: I made another Closet Core Kalle because I can make that placket in my sleep, I need to be reminded I know something about sewing here and here's a burrito yoke photo

Spoonyflower coffee cup fabric in cotton sateen. Mmmmmm

Back to the knit

Second fitting for this jumpsuit. The first one was a 'so do ya think this is going to work' (also had to see if we needed a side zip and yes we do) and 'is this what you wanted and what else do you want?'

She wants it fitted through the thighs, swooshy at the legs. She's the boss.

There are terrible photos but they let me see what I could not see when my beloved goddaughter was standing in front of me. Looking at the photos here, it's obvious where we need to go. Space and time to think.
hoiked way up in the front

hoiked up back view

Now, I know the back is fine without being adjusted, pulling them up looks terrible; it's the front that has the trouble. there's too much in the crotch point, even after shaving some off. The next set of changes include adding a stable lining for the bodice to support the pants at a stable waistline. 

When I get stuck, I have a couple places I go to on the internet: this one is for pants

https://5outof4.com/pants-fitting-guide/


This is a pretty comprehensive 'photo shows problem, diagram solves problem' run down of what can go wrong and how to fix it. 
This not related photo that illustrates the point that the wrinkles point to the problem: there's not enough fabric in the armscye for the fella to raise his arm. this is an exaggeration of the problem, but it illustrated the problem to the tailors that it's bad enough and he needs a remake of the sport jacket, because this is just too tight. He's not lifting boxes, but this jacket will not fit over a thin sweater, not even a shirt with sleeves.

For videos, Style Sew Me does a nice job
https://youtu.be/1gsHHK5TlEw
has a nice set of action shots (you have to smooth and reshape that seam as you sew) and some nice advice. 
I would undo the seam , baste it, check it and then stitch it, because my problem is not equally distributed front and back (and probably no one's is)
Baste and check before you cut.
And don't be afraid to put fabric back on if you're making a toile.

Spent a lot of time second guessing
Recut, resewn, recut in final fabric.
Better (also has elastic in waist)
It took me an entire afternoon to get this result, and a lot of mis-makes. Making the loops on the ribbon gave me my best results, but a whole lotta other folks would say differently.




This was a mistake. Pressing and putting the steam board over it was smart. leaving it on the ironing board overnight was a big error. The side seam pooched out to a bigger curve than it needed to be, so the side hip has a little bag to it. Bride is going to steam it back flatter, which should work. Still, a rookie mistake!

Clipped out excess in hem seam, used random pressing aide to hold steam in to set the crease.



So much to sew through at the side and so hard to get it all to line up. Ponte knit is heavy and wants to fall on the floor and pull out of my hands. 

I was very concerned with making sure the side seam for the zipper lined up at the waist seam and the top edge, and there was a lot of basting and swearing and the usual poor vocabulary exercising. It's like a white on white on white sandwich.

 Basted the zip seam closed to add the zipper,
I did this about fortybillion times.

Made a sash of the lace and poly organza. 


Sewed all ten feet of it, turned it, pressed it




Handstitched motifs to secure to the back at about one in the morning because I forgot I hadn't finished it. 
Bodice to pants, and this time I pull out the pins before I sew over them.
that's fancy sewing here.

this is as long as I can get the stitches to go.

Plushy elastic on waist gets little ribbon ends

Missing: photo of entirely hand inserted zipper. Gaaaaaah.
SUPER fancy sewing


I make checklists for any day or process that has more than two steps, so I won't forget something. 
I did not embellish the sash: I was too damn tired.
And Whitney doesn't read this blog so she won't know I snagged a lil Lovecraft for her.
Finished photo of jumpsuit? No. Too tired to think of it.


Monday, May 23, 2022

Bob and Variations

 


I can never make just one.


I have been wearing memade pants exclusively for (checks blog)
a jillion years. (2014) (and I did take the Craftsy Jeanius course and it changed my life)
https://www.craftsy.com/class/jean-ius-reverse-engineer-your-favorite-fit/

https://erniekdesigns.blogspot.com/2014/03/jeans-x3-sources.html
specifically: I just don't want to bother with the other pants anymore.

I have some things I want in pants and I got tired of buying pants and altering them. I got tired of pants not fitting, having stupid pockets, being uncomfortable.

I am not sure why I originally wanted one piece pants (I am prone to stunt sewing), but I did and I hammered on that pattern a lot. And the final iteration had the side seam towards the front, and an inseam pocket in it. And I was very happy with them, and was only lured to the Bob side by Instagram people.
(@theladywholunches, specifically)

The Bob uses less fabric and fits just right.
It does bear a strong resemblance to V8499 and V8561, both Marcy Tilton patterns
(please see http://communingwithfabric.blogspot.com/2010/03/vogue-8499-marcy-tilton-pants.html for her take on them)

Even Google thinks so; my search results for marcy tilton pants patterns shows the Bob pants and the Ethel:


So more Bobs happened.


Two yards, crossgrain layout: squeezed fronts backs waistband and facing for pockets (not entire pockets)


These took two yards of Ankara and used all but a couple of 8" x 5" triangular pieces.


A nice thing about ankara is that you can use it crossgrain to show off the print, and if the hem of the pants pieces is right on the selvage, the print lines up all around the pants.  and the front piece looks off grain. Except it's not if you look at the marking on the piece.
Well, we'll get to that
You should always mark the grainline on your pattern pieces; this is sewing 101. I've messed up so many pants by not paying attention to that, and the inevitable twist in the legs as they get washed and worn is just my pants telling me what a hack I am for not paying attention.
HACK! LOSER!
And looking at this diagram for the pattern pieces, there's an interesting set of grain choices.
The hems match the grain lines, but the grainlines don't entirely match the front and back seams. The front piece actually gives you a 1" by 8" wedge more fabric at the front seam (the gray wedge indicated below), starting with 1" at the waist and tapering to the crotch. I have more tum than I used to, and this is...not a bad idea. All three fabrics I used are so busy you can't notice the widening.
the yellow rectangles are square with the pattern's grainlines



Yes, it's weird, but I don't think it's wrong. the grain is consistent between the front and back, and the fit works for me, so I'm calling it hooray for the extra gray wedgy bit. I have added that and more into pajama bottoms to allow for cake consumption; why not start with it?

I ditch their pocket bag for one where the top seam gets sewn into the waist band so the weight of the bag is carried by the waist band, not the side seam (which the side gets sewn into). And my bag is bigger. bigger on the inside.
Inside out Bob pants, showing larger grey pocket bags (made from separate material), extending into the waistband and staystitched to the side seams


So here are the Bobs
Another Ankara, from House of MamiWata
and Tiger
from Alexander Henry, courtesy of Stonemountain and Daughter Fabrics
(I don't get paid or compensated by them, they have both done a great job by making it easy for me to give them money for fabric)
You can see where the pattern does not match up on the side (moved more to the front because extra pocket contents room under my tum) seam, and this needs to be a feature, not a bug. In another kind of print, I could turn the front panels sideways from the back, to make a contrast (I have done that with  stripes on another pattern, and it looks really cool)
This is a great pattern for ankara, as the body in most of those fabrics is really a great match for this style. The novelty cotton is a little too soft for it, but these will be fine once summer comes in August.

I suspect there's a couple more coming down the road....

Sunday, May 15, 2022

Style Arc Bob Pants: Peer Pressure Pants

 Now here's something I don't say very often 
"I made these because everyone else made a pair and they looked great on them"

Style Arc Bob pants

and even more of a surprise:

"And they turned out pretty great!"


Pretty much straight size 18, with the usual adjustments: moved the side seams towards the front by an inch (you can see that on the grid board photo above, and on this inside out flatlay photo.




changed the pockets to hang from the waistband, and faced the visible edge.
used the selvedge edge as a trim on the inside waistband and visible on the hem



And I have two more cut out right now, ready to sew!