Showing posts with label pattern hack. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pattern hack. Show all posts

Thursday, July 1, 2021

This Shirt Is My New Obsession: Christine Wada is a genius

 

I am clearly losing my touch if I missed this last week.

To my credit, I am watching this show on a teeny laptop in my basement


(which has been a balm and a blessing during our heat wave)

not in the promo art

So we gotta take this one apart because I WANNNNNNNTTTTTT

I am trying to find photos of the back of this shirt. Pretty sure I am going to have to make my own screen grabs of this. 
But I did find this, which proves how AMAZING the costuming is on this show
https://twitter.com/sophiadimartino/status/1410512718952607744


Also pretty sure after an hour of sketching that I am going to have to drape this to see how to make that one seamless piece and which way the bias is running on it to get it to drape that nicely. That's a woven shirting fabric.


This post will be continued. Any ideas or suggestions, lemme know in the comments. If you know anyone with any intelligence on this shirt PLEASE pass my query along.



Sunday, April 7, 2019

Bride of Dignified Pullover: Collar Transplant

Somehow, something went wrong.
Yes, the back is super wider than the front.....
I made a toile from the edited pattern. The back is enormous
And fixing it is .....pointless

I've had this problem before; move one thing an inch, next thing over needs moving an inch. 

In the end, I was chasing the seams around the bodice.

In the middle of a long walk, it occurred to me that I need to transplant the new collar onto a shirt that already fits and stop chasing the errors
(we aren't even near working on the sleeves...yoinks). Then I can slash up the new pattern into sections for my knit pieces.

And I HAVE that shirt pattern already. 



So all I have to do is trace off that pattern, and redraw the new collar opening onto it. 
I'm going to open it up a little, and lengthen the sleeves.  I was going to add some ease, but this is for knits and it will have plenty as is. I might put the bands back on it (scaled down a little)
I can open up the bodice and make it a little wider, toile that, and then decide where to divide the body into blocks for my ....collections of shirt images

And I'm going to reuse the sweatshirt fabric.
I still have about a yard left. There's enough between the toile and that yard to make this second version. For once I used a long stitch length
Just in case this happened.
HEY! Thanks Previous Me!

But then, this happened. Just hanging out at Pacific Fabrics, like ya do....
Alexander Henry Flying Machines 2016
HOW DID I MISS THIS???????
So I had to do this. I didn't leave any for you, and I've used it all up. The Cutie summer 2018 dress, updated with the 2019 Arm Expansion Pack (going to try to make the Lady Arms sound like an advancement, rather than an aging side effect). 
now with more arm

Still too chilly to wear without leggings and a sweater, but DAMN

So the pullover in progress went into a project box and we'll come back to it presently. I gots work this week. Mmmmmmoney!
Have a good week, folks.

Today's soundtrack: Morricone https://youtu.be/yRDDflQlvgc
and 
Herrmann https://youtu.be/ANn3qjr-0fg

Wednesday, February 15, 2017

Burda Burda 6932 and 6599: 70s Teen Gets More Clothes

Before the next paid gig, I wanted to get to the wish list for TeenStillLivingAtHome (aka the teen formerly known as Blondini, who is not blond right now)
He wanted a wool jacket that zipped up the front with pockets pockets pockets. 

So I adapted this one, not being really interested in redrafting from scratch.
Joann pattern sales have made me lazy; $2.59 for tissue with consistent sizes on it. Already printed!
The instructions for this are very basic, and show it more as a unstructured casual jacket than a man's topcoat. No pads, no rolling the collar, little facing.

I spent a fair amount of time with Roberto Cabrera's "Classic Tailoring Techniques" book, more often that not reading why I should not have done what I just did.
Le sigh.

This is the lining, from the flat folds tables at PacFab. It's a shantung style silk. It goes nicely with the gray and holds the pockets well. I had to mark a seam line from the facing on the lining to attach the front facings to the lining by machine. There's enough hand sewing in this anyway.

For some reason, there are no other photos of the lining / interior pocket construction. It took long enough, surely. I made the full lining, had him try it on as a muslin, checked it for fit and marked on it for where he wanted the interior pockets to be. The interior pockets are two self-welted pockets, one vertical , one horizontal. Same construction, just turned on it's side.

I used a Baltic wool blend coating from Pacific Fabrics. It's very soft and sturdy, but it's got enough rayon in it to burn and take a shine if you heat it up enough.
So a lot of this work was done by soaking it and letting it dry to set.


I believe I rolled and stitched this collar about a gazumpty billion times



This was okay until I realized it wasn't rolled in the right place vs the collar stand height.





Zipper basting, with pliers to pull/push the needle.


Second collar reblock




All that basting still didn't deal with a puckered insertion.
More seam ripper.


And more seam ripper.


Hemmed. Lots of hand sewing here.

Wool is a very pleasant hand sew. It's soft, it's malleable, it's soft.


And it gets put on and it leaves.

