Latest Posts

Rate the Dress: late Regency details

There was lots of love for last week’s green & buff linen and lace 1900’s ensemble, with the only caveats coming because of too-unique trim.  That tiny imperfection brought the rating down to a respectable but not perfect 7.9 out of 10.

This week I’m sticking with the super distinctive trim theme, to find out how far I can push that envelope.  The period and colour scheme is totally different though.  Late Regency.  Yellow and black.  Not usually your favourites!  Have I pushed too far?

Dress, ca. 1818, British, silk, Metropolitan Museum of Art

The really noteworthy thing about this dress is the trim: the stylized leaves and lacing on the bodice, the cord twisting through the leaves at the hem.  It’s quite something.

Dress (bodice detail), ca. 1818, British, silk, Metropolitan Museum of Art

Dress (detail), ca. 1818, British, silk, Metropolitan Museum of Art

What do you think?  Too crazy and distinctive, or a wonderfully unique frock, sure to stand out in a crowd in the right way?

Rate the Dress on a scale of 1 to 10

Simplicity 2733: a pattern mystery

I found Simplicity 2733 at an op-shop a few days ago, and it has turned out to be quite a fascinating piece.

On the surface, it looks simple: a basic late ’50s blouse pattern:

Simplicity 2733 late 1950s blouse

The pattern wasn’t a lot, and I was in a hurry, so I didn’t inspect it at the op shop.  When I came home and opened it up, I was surprised for two reasons.

First, I got a bonus!  It also included most of the pieces (all but the longer sleeve view) and the instructions for Simplicity 1735.  Sweet!

Simplicity 1735 via Ebay

The second surprise?  Simplicity 2733 is late 1950s, but the pattern is a non-printed, pre-cut perforated pattern, of the type that you rarely see in post mid-1940s patterns.  I have never before seen a 1950s pattern of this type.

What a conundrum.  Why is this particular pattern so old-fashioned?  Are all copies of 2733 like this?  Or was this pattern produced in NZ, using older technology, meaning that the NZ version of the pattern is different than the usual international version?

Any thoughts?  If you own Simplicity 2733, what is your version like?

The ‘Serendipity’ Underbust corset

I love my underbust corset pattern, and I keep making it up.  I also keep making up versions of it and not quite finishing them.  For once though, this served me in good stead.  Five Sew Weekly challenges ago I was sewing like mad, desperately trying to get everything made the four challenges I would miss while I was in Hawaii, where I wouldn’t much in the way of sewing accoutrements or internet access.

Other than being frantically busy, I had one massive problem: Mena hadn’t put the Sew Weekly challenges past the 8th of Sept up before I left, and I would get back Friday the 14th  Sept, with the next, unknown, challenge due on Sunday night. Not a lot of time to sew, especially since I would kinda need to spend time with Mr D too!

So I took a deep breath, crossed my fingers, prayed, and tackled my UFO pile, hoping that I’d get something finished that would fit the challenge due on the 16th. After all, we’d had so many specific challenges in the recent past: yellow, and collars, and plaid (haven’t shown you that one yet because I don’t have good images).  Surely  Mena wouldn’t be mean enough to throw  another  challenge at us that required a very specific fabric or technique, right?

Well, the challenge the week of the 14th Sept was polka dots.

Ack! So specific!

And yet, amazingly, through the most fortuitously providential and serendipitous coincidence (try saying that five times fast!), the last thing I manage to finish in my last big rush of sewing was a polka dotted underbust corset for me that I’d got 90% done months ago.  Just  the thing. Hooray!

I really don’t know how I got so lucky. Not only did the corset perfectly fit the challenge, it’s also probably the only polka-dotted garment I have ever sewn in my entire sewing career. It even has polka dotted ribbons!

The other serendipitous thing about this corset?  The photoshoot.  It was madly rushed, poorly organised, not at all thought out, I didn’t go anywhere special, and it looks amazing!  Thanks Shell!  It’s so amazing I’ve just stuck a bunch of photos up in a gallery, so ya’ll can watch me be vain without having to scroll down.

Just the facts, Ma’am:

Fabric:  .5 metre of red & white spotted cotton (inherited from Nana), .5 metre of linen interlining (thrifted for $1), .5 meter white lining (from stash).

Pattern:  Mine own

Year:  2012

Notions:  One steel busk (free) , plastic whalebone boning ($10), self-made piping, bias binding rescued off another item, corset lacing ($4).

And the insides?  Picture perfect inside and out.

Hours:  5 (plus hundreds developing the pattern, but those don’t count, right?)

First worn?:  Monday 17 Sep for the photoshoot

Wear again?:  Not sure.  It’s kinda cutesy for me.

Make again?:  Well, of course!

Total cost:  $15