Monthly Archives: June 2011

Lacis

I am finally caught up on all my clothing orders! The wholesale swimsuits put me a bit behind, but this weekend I finished the last few pieces. I have time to make things for myself again, and I have many exciting projects to share with you. One of them involves this pile of old lace, which I bought from the most wonderful store. Lacis has an entire room full of old lace for sale. There are place mats, pillowcases, fragments from cuffs and collars, crocheted gloves, tatted edgings, strangely shaped pieces of lace for covering very specific pieces of furniture, and a basket of unwanted old doilies. I went through this basket carefully, and came out with a stack of $15 worth of old doilies. I’ve pinned them to my dress form, and I plan on making something a bit like this.

Did I mention that Lacis is a wonderful store? Not only do they sell old lace, lace making supplies, millinery supplies, and all sorts of other wonderful crafting bits and pieces, they also have a museum in the back room. It currently has an exhibit of 19th century foundation garments, ranging from intricately embroidered chemises to strange cage-like bustles. I was surprised by the size of the corsets – there is no way I could have fit into any but the very largest, even holding my breath, and I’m pretty small. It was interesting to see all the layers involved in dressing a 19th century woman, and most of the samples are beautifully decorated (as you might expect from a lace museum). If you are in the Bay Area, it is worth checking out.

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Lace collar

Prima made this pretty 20s inspired dress for herself, but when she went to put it on she found that something wasn’t quite right. It fit well, but there was something about it that didn’t work for her. She thinks the light brown of the lace just isn’t her color, so she had me model instead. I’m always happy to wear such a lovely dress!

Her last year of college Prima did an independent study in tutu making. For her final project she put on a dance production which she choreographed, performed in, and of course made all the costumes for. The sparkly purple trim on this dress is left over from one of those tutus.

More photos can be seen in the Etsy listing.

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Summer pants complete!

The summer pants I’ve been planning and making are finally done! I’m pretty happy with the way they turned out. They are so wide legged they border on costumey, and I felt kind of weird wearing them to work. But they are so comfortable on a hot day, and they make me feel like the star of a black and white movie.

I followed the instructions I posted last month to draft the pattern for the legs. The waist band is just a strip of fabric 4″ wide and about 50″ long, and a lining with the same dimensions. I sewed them together (right sides in) along all four sides, leaving an unsewn gap as long as my waist in the middle of one long side, turned it right side out, and sewed that hole to the top of the pants, beginning and ending at the side zipper.

The dark gray chambray was the perfect fabric. It’s lighter weight than most pants, which gives it a nice drape and makes them very comfortable on hot days. If you wanted to make pants like these with a heavier fabric you would have to make the legs quite a bit narrower, since a stiffer fabric would stand out further from the leg.

If you want your own and don’t want to make them, they are available in my store. If you’d rather make them yourself, I’m happy to answer any questions about what I did!

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Isabel

Isabel relaxing on our first really summery day in a skirt she brought back from Vietnam and my new sandals.

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Summer lace

It’s finally warm here, after too many rainy weekends. It was also my first (relatively) quiet weekend in a long time. I delivered the swimsuits and am one dress away from being able to sew for myself again. I went to the fabric store with Rosie and picked out the material for my summer pants. Very excited!

The pattern for this top comes from Lace Style. I think it was my second lace project, and the first to come out like the sample. I used crochet cotton held double (as the pattern recommends).  The original pattern has smaller lace repeats at the top, which I skipped. It might make for slightly more interesting knitting than an entire top in one simple pattern, but I prefer the look with them all the same. It was a quick knit, a great project for someone new to lace.

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Swimsuits part 7: How to make a one piece swimsuit

Now that you know how to make a two piece swimsuit, it is very easy to add a little extra fabric and sew it together into a one piece.

Begin with your pattern for bikini bottoms. Measure your side from your bra band to just bellow your hip. Extend the pattern for the bottoms up until both sides are this length. For the back, draw a line straight across connecting these sides. In the front, connect the two sides with a peak in the middle.

Cut out the front, lining, and one strap like you would for a bikini top. You will not need a second strap. This swimsuit only ties at the neck, not at the back, so the single strap loops around and ties to itself (it’ll make sense when we get there).

Gather the center of the top front (like for the bikini top), pin this piece to its lining with the right sides facing in, and sew along the top edge. Turn right side out and, holding the main fabric and the lining together, sew the bottom edge of this piece to the top edge of the front bottom piece. The front of your swimsuit is now complete! Pin the front to the back with the right sides facing in, and sew up the sides and the crotch.

