Posts

Showing posts from September, 2014

Bones top - fitting after making!

Image
I am not good at fitting. YET. I am working on it. This is a stage in that journey. This is the second SewOverIt top I've made. My first one was made out of a floaty fabric that made me look like it was subtly hiding a killer bod. I really love it, despite the fact that the shoulders keep slipping down my arms. This time, I wanted to use some amazing stashed fabric with bones on it! It is much more solid than the first fabric, and I decided to make it in the smaller size to reduce the shoulder issue. BIG mistake. This is how I looked when finished: Please excuse the TERRIBLE photo. Mr M was busy and this is the biggest mirror we have!  I think you'll agree that this is not the most flattering of tops. Nor trousers, but that isn't the point. I couldn't wear this out, but I LOVED the fabric. So it needed to be fixed When I grabbed the back at my waist, it looked like this: Probably the best I'll be able to get... So I got busy. I found a length of blac...

The Handmade Fair

Image
Yesterday Mum and I spent the day at the Handmade Fair, at Hampton Court Palace. My view on arrival... it was a loooong walk round to the back to get to the fair! It was such a brilliantly put together event, there was nothing I didn't enjoy! I was smiling all day, and by the looks of it so was everyone else. We had booked ourselves into some workshops already, so we made sure to arrive in time for our 10am Edwina Ehrman (in conversation with Kirstie Allsopp) talk. Kirstie and Edwina on stage, discussing wedding dresses. Edwina is the curator of the current wedding dress exhibition at the Victoria and Albert museum. Her knowledge of wedding dresses and textiles was amazing, and I particularly loved that she gave the stories behind the dresses. At the end of the talk, she gave way some books to the ladies in the audience who had been married for the longest - 50 years! After that, Mum and I had some time to explore before our 2pm calligraphy workshop. We wandered aroun...

What I learned from OWOP

Image
Yes, I said I'd review OWOP on Sunday... but I got home from the school trip and went to bed. I'm still exhausted now, so forgive me if this is total garbage. OWOP was really fun. I've never done anything like that before. Here is a summary of my outfits: Lesson 1: a variety of left arm positions makes photo collages more interesting. I'll try to remember for next time! Lesson 2: The more I sew a pattern, the more confident I feel. I think that rather than aiming to sew lots of different things, I'll focus on sewing items a couple of times to see clearly how much better I get! Lesson 3: I cannot fit in much sewing during the week. One of my aims of this blog is to share how I squeeze sewing into my life, but be assured that a normal week does not allow this much making. I am now significantly under pressure to catch up on work. Lesson 4: Knee length is the best skirt length for my parsnips legs. Lesson 5: Darts are more important than I thought. Taking...

OWOP day 5!

Image
Ending on a high... This is my favourite outfit of the week. Possibly my favourite item I've ever made! It's the top - I didn't make the trousers! You'll know when you see trousers that I've made as I'll be shouting about it. Trousers are HARD. Waaaay back in the late 90's/early 00's, I had a weird skirt/trouser mix thing. It was a pair of black stretchy trousers, with a skirt attached. I wore it rather a lot before it became deeply unfashionable (and I grew out of wearing stretchy trousers!), but that experience put me off ever wearing a peplum. Until now! After making the skirt on day 2, I wanted to have a go at making a top. But the bodice sits just on my waist, so the only way to use the same pattern to make a top was to have another little 'skirt' from the waist. Urgh. I decided I'd give it a go, but didn't have much hope. Despite my negative attitude entering this project, I love this top soo much. It was easy to ma...

OWOP day 4

Image
This dress has a story... Check out our beautiful wedding gifts - rose plant, sundial and potted trees (in the background!) I've been wanting to wear more orange for a while now. I even had a bizarre urge just days before our wedding to completely redo all the flowers and decorations to get more orange in there... glad I didn't! I'm pretty sure Mum would have cleverly talked me out of it, while making me believed that I'd just changed my mind. So, anyway, when this challenge came up, I knew I needed to use some orange! I had just enough of the orange flowery fabric for the bodice, and just enough of the creamy stuff for the skirt. Bingo! I got cutting. The skirt fabric was a dream. It practically velcroed where I wanted it, so I cheated and didn't use any pins at all (saved me minutes - worth it!). The orange is just a reasonably solid cotton/polyester, so I left it unlined. First layer made, I started to hold it up to myself and noticed that a)the top f...

OWOP day 3!

Image
Hi from day 3! I made this from a budget bedsheet from Dunelm! I wore it for the first time for our engagement shoot in June, then for our pre-wedding BBQ at Ma 'n' Pa's house, then today! I really love the pretty flowers on it. I adapted this a little bit - it has a bodice a size smaller than the dress. I have a really tricky body - narrow shoulders and waist, with big hips and bust. That means that fitting is a big pain! I took the back seam in a bit, which made it narrower at the shoulders without losing anything from the bust. I'm not sure if that's the right way to fix it, but it appears to have worked! It gave me an opportunity to wear these incredible shoes that I had to fight for in the shop. Unfortunately they're so high and painful that I only made it to break time before switching to flats.  Awkward car park picture Our engagement shoot was on a pick-your-own farm! Tomorrow's outfit is made from the exact same pattern (duh - it...

OWOP day 2!

Image
Today was a simple make - I just used the skirt section of the Butterick dress pattern (B5748 if you're interested?). So  basic circle skirt. I shortened it a bit and made a waistband. The fabric is a pretty cool swan print that a super awesome colleague donated to the cause (thanks Debs!) and I was really stuck with what to do with it for a while. I think I made the right decision in making a skirt. There is enough fabric to make another one, so keep your eyes peeled for when I decide what to do with that! You can't see the print too well, but each of the round blobs is a pair of swan heads. Here: OWOP going well so far!  Also, massive thanks to everyone at work making the effort to check out my blog even though you see/hear about everything all day anyway! You're brilliant. :) Emily

OWOP day 1

Image
Okay, I'm cheating a bit. OWOP (One Week, One Pattern) is supposed to be Saturday 6th to Friday 12th. But I don't have time to think at the moment, let alone sew, so it has dropped down the priority list a bit. So I'm doing Monday to Friday, One Pattern (MtFOP??). Here is day one: It is a Butterick dress that I LOVE! I made it over a year ago while still learning to sew and I still wear it to work regularly. It's made of a green fabric with teeny tiny little pink, yellow and white flowers. I put a yellow zip in too, just to make it fun. Worn with my big white heels and jacket, I think it's suitably smart to impress the kids at work. I'm excited about this week - I'm wearing a mixture of old favourites and new makes. Fun, fun, fun! Emily.

Trousers update!

Image
Back to school! I started back at school on Monday and had a brutal re-introduction to real life. During the Summer holidays, it's easy to forget what my term-time life is like (hence managing to start a sewing blog). But now the harsh truth is very much a daily reality. I wake up and go to work, then I come home for about 6, eat dinner, and continue working until 10pm. Then I get up and do it all again. Not a whole heap of sewing time scheduled in there... This evening I have about 15 minutes before I really need to get back to work, so I could either finish a sewing project or write a quick blog post. Clearly I've opted for the blog post!! So here is my 'in progress' trousers. They are my first ever trousers from scratch and I'm pleased with some of them. Unfortunately, being cursed with disproportionately huge thighs makes trousers really tricky both to buy and to make. I had to make these in a size 20 (I'm normally a 14!). Initially I thought that I...