Tuesday, September 20, 2022

Solstice Singers costume for December performance

 Last year I made a costume that I never wore. After the performance in Dec 2021 I bought some linen to make a new dress but ended up using the mockup I made instead. It worked out well for the Spring performance.

But I finally have time to use the linen.....

I've made 2 rectangular construction dresses for myself. I feel confident making this style. The above garment also had lots of grommets so I'll add some on the side to make it more fitted. Maybe some tone on tone embroidery.

I'm also using the silk giornea from last year. I took out the lining and am fashioning it into a sideless surcoat.

This is over my cotton underdress from last spring. It is cut out shockingly lopsided wrt to pattern. I think I'll try rounding out the neckline to even it out. Also the front is too wide. I've pulled it in a bit. I think it should be slightly shorter than the underdress.


 

I'm finishing all of the seams of the underdress by hand. This looks greener than it is. It is more of an aqua.
 


I found some very cool fur on Amazon. I'm not sure if it is over the top?

Here are a couple with fur:



They do seem to be long, to the floor.

I like the look of the fur around the bottom. But don't want it off the shoulder.... I think.

Tried folding and pinning....


Seems promising but the fur is very thick/wide 4" or so.

I ended up digging in and cutting the shape and turned under the edges on the machine.

I also decided to try cutting the fur to reduce the width. Half width looked better around the neckline. 1/4 width for the armholes. I think full width on the hem.

The aqua under dress is on the right. So I think I'm mostly done except for lots and lots of hand sewing.... and maybe a hat? With fur?



Thursday, April 21, 2022

Dress and Cape for Child

 

This rectangular construction dress matches one I made for myself from a flannel sheet, but pillowcase sized(actually even smaller!). The hooded cloak is stretchy velveteen lined with gold holo latex. The child in question wasn't particularly interested when I brought them over but she will be eventually. 

It was great practice for my own under-dress which is waiting for the over-bodice to be done so I can determine the neckline. I've got over half the eyelets done. I'm trying a different approach, just whip-stitch rather than buttonhole stitch and it goes quicker! Then I have to decide on the hem and finish the shoulders....

Stay tuned!

Tuesday, April 19, 2022

Silly Girls Publicity shots

 Thanks to the costume designer I have these great shots:

I wasn't involved w/ Belle or Gaston's costumes but they look great!

The Silly Girls in the background.

 
Another great shot of the Silly Girls' dresses :



So in the end I'm glad I did it and did a good job but was also glad I was finished. My own dress for my spring concert with the Solstice Singers is well along in the 'mockup' stage and the underdress is almost done. I'm going to finish the mockup and probably use it with a long skirt for the concert rather than tackle the final aqua linen. I'm working on the eyelets and then there is only the hem and shoulder seams.... picture soon.

Sunday, March 20, 2022

Silly Girls costumes near completion

 

The Silly Girls at the second fitting

All three will have matching wigs and bows. The vests will lace up the front. The skirts have 4 drawstrings(2 in front and 2 in back) so they can be pulled way up if desired. The costumer likes one side. They were discussing which side it should be. 

I've been working on altering the vests which are fully lined. The green one was 4-5" too big. 



 

(Ack! Please excuse the toilet in the picture!) If I took it all in the back the back piece would all but disappear. I had to redo the shoulders anyway so I opened them. Turned it, unpicked the bottom and the top exposing all seams. I took in each seam by 1/4" which was 1/2" of circumference. Six of them totals 3". I took the remaining 2" out of the back piece. It wasn't as awful as I thought. I've turned it right side out but not pressed it. I'm debating another fitting before doing the eyelets but I want them to be done!

The orange one needs similar adjustments although not as drastic.

The yellow one is, I think, the one who said she was going to lose 25lbs by showtime. I didn't worry too much about fitting her vest, although it fit the best of the three already. If she she loses even 10lbs I think it would effect the fit. I'm going to finish the other two and then see where she is. I've tried to lose weight before and early goals often prove too ambitious. But sometimes those first 10lbs come off pretty easily.

The trick is to have the front not quite closed when laced up. I can also put in more eyelets in back to give extra cinch.

I've been concerned about the eyelets as one of my first tests fell apart but I tried another and it worked better. 10 per vest and 10 more if I add back cinching. That's a lot of practice.

Looking forward to getting these done and moving on to 2 new pouch styles I saw this week. I'm considering making some for the Silly Girls from scraps. I also want to make my linen dress. Ideas keep evolving..... more as they develop.....

Tuesday, February 22, 2022

Costuming again!

 Beauty and the Beast Silly Girls

Through my singing group Solstice Singers of Woods Hole, MA I met a woman who learned I made costumes. She's involved with the Falmouth Theater Guild  and asked if I'd be interested in helping with costumes for their production of Beauty and the Beast this spring. 

