Tag Archives: #tanitisisandthetwins

Optimistic Spring Dresses

(Please note—I wrote most of this post about a month ago, in late April. I am publishing it at the start of May Long weekend, and there is snow on the ground again.)

A few weeks ago I returned home from work to discover my aunt had deposited a sizeable pile of sewing-related donations on my dining-room table. While these aren’t unwelcome, they can precipitate a bit of a crisis in storage space, give the current (and perpetual at this point) maximum-capacity state of my stash. But this particular lot contained a lot of fabrics of appeal to six year old girls, so I received some more-or-less instant requests. The twins both picked out fabrics for Barbie-inspired dresses and fabrics for spring dresses.

This post is about the spring dresses. when and whether the “Barbie” ones get sewn… we’ll see.

With a day or two of receiving the donation, R provided me with the drawing above, executed on some brown packing paper, if you’re wondering about the colour. I love that she thought to provide me with front and back views, even if I wasn’t quite sure how to interpret the back.

On paging through the kids’ dress patterns on my phone , I ended up on this Anne Adams pattern, a vintage mail-order brand that crops up around here from time to time. I don’t have the envelope for this one to get a date off the postmark, but it’s unprinted and the instructions “feel” old. Most of the mail-order patterns I have are from the late 60s, but I wouldn’t be surprised if this is a bit older, 1950s or even late 40s.

My pattern is only a size 4, but the width compared to the twins’ measurements was fine… I just needed to add a ton of length.

After carefully extracting and ironing out the pieces, and double-checking the instructions for the meaning of the various perforations, I made some very quick and dirty alterations.

For R’s dress, I added about 6 cm length above the waist, and 19 cm (don’t ask me, it was a random amount the first time and then I measured after to replicate it) to the length of the skirt, and removed the straps, somewhat freehanding the upper shape to create a curved front and dipped back. I’m not sure why, exactly, since that wasn’t a clear feature of the requested dress, but anyway. I think it looks cute but I should move the straps closer to the middle.

The pattern is a fit-and-flare design with princess-seams. Front and back are cut on the fold, with no zipper, and it’s meant to be pulled on and then cinched in with sash ties inserted at the side-seams. This seemed like it would convert relatively well to the kind of criss-crossed back lacing R seemed to be requesting in her line drawing.

Now, R had selected this lovely aqua and purple floral print, made of some kind of light polycotton (or maybe just straight up polyester, considering how slippery it was.) It was, in fact, a straight-up pain to sew, so I didn’t want to fuss around with too many details, like the upper yoke-type decoration in her drawing. The only part that was pleasant, frankly, was turning the little strip of bias tubing to make the lacing loops, which is always nice in a slippery fabric. I found some dark purple bias binding in stash and made piping for the upper edge, and the long straps which cross in the back and then thread through the lacing loops to cinch it in. To ease in the hem, I ran it through the serger with the differential feed turned up to gather it in, though a lower gathering ratio would’ve worked better on this thin fabric.

Then, since it still seemed rather plain, I did the almost-unthinkable and broke out one of my Janome’s decorative stitches to finish the hem. I had to test several to find one that printed out relatively close to how it is supposed to look, but I’m quite happy with the result, and if you aren’t going to use those stitches on little-girl dresses, when ARE you going to?

T’s selection was a much more pleasant-to-handle (probably quilting) cotton in a pink rose print. Some digging through stash turned up some blue cotton bias that looked good with the design, and she had claimed the ribbon to go with the fabric as soon as I pulled it out. The print is actually pretty vibrant, but we both liked the more subdued reverse side better, so that’s what you see.

Since I had made R’s dress first, she had a pretty good concept of it, and was amenable to having hers be from the same basic pattern. Except that it definitely needed a ruffle.

So I laid out the pattern again, this time adding 5 cm above the waist and a similar amount to the skