One year, a challenge every fortnight, and at the end of it, 26 fabulous historical garments.
How it works:
Every fortnight in 2013 I’ll post a themed challenge and we’ll each sew (or knit, or crochet, or tatt, or embroider, or whatever it is you call making a hat, or otherwise create) a historical garment or accessory that fits the theme.
I’ll post the challenges 7 ahead, so that you have plenty of time to plan and work on more elaborate challenges. You can do as many or as few of the challenges you want – I’ll be trying my best to do all 26, but if you can only do 6, that’s fine.
For the purpose of the Historical Sew Fortnightly, ‘historical’ means 75 years or older, so pre 1938.
Your item can be as basic or elaborate as you want, from a simple fichu to fill in the neckline of a gown, to a full ensemble from the undergarments outward: whatever you need and can can handle time and skill-wise.
I’m hoping that the HSF encourages research and historical accuracy, but (unless that is the nature of the challenge), but the level of accuracy is really up to you, your desires, skills, and your resources.
The dates for the challenges are the dates that the challenge is due (post it anytime in the fortnight after). You can start your project as early as you need to get it done in time – it doesn’t have to be done in the two weeks.
Feel free to blog about the process of making your project, or use an UFO that you have already blogged about.
Some background posts about the HSF:
How it started (or, the original post)
Tips and Tricks for doing it (without going crazy)
How to participate:
- Join the Historical Sew Fortnightly group on Facebook. The challenges are listed as events, and you can choose to ‘attend’ them, chat with other attendees, get ideas, encouragement, and work through difficulties. Then, when your item is done, you can post photos in the album for each challenge, give a description, and link to an online photo album or a blog post if you have one.
Or…
- Participate through the Historical Sew Fortnightly page on my blog. There will be a page for each challenge as they come up. I’ll post inspiration for the challenge, perhaps a tutorial or links to helpful sites, and, when the challenge comes due, my creation.Leave a comment on the page for the challenge with links to your blog post or online photo album to show off your creation. I’ll pick my favourite interpretation of each challenge to feature on my blog each fortnight.Grab the button below or the slightly larger version in my sidebar, and post it in your sidebar. Be sure to link it to the Historical Sew Fortnightly page. With WordPress your html will look like this:<a href=” http://thedreamstress.com/the-historical-sew-fortnightly/”><img src=”http://thedreamstress.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/12/HSFsm.jpg” ></a> (unless, of course, you save the image to your computer and re-upload it, in which case your image address will look different)
With each post or photo be sure to tell us:
The Challenge:
Fabric:
Pattern:
Year:
Notions:
How historically accurate is it?
Hours to complete:
First worn:
Total cost:
The Goals:
- To encourage collaborations and interactions in the historical costuming community;
- To encourage all of us to do more historical research, to improve our standards of historical accuracy, and to expand our historical sewing skills;
- To provide excuses to sew amazing garments from throughout history;
- To provide incentive to photograph these garments so they can be shared and appreciated;
- And most of all…
- To have fun!
The Challenges:
- #0 (the bonus challenge): Starting Simple - due 31 December NZT. Finish a project, make a very simple garment, or something you have made before.
- #1: Bi/Tri/Quadri/Quin/Sex/
Septi/Octo/Nona/Centennial – due 14 Jan. Sew something from __13, whether it be 1913, 1613, or 13BC - #2: UFO - due Jan 28. Let’s get something off our UFO pile! Use this opportunity to finish off something that’s never quite gotten done, or stalled halfway through.
- #3: Under it all – due Feb 11. Every great historical outfit starts with the right undergarments, and, just in time for Valentines day, here’s you’re excuse to make them. Chemises, corsets, corded petticoats, drawers, garters, stockings…if it goes under your garments, it qualifies.
- #4: Embellish - due Feb 25. Decorations make the historical garment glorious. Whether you use embroidery, trim, pleating, lace, buttons, bows, applique, quilting, jewels, fringe, or any other form of embellishment, this challenge is all about decorative detail.
- #5: Peasants & Pioneers – due March 11. As wonderful as making pretty, pretty princess dresses is, the vast majority of people have always been poor commoners, whether they were peasants working the land, servants in big houses, or (later), pioneers carving their own space in new lands. This fortnight let’s make something that celebrates the common man.
- #6: Stripes - due March 25. The stripe is one of the oldest patterns, appearing in the earliest textile fragments and visual records of garments, and its never gone out of style since. Celebrate stripes with a striped garment. Will you go for grand baroque stripes, pastel rococo stripes, severe neoclassical stripes, elaborately pleated and bustled Victorian stripes, or something else entirely?
