Scroop Patterns

The Scroop Miramar Dress, Top & Tunic on Nina & Hvitr

I had a fantastic group of testers for the Scroop Miramar Dress, Top & Tunic – 6 awesome ladies who were nice enough to tell me  every little place in the pattern that they found confusing, all the typos and stylistic oddities that I’d left in because you start missing them after you’ve read it a million times, any places where the printing just didn’t quite work, and any fit issues that they had, so that I could make sure that everyone, everywhere in the world, would be able to print and make up the pattern successfully.

Two of my pattern testers were fellow Wellington sewists (and Wellington Sewing Blogger Network members), Nina of SmashtheStash & Hvitr of Historical Living with Hvitr (who you probably recognise from the phenomenal things she makes for the HSF).

Having local testers is really helpful, because it means I can see things in person, and get fussy over the fit in ways it’s hard to do from photographs.

Also, both Hvitr and Nina are extremely detailed and analytical, and Nina is a professional copyeditor who notices the most tiny inconsistencies in my layouts and instructions, and leaves massive print outs with red-marks all over them for me when pattern testing – which basically makes her my favourite person in the world!

Having local testers is also really helpful because you can talk them into doing photoshoots with you, so you get lots of images of the finished garment.  And, being the awesome women they are,  they will even do them on the most Wellington of spring days: when the wind is a howling gale that leaves  your hair, clothes, umbrellas, sundry leaves, and unexpected passerbys who didn’t stand firmly enough, plastered against you as you pose.

So we had to work really hard for these photos, and find any sheltered corners we could!

Nina made the dress version of the Miramar in a very lightweight knit in periwinkle blue and white with an abstract marbled pattern:

The Scroop Patterns Miramar Dress, Top & Tunic, scrooppatterns.com

The Scroop Patterns Miramar Dress, Top & Tunic, scrooppatterns.com

The Scroop Patterns Miramar Dress, Top & Tunic, scrooppatterns.com

Nina’s fabric didn’t have quite as much lengthwise stretch as I recommend, so it’s very snug in the arms.  (I also relaxed the fit in the arms slightly based on feedback from pattern testers, and did some adjustments which should fix some of the back wrinkling issues some testers had.  That’s what pattern testers are for – to help smooth the wrinkles!  Not always literally though…. 😉 )

Hvitr made two versions of the Miramar.  A top in a midweight ponte knit, with a subtle dark-blue & black scroll pattern that was giving Nina and I serious fabric envy:

The Scroop Patterns Miramar Dress, Top & Tunic, scrooppatterns.com

Hvitr made the top a size bigger than her measurements, so it could be worn over other garments…

…Such as, her  short-sleeved version of the dress, in classic black, with the skirt lengthened to ankle length:

The Scroop Patterns Miramar Dress, Top & Tunic, scrooppatterns.com

(can we all take a moment to admire her crazy-awesome belt and fabulous Jeffery Campbell shoes!  I am loving all the different ways people are styling this!)

The Scroop Patterns Miramar Dress, Top & Tunic, scrooppatterns.com

As you can tell from the hair, even in the most sheltered spots we could find, it was WINDY!  I ended up giving Hvitr an impromptu mid-photoshoot braid, just to help keep her hair out of her face a little:

The Scroop Patterns Miramar Dress, Top & Tunic, scrooppatterns.com

Thank you Nina & Stella for your wonderful  help, as pattern testers and models.

Get your own Miramar pattern here!  

7 Comments

  1. The Miramar looks great in all versions! I wouldn’t mind having a Miramar dress myself, but I’ve never worked with knits before. You do give instructions about that with the pattern, right?

    • Yes I do! I specifically designed the pattern so it has all the information for someone who has never sewn with knits. I’ll be doing a few blog posts about it too 🙂

    • sewcharacteristicallyyou.comHi Catherine,

      I was one of the pattern testers and I never made anything with knits before I tried this pattern. I have done some alterations on t-shirts before and that kind of thing, but never a full fledged knit project. This had to have been one of my easiest sewing projects ever.

      Sarah
      http://www.sewcharacteristicallyyou.com/blog

  2. Elise says

    This is so much fun! The beauty of sewing for yourself is that you can do anything–anything-you want. Looking forward to more patterns and more experimenting.

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