motorharp: line drawing of kid with glasses intently reading (Default)
2021-05-27 08:13 am

Past Patterns Riding Habit #902






past patterns #902 lavender acetate cotton tafetta Victorian equestrienne riding habit front view buttoned

I bought this pattern in high school. While I really, really like this now, I would have LOVED it then. I originally wanted to make it in a sky blue cotton velveteen. I don't remember why I didn't make it then; maybe I was intimidated by the addition of boning, or maybe it was my short attention span. I have it now!

past patterns #902 lavender acetate cotton tafetta Victorian equestrienne riding habit back view with tails
The tails!


past patterns #902 lavender acetate cotton tafetta Victorian equestrienne riding habit front view buttoned
The buttons!


This is a really good basic bodice pattern, as reviewer Sorrel Smith said over at The Great Pattern Review. Would I make it again? Possibly, using it as a jumping off point. It would probably look good with lapels. I would also need to make the neck a smaller diameter. I didn't compensate for that when I added width to the center fronts.

past patterns #902 lavender acetate cotton tafetta Victorian equestrienne riding habit front view unbuttoned


It is also a surprisingly handy little jacket. It is an unexpectedly warm, light layer and perfect for spring. I can't really wear it over anything other than a t-shirt anyway. the sleeves really are quite tight. I think the jacket would hang better through the back if the sleeves hung on my arms properly.

past patterns #902 lavender acetate cotton tafetta Victorian equestrienne riding habit side front view unbuttoned


So no bike riding or harp playing in this thing, or anything that requires me to move my arms forward and bend them.

past patterns #902 lavender acetate cotton tafetta Victorian equestrienne riding habit back view
But so what! The tails!


* Click on any picture to see it bigger.
** Past Patterns has a note on their website for #902: This pattern is currently being updated and so it is listed out of stock. Not sure what's being updated - it seems fine to me.

Fabric: Cotton/acetate faille, possibly from Schoolhouse Fabrics (I still miss that place)
Cost: ?  Maybe $12 for the one piece of lining I needed and thread?
Time: Too. Much. Hand sewing. 3/24 dyed fabric, 3/30, 31 alter pattern and cut and muslin, 4/2 almost killed myself with my iron, 4/3 new iron, 4/5,6 sewed and found I needed buttons and sleeve lining, 4/10 fabric store, 4/11 organized button stash and found buttons!, 4/12 -15, 18, 26-30, 5/2-6 sewed, 5/8 finished! Conservatively, probably a total of about 34 hours.

ETA: My mom refers to the tails as "butt flaps" and I kind of can't not call them that now.

motorharp: line drawing of kid with glasses intently reading (Default)
2021-05-23 08:11 pm

So many buttons... pt. 2

Animation of sewing on 10 covered buttons

I got so tired of sewing on the buttons that I didn't make a full gif. As mentioned before, you can click on the above to replay the animation. Also, as mentioned before, I only, ha "only", needed 10 buttons for the tails. I love these tails!

past patterns #902 lavender acetate cotton tafetta front bodice with collar

After the buttons are sewn on the tails, the tails are finished with a bit of lining to hide everything and tidy up the edges.  The collar did turn out a little big. Not sure why since the basted version fit fine.

past patterns #902 lavender acetate cotton tafetta sleeves with three button vents

Then the sleeves are made, and I made them as big as possible through the biceps and forearms. And I also made them backwards. The images in the instructions were a bit confusing to me, and I should have paid attention to the actual pattern piece names. I ended up doing yet more hand sewing and tacking down the sleeve vents so they didn't stick out weirdly due to facing the wrong way. And I did that after making three buttonholes and sewing three buttons on each vent.

past patterns #902 lavender acetate cotton tafetta front bodice with buttonholes marked and covered buttons waiting to be made

The home stretch - making 17 buttonholes and 17 buttons. The pattern recommend making handmade buttonholes. HAHAHA!

past patterns #902 lavender acetate cotton tafetta front bodice with buttonholes finished and covered buttons waiting to be made

I had about 1/4 of one layer of thread left on the spool after sewing all these buttonholes. My heart was beating a little hard, and there were several stops to wind more thread on the bobbin, but not too much, so I wouldn't run out of either the thread or bobbin one before the other. And it was especially nerve-wracking because I had just been at the fabric store the prior day and thought "I have plenty of thread! I'm sure I don't need to buy anymore!" Thankfully, I was right.

past patterns #902 lavender acetate cotton tafetta front bodice with buttonholes finished and covered buttons made

The buttons ready to be sewn on. I think it took me 4 hours to sew all 17 buttons on the front.