Lately I've been saying yes whenever something like this comes up. I had an opportunity to join the Solstice Singers last fall when I stumbled onto their signup booth at a music event near the public library. I hadn't planned on doing it right then... but there it was. I've found my life has been a series of these serendipitous events. I joined the group and made a costume:

Crocheted the snood, circlet is cardboard covered with fabric. The Giornea(overgown) is a heavy silk lined with a tablecloth. The belt is one I was given from a collection of jewelry and stuff, it has a shell on the front. I love the look but... the undershirt and yellow underdress are knit. Maybe OK if we were on a far away stage but our venue is small and we're pretty close to the audience... at least that was part of my rationale for not wearing it for the performances. Also, the combination of the silk and tablecloth was too much. It looks cool and swoopy outside but it would have been too hot indoors under stage lights and difficult to move around on the platforms we used. 

 

 

I ended up wearing a *gasp* Purchased Dress from China:

which you can see in the video. Wish I'd seen how it would look in pictures before I wore it. I find it a little too tight for my taste. I ordered it as 'insurance' in early November and it arrived Dec 13, the day of our dress rehearsal. The others in the group said it was flattering and encouraged me to wear it.

I also didn't like the snood look. I looked so washed out, so I made a stuffed circlet covered with pearl rope which matched the silk... but I ended up not wearing it so I made another thinner one covered with ribbon... hmm no pix of that.


But I have plans for this outfit. I want to make a shift and linen kirtle with tie-on sleeves. I've already bought the fabric, a gorgeous aqua color which matches a color in the silk. I'm going to try to follow Morgan Donner's tutorial. She has several different styles. I'm working on mock-ups until I can decide exactly how I want to proceed.

For the giornea I'm going to separate the tablecloth and the silk. The silk needs a much thinner lining. Also the v-neck needs to be much wider and go all the way to the waist. This will also lighten it a bit. The back is also supposed to be a V but I'm not sure it will stay on properly. I can make a second overdress from the tablecloth, which is gold brocade which you can barely see in the image on the right.


OK, back to BATB. I met the lead costumer and we decided I'd start with the Silly Girls. I'm worried about taking on too much and this seemed challenging enough but straightforward sewing and fitting, even though I'm not terribly experienced. 

So far I have the fabric and pattern.


Seersucker underdresses with vest and apron matching. I'm going to make the apron skirt gathered onto a waistband and put in casings and ribbons for cinching it up on the sides. The tricky part is fitting the lined vests. I only have measurements that someone else took. One person is about a 12-14, the others are larger, 22-ish and 26. I notice the pattern has a 10" difference between bust and waist, but most of the people have a thicker waist.... so I'm making mockups. Actually using drafting techniques I've seen but never used. I think it should work as I made one underdress and put it on my dress form and put the mockup vest over it and it looks ok.

So once I have the other dress and mockup made it will be fitting time. End of this week or next week depending on how much I get done today.... and I'm still waiting on the green seersucker which might arrive by the end of this week.

I'll update when there is more to show.










Thursday, January 7, 2021

Keeping busy at home in 2020 - a recap

After my last post in May 2020, I continued to explore various ways to use strips of fabric. Some orderly, some more chaotic. I lay them all on the bed and took a picture. The one from the previous post is near the middle.


 Some of them are large enough to make a bag. Eventually I ran out of gas and found that my fabric stash was in chaos... and it was spreading! My beads were in chaos! In fact, the entire room was a mess, and spilled into the guest room. I escaped to the attic where I brought a sewing machine and table. I planned on working on Chris's T-shirt quilt just to help clear out the guest room.

I didn't work on them right away but I did eventually with great success!

It isn't quite done. Chris noticed a few key ships were missing so he dropped off a bunch of other shirts which I haven't tackled yet.... but soon!

Meanwhile, I was working on organizing the fabric and the result is satisfying:

The shelves contain longer pieces of fabric wound around cardboard. Also fabric baskets(another project) with strips of various sizes that make scraps easier to work with:


I was playing around with some sampler blocks.

I also worked on bead organization but I'm not happy with the result yet. I got everything 'put away' but decided to try working on a project and it was difficult to find what I wanted. I need to work on it. 

However, as a result I have created a bunch of small pouches. I'm getting better at following the gridded design. It is tricky because the rows are offset.


Here's what I'm working on today:


Also made a bunch of these little card holders:

Guess I've been pretty busy since May!




Saturday, May 16, 2020

'Stripping' an abstract quilt


Today I watch a great show on PBS: Quilting Arts. In this episode, Nancy Ryan shared this amazing technique she calls 'Stripping an Abstract'. I immediately dropped everything to try it out. I am more than pleased with the result so far. I think this took me less than 2 hours. This is just the beginning, it still needs to be quilted and the edge finished. It looks complicated but is deceptively simple. Heat 'n' Bond (this is not an ad, just a convenient link) is the key, and a good rotary cutter, mat and ruler. I was just fumbling around and look what happened! Can't wait to do more!