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Felicity lends a paw

All last week I was frantically sewing in order to finish two new dresses and four new hats for the Katherine Mansfield Garden Party (because sometimes  I’m just no good at all at being sensible and restrained!).

Felicity, lovely helpful sewing cat that she is, seemed to sense the haste, and did her best to lend a paw.  She generally likes to hang out with me while I sew, but I’ve never seen her put such a concerted effort into being there for the entire process.

Her main concern seemed to be that the fabric would run away and hide if she didn’t sit on at all times, so she spent most of the week curled up on whatever I was working on, firmly holding it in place.  Very helpful that!

First she sat on the linen:

Felicity the cat thedreamstress.com

Then she sat on the lace:

Felicity the cat thedreamstress.com

Then on the  rayon slip fabric:

Felicity the cat thedreamstress.com

And then on the other linen:

Felicity the cat thedreamstress.com

Before returning to the partly sewn white linen, to make sure it didn’t attempt a mid-construction escape.

Felicity the cat thedreamstress.com

Even with the fabric under the sewing machine needle, she couldn’t be sure it was safe unless she was on guard:

Felicity the cat thedreamstress.com

Fabric was not the only material that needed her watchful eye.  She sat on the partly-made hat (as a cat ought):

Felicity the cat thedreamstress.com

And the sewing books:

Felicity the cat thedreamstress.com

And even when napping, one eye was left ever so slightly open to guard her hoard:

Felicity the cat Felicity the cat thedreamstress.com

Whatever would I do without her!

Felicity the cat thedreamstress.com

“A perfect day for a garden party” The Katherine Mansfield Garden Party at Hamilton Gardens

Last weekend I flew up to Hamilton to give a talk on Katherine Mansfield and Garden Party fashions at the Glory Days Salon at the Katherine Mansfield Garden Party at Hamilton Gardens.

Hamilton doesn’t have a reputation for being the most interesting  city in New Zealand, and I wasn’t sure what to expect.  I’m happy to say that I had an absolutely marvellous time, and that everyone I met and interacted with was absolutely delightful.

The point of the garden party is to raise money for a new Katherine Mansfield garden at Hamilton Gardens, which will recreate the garden described in Mansfield’s The Garden Party (that’s a link to the story, and if you haven’t read it, do.  It’s delicious.  The more I read Mansfield the more I love her, and the more I understand why Virginia Woolf said that Mansfield was the only person who ever produced writing that she envied).

The Hamilton Gardens are just spectacular.  I wish I’d had a week to explore them!  And the Garden Party was fabulous.  Hamilton Garden’s sets it in 1922, when Mansfield published The Garden Party, rather than in 1907ish, when the story is actually set, so all the music and decor and costumes  were focused on the 1920s.

A vintage friend, going to the garden party for the first time, commented on how much she enjoyed it, and how relaxed and friendly it was, and how much it reminded her of Art Deco Weekend, before it got too big.

Hearing her, I realised that the Mansfield Garden Party is everything I want Art Deco Weekend to be, and which it doesn’t always achieve.  It is relaxed, and friendly, and inclusive, and nicely informal, but with just enough going on.  It was big enough to be interesting for the whole day, but small enough you felt you actually got to see it all and really spend time with people.  And it’s New Zealand focused: drawing on something that is totally unique to us, and presenting it in a very New Zealand way.  Art Deco weekend gets a bit too big and polished and commercialised.  The Garden Party was just my size.

Plus, starting this year it had a Salon!  What could be more fabulous than spending your morning broadening your mind and learning a bit and having delicious morning tea and chatting with interesting people?

I was one of three featured speakers at the Salon.  Barbara Roseberg spoke on garden parties and  the flowers in Mansfield’s writing, Ian Day of Howick Historical Village spoke on al-fresco dining (utterly fascinating  – definitely someone worth making an effort to hear speak), and I talked about Mansfield’s garden party fashions.

This  meant pretty dresses!  New ones!  And new hats!

And models!  All of my Hamilton contacts were already involved in the Garden Party, so I ended up putting out an open call for models, and got lucky when three lovely and incredibly nice and helpful ladies volunteered.  It’s always a little scary dressing models based on a few measurements and a photo or two, but they all fit their dresses perfectly, in all possible ways.  Oh, the happiness!

The Katherine Mansfield Garden Party, Hamilton Gardens thedreamstress.com

The Salon was fascinating; here my models are reacting to a particularly terrible story of Ian’s about flies and food and WWI:

And the feedback for my part of it was great (Yay!)

Afterwards there was a mini photo-shoot with Tony McKay (OH MY!  Best time spent to results achieved ratio ever!  I’ve worked with quite a few photographers, and I don’t think I’ve ever seen one who managed to get such a great shot with almost every single click):

Courtesy of Tony McKay Photography and Glory Days Magazine

Courtesy of Tony McKay Photography and Glory Days Magazine

And beautiful gardens to explore.

The Katherine Mansfield Garden Party, Hamilton Gardens thedreamstress.com

And fabulous old cars to look at:

The Katherine Mansfield Garden Party, Hamilton Gardens thedreamstress.com

And a costume contest to judge (yes, yours truly got to be a judge!).

And roses to admire:

The Katherine Mansfield Garden Party, Hamilton Gardens thedreamstress.com

TL;DR: Hamilton is fabulous.  Particularly the Hamilton Gardens.  And my models.  And Glory Days.  And Tony McKay.  Go to the Garden Party and the Glory Days Salon next year!

Rate the Dress: Summer Whites of the 1870s

Huzzah!  We have a winner!  Last week I showed a court dress in black satin with gold embroidery, and, with only 4 out of 30 votes coming in at anything but a perfect 10, the dress scored a truly spectacular 9.8 out of 10, which is pretty much as close as I think we’ll ever  get to a perfect 10!  (such a change from Charles of the week before, who actually did better than I thought – 6.3 out of 10, for “Fantastic outfit, wrong wearer” as HoiLei succinctly put it.)

This dress is inspired by the recent weather: it has been HOT.  Not too bad in Wellington, but I spent the weekend in Hamilton and it was 30 degrees and 60% humidity, and I had models in period dress, and there was a lot of discussion about how you handled that kind of heat historically.

Here is one example of how:

Superficially this dress is the complete opposite of last weeks: light cotton instead of heavy silk, white instead of black, an overall  impression of lightness and informality instead of grandeur and formality, covered-up rather than revealing.  And yet, as you look closer, some of the same themes remain: restrained colour schemes with elaborate shaped embroidery for impact; simple silhouettes with just a bit of ruffles to create the impression of feminine delicacy, layers that create the desired fashionable silhouette.

These two dresses may be a quarter of a century apart in date, and at least a dozen degrees apart in weather-comfort, but they still aimed for many of the same things.  Can this weeks’ frock match the last ones score?

Rate the Dress on a Scale of 1 to 10