Next up, the actual jacket on an actual person!

motorharp: line drawing of kid with glasses intently reading (Default)
2021-05-19 08:37 am

So many buttons... pt. 1







Animation of making 12 covered buttons

All the pieces of this jacket are underlined, which meant hand-basting around all the edges of all the pieces. If there is a next time, I would probably line it, as well or instead, because the seam edges are also supposed to be overcast by hand. Well, I can tell you I gave up on that pretty quick and got out the serger. And even that was too much sewing.

The fronts and back are made separately, and before sewn together, the buttons are attached to the tails.

past patterns #902 lavender acetate cotton tafetta left bodice front with two dartspast patterns #902 lavender acetate cotton tafetta back bodice with 6 seamed sections

And so begins the saga of the buttons.*

I would like to be an organized person. Some things are well organized, like my sock drawer. Other things are not, like almost every single sewing thing I own. I think I mentioned in a previous post I finally organized my fabric. It is nice.

This jacket requires 33 buttons for the size I made. Covered buttons would look nice, right? I looked in my covered button box and had one package of 5/8" size. So I would need 28. Ugh. Do I order in bulk and get way too many? Do I try to find that many in the fabric store and pay way too much?

I dithered for almost a week.

Then I got a wild hair to organize my three boxes of closures, including the one that contained that one package of buttons. In addition to covered buttons of various sizes, I have pearl snaps, grommets (eyelets), a bunch of vintage self-covered belt kits that I picked up every time I went to a now-defunct craft thrift store, and ... a bunch of covered button kits that I picked up every time I went to a now-defunct craft thrift store.

People, I had 32 buttons total.

Aaaargh!

But wait! [personal profile] gorthx to the rescue with the last remaining button!

But wait! Some packages said 5/8" and some said 9/16". Now I had to figure out how to disperse them so the size difference would not be noticeable. Twelve for the tails, six for the sleeves, and 17 for the front.

Yeah, that doesn't add up to 33. I made the above pictured twelve for the tails, realized I only needed ten, then lost track of which size I made. So measured them, and all the buttons were 9/16", even the ones marked 5/8". *shrug*

I made the buttons at each stage instead of making them all at once, so stay tuned for more button content.

* You can click on the top pic to watch a gif. Who knew you could make animations in gimp.

motorharp: line drawing of kid with glasses intently reading (Default)
2021-05-16 03:05 pm

Fitting the riding habit

I had optimistically cut out the size 12 back when I first bought the pattern. Not that I'm not a size 12, it just took me a few decades after buying it to actually make it.

My trusty bunka sloper came to the rescue again - I added 1" to both center fronts (for a total of 2") and that was it. Really. The shoulders were surprisingly fine! Then I read a review over on Greater Bay Area Costumers Guild (ctrl+f or scroll down to #902) that said the shoulders on this pattern are really square.

I studiously avoided the major dye blobs when cutting it out. I basted it together and it fit almost perfectly. I don't think I've ever had something fit me this well on the first pass. Am I Victorian shaped?

The only thing that didn't fit were the sleeves. They are pretty tight on me. I decided to sew them bigger, as much as the seam allowances would allow.

I guess Victorian ladies weren't buying tickets to the gun show.



motorharp: line drawing of kid with glasses intently reading (Default)
2021-05-11 05:03 pm

Dyeing more fabric and changing my mind


This fabric was originally on the back of a velvet biscuit quilt I made in the 90s, was bubble gum pink, and was going to be turned into a muslin for tuxedo blazer.

I took apart the quilt a few years ago because it was Time, and kept the backing. I have no idea why I decided to put a bright pink cotton/acetate faille on the back of a heavy velvet quilt. It always slid off my bed within a matter of minutes leaving me freezing.

There were two pieces each about 2.5 yds long and 35" wide. I had drafted a tuxedo jacket pattern that I wanted to muslin, and thought a fancy, shiny fabric might be nice if the muslin turned out to be wearable.

However, not pink. So I got out the dye. Again. I thought I'd try black, knowing that cotton dye would probably only work on the cotton fibers, but hoping for the best.

What I got was so much better!
 


It came out a beautiful antique lilac color! The cotton is definitely black, but the pink in the acetate just got toned down a bit. Combined they are a color that is an exact match for the Coats and Clark thread color "Light Vintage Purple".

Well, it was mostly that color.

This is why it's important to prewash your fabric before dyeing. I'm going to say this is a bird shape, but it also looks weirdly lewd to me. I washed the fabric with synthrapol, twice, and the water was lifetime-smoker-yellow both times. *shudder*

I do, however, really really like the more subtle gradients of color that occurred in the rest of the fabric. So much! I think it adds to the antique look of it.  I decided this special fabric needed to be a much more special jacket than my original plan.

Enter the Victorian equestrienne bodice that I've been wanting to make since high school.


Past Patterns #902

Stay tuned for more...

*click on any picture to see it bigger.