- #7: Accessorize - due April 8. Accessories add polish to your outfits, helping to create the perfect historical look. This week is all about bringing an outfit together. Trim a bonnet, paint a fan, crochet an evening bag, sew a shawl, or dye and decorate a pair of shoes to create the perfect period accessory for yourself.
- #8: By the Sea - due April 22. The sea has inspired and influenced fashion for millennia. This challenge is all about nautical fashions, whether you make something to wear on the sea, by the sea, or in the sea (or lake or river).
- #9: Flora and Fauna – due May 6. Textiles and the natural world are inextricably linked. Until very recently, all textiles were made from flora (linen, raime, hemp) or fauna (wool, silk, fur), and dyed with flora and fauna. Flora and fauna also influenced the decoration of textiles, from Elizabethan floral embroidery, to Regency beetle-wing dresses, to Edwardian bird-trimmed hats. Celebrate the natural world (hopefully without killing any birds) with a flora and/or fauna inspired garment.
- #10: Literature – due May 20. The written word has commemorated and immortalised fashions for centuries, from the ‘gleaming’ clothes that Trojans wore before the war, to Desdemona’s handkerchief, ‘spotted with strawberries’, to Meg in Belle Moffat’s borrowed ballgown, and Anne’s longed for puffed sleeves.In this challenge make something inspired by literature: whether you recreate a garment or accessory mentioned in a book, poem or play, or dress your favourite historical literary character as you imagine them.
- #11: Squares, Rectangles & Triangles – due June 3. Many historical garments, and the costumes of many people around the world, use basic geometric shapes as their basis. In this challenge make a garment made entirely of squares, rectangles and triangles (with one curve allowed), whether it is an 18th century kimono, a flounced 1850s skirt, or a medieval shift.
- #12: Pretty Pretty Princesses - due June 17. Channel your inner princess and her royal wardrobe. Pick a princess, queen, empress, arch-duchess, or a de-facto queen as inspiration for a fabulously royal frock (or other garment). The occasional prince is also most welcome.
- #13: Lace and Lacing - due July 1. Lacing is one of the simplest and oldest forms of fastening a garment, eminently practical, and occasionally decorative. Lace has been one of the most valuable and desirable textiles for centuries, legislated, coveted, at times worth more than its weight in gold, passed down from one garment to the next over centuries. Elaborate and delicate it is eminently decorative, and rarely practical. Celebrate the practicality of lacing, and the decorative frivolity of lace, with a garment that laces or has lace trim, or both.
- #14: Eastern Influence – due July 15. The East has had a profound influence on Western fashions for millenia, from the Chinese silks that were worn in Ancient Rome, through the trade in Indian chintzes from the 17th century onward, 18th century chinoiserie, Kashmiri shawls and paisley, 19th century Japonisme, and early 20th century Orientalism and Egyptian revival. In this challenge make an item that shows the Eastern influence on Western fashion.
- #15: Colour Challenge White - due July 29. White has carried many connotations as a colour, from defining culture and social boundaries, to denoting status, to implying purity, or simply cleanliness. For this challenge ‘white’ is defined as anything in the white family – from brightest white, through to ivory and cream and all the shades between. Whether you make a simple chemise or an elaborate ballgown, your item should be predominantly white, though it may have touches of other colours.
The Challengers:
The Quintessential Clothes Pen
Le dressing de Melle de l’Isle
Jessie’s Sewing Adventures into the Past
Historical Clothing and Uniforms
Girl with the Star-Spangled Heart
Elamaa 1700 – Luvulla (Living in the 18th Century)
A Small Girl in the Great Outdoors
A Dedicated Follower of Fashion
Challengers are listed in reverse alphabet order. I’ll add your blog once you leave a comment with a link to a completed post either on a Challenge post or on Facebook









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I’m joining in from the UFO challenge! I’d meant to join in from the very start, but ny 1913 project got very delayed while I moved house. So here’s my uFO challenge blog post link: http://claremccutcheon.com/2013/02/07/historical-sew-fortnightly-unfinished-object-challenge/
Almost done with my bustle for challenge #3! Just need to add some ruffles.
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I joined! Such fun!
Xx, Caroline
http://dressedintime.blogspot.com/2013/02/the-historical-sew-fortnightly-3-under.html
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I joined! And started a project. This is the link to the underclothes for Challenge #5, I’m making a peasant’s/servant’s attire. Maybe more scullery maid like.
http://merlinstitchedintime.blogspot.com/2013/03/historical-sew-forthnightly.html
Christine/Merlina
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Hey! Can you please add my blog?
Here is my Flora/Fauna entry:
http://peryn-wn.livejournal.com/4246.html
Thanks very much!
Peryn/Isabel Westrose