Following the instructions for bikini bottoms, put in the lining and add elastic to the leg holes.

Fold the straps in half with the right side facing in, and sew up each side, leaving enough space in the center for the sides and back. Sew the unfinished edge of the strap to the swimsuit along one side, across the back, and up the other side.

Take your new swimsuit to the beach!

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Strawberry pie

Isabel’s been watching “Pushing Daisies,” and it inspired her to spend Saturday afternoon baking. I approve.

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Swimsuits part 6: variations on the bikini top

There are way too many styles of bikini top to describe them all here. I’ll stick to some simple variations of the gathered bikini I described yesterday.

Perhaps the easiest thing to add is a small strip of fabric covering the gathers. This gives the top a sort of bow shape. Cut a piece of fabric twice as wide and twice as long as you want the center of your bow to be. Fold it in half lengthwise with the right side facing in and sew up the side. Fold it right side out, wrap it around the gathers in the middle of the top, and sew up the other end.

Another easy modification is to add a more substantial back. Cut a rectangle of fabric as long as your back (accounting for the fabric stretch), and sew it to both sides of the front. Shown above with elastic straps attached in front and in back and bellow with the usual straps sewn on in front and tied as a halter. The swimsuit bellow has a tapered band (smaller in the middle, larger at the sides) rather than a simple rectangle.

A tie front is a slightly more complicated modification, but still quite manageable. I’ve sketched the shape of the front pieces. Cut two pieces in this shape from the main fabric and two more from the lining. Sew the lining to the main fabric, turn right side out, and sew to the back (or straps) as usual. Tie the front.

 

Next week: How to make a one piece.

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Swimsuits part 5: How to make a gathered bikini top

The simplest of the tops I make is the gathered one you’ve seen in most of the swimsuit tutorial posts so far. It is made from two straps, a rectangle for the front, a matching rectangle of lining fabric, and optional molded cups. The first step, of course, is making a pattern. For this swimsuit the pattern is so simple I won’t give you anything to print out. Just take a ruler and start measuring.

You only need one measurement to make this swimsuit: the distance between your arm pits, measured over your breasts. Subtract 2-4″ inches from this, depending on your size and how tightly you want the swimsuit to fit, and you have the length of your front piece. Measure out this length along the edge of your fabric. Measure up 5-7 inches, depending on your size and how much coverage you want. Cut out a rectangle with these dimensions (2-4″ less than your armpit to armpit measurement X 5-7″).

For the lining, cut a bow tie shape that is as long as your rectangle and has the same height sides, but dips in at the center. If you don’t have lining material, cut this out of your main fabric

For the straps, cut two strips of fabric 3″ wide and as long as your fabric (45″-60″). You can taper the ends if you want, or leave them square. Place two marks 5-7″ apart (the width of your center piece) near the middle of each strip. This is where you will sew in the front of the swimsuit.

The first step in sewing up your swimsuit is to gather the center front. Using a long stitch length, sew a line down the center of the rectangle. Tie together the two threads at one end. At the other end, pull on one thread and push back the fabric so it gathers. When the gathered center is the same length as the center of the lining, tie together the two threads on this side. Sew over your gathers a couple of times to reinforce them.

I strongly recommend you sew in some sort of padding. They give the swimsuit a bit of structure and hold the edges right where you want them. You can do this with elastic instead, but reinforcing the fabric with pads makes for a much more comfortable swimsuit. Removable pads don’t really do this. They have a terrible habit of trying to remove themselves while you’re swimming, and you don’t really want to be standing on the beach rearranging them. Make sure you’re using something that can go through the washing machine and dryer of course, but anything that goes in a swimming pool should be washable. I cut out an appropriate shape from a sheet of bra-making fabric, but if you’re only making one suit it makes a lot more sense to buy molded cups.

If I’ve convinced you that you need to sew in molded cups, this will be the next step in making your swimsuit top. Sew the cups to the lining using an 1/8 inch zig zag.

Next, pin the lining to the front with the right sides facing in (for the lining, the cups are sewn to the wrong side). Sew along the top and bottom (the long sides) and turn right side out.

Fold the straps in half lengthwise with the right sides facing in. Sew up each end of each strap up to the marks you made using a slight zig zag stitch. Turn right side out.

Sew the front of the bikini to the straps between the marks. To make this look tidy, sew the back of the strap down first, then fold over the front and carefully top stitch. If that doesn’t make any sense, just sew them together. It will look good on, and that’s all that really matters.

Next: other bikini top styles.

 

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