After the hand sewing and steaming, the overalls were a snap.
Well, sort of. The buttons weren't.

The Sullivans would not hammer in straight no matter how I held them or what angle. The nails for the Dritz that came with the strap buckles bent and broke. The Snapsource buttons on the left went in perfectly the first time, and stayed in. I am putting this in here so I can remember which ones to buy next time, as I have fallen down this rabbit hole before. You will not fool me again!

The denim was WAAAAAY offgrain and got the 'nailed to the wall treatment

How this works: I alter the pattern on the left and read the pattern on the right for amusement. And a little instruction on seam order in men's jeans.
And I don't know why I bother. The theme of this post should be "Burda will get you most of the way there, but you really should consult a book before you make one of their patterns." 

Burda isn't bad, just vague. The pictures of the pattern pieces are on the tissue, not on the instructions, so you need to open the whole tissue to refer to the images of which piece is which (versus their listed descriptions in the instructions).

Facing? Which facing?

Okay, this is Burda 6765. But you get the idea. This was a bust for me btw. The two pieced sleeve is great though. Why this top has a two piece sleeve, I have no idea. But it's better than the top.

They are combined with the layout, so it's a space saving feature? 

The finished measurements are also on the tissue. Still annoying. At least Vogue's single size patterns would indicate this measurement, at the actual bust point. Burda: no. And this is a man's pattern, so perhaps 'finished chest' would be appropriate.

Not a deal killer, but annoying.


To be frank: I needed an immediate and cheaper option for a overalls pattern than the men's versions online, but this version needs revision. Less bib, higher waist, deeper pockets (the pockets are sad. The shorts version pockets are a pale parody of actual pockets - they are about an inch deep). But it's a start, and it's already printed in consistant sizes on paper. And editing it to fit SlenderTeen will be very simple.
(how simple? Remove the width in back piece relating to waist dart. Straigten waist band and seam. Boom!)

So things get longer, get shorter. It was pretty straightforward. At least their alteration lines are consistent from piece to piece.


After this, and ignoring the thousand button holes  (the Bernina needs a tune up STAT) and the cruddy jean buttons, it's a swift build.

I did add a facing to the interior back. I will run out of that striped sheet eventually. I will need to find more; it's perfect pocketing material.


 70s Revival Teen (the teen formerly known as Blondini) chose the washed denim and bronze hardware (silver deemed too flashy), and I went with a Union Bay silver topstitching. I know my 70s denim, and due to the button switch, they are antique silver. 

We were in the car, and the teen gets to run the stereo and the driver gets to yea/nay. It's been "Hamilton" or Rufus Wainwright, so I'm good.

He put on Kansas, and I was okay, but 
Absolutely
No
'Dust in the Wind'.
Nope.

I had the distinction of seeing them on tour in late 1978. I only remember it because Cheap Trick opened, the import version of"Live at Budokan" had just propelled them into the spotlight out here on the left coast. It was an amazing set; the hall cleared out at the break. Sadly, I was stuck for the rest of the show.
So when we're listening in the car to 'Wayward Son' and it's six thousand different genre bits, I was struck by how much more progressive rock they were than the 'heartland' rock they called themselves. A little Gentle Giant, a little King Crimson, a little Renaissance, the tiniest bit of Weather Report. Each a solo bit about 30 seconds long.

And how fricking long that song is.
Two minutes of melody.
Ten minutes of solos.
Ah, the 70s!
This is what the Ramones saved us from.

I would like to draw an analogy between Burda and this song, but it's painfully strained.

 Burda does have that two minutes of lederhosen, and they always have a couple of dirndl patterns, which have their place. Like scrubs; when you need them, you need THEM. 

Otherwise, it's always a little short on distinctive style details and the instructions feel like they got lost in translation. And they were better in the 70s (I sewed a lot of Burda in the 70s and early 80s).

But for $2.59, I'll take it.

Eleven more dresses came in to get hemmed/rehabbed. And I have a little more work before Emerald City ComicCon begins March 2nd.
And will I get to SewExpo?
 Ah, carry on my wayward....NO. BAD EARWORM! BAD!

Sunday, August 23, 2015

Some ideas are always with us

Vogue 8721, now out of print

You and I have seen this design many times over the years, but sometimes it is nice to have a pattern already made up for you. Elizabeth Gillett's Vogue pattern can be repurposed to make this fine Vionnet 'blazer' (their wording, not mine).

Essentially, it is backwards. The back seam in the Vogue pattern is the front opening in the 'blazer'. In something drapey, it would be yummy.

I do wonder why Vionnet doesn't dig into the mother line more often. It does seem a bit skeevy to me to buy/use the name and not the ideas. Unless all you're doing is selling perfume and licensing.


I am hammering away on three shirts for the Refashioners 2015 challenge, in the audience participation department. Been putting up clips on Instagram, but not enough time to make a post today.

see the cross seams? Go for it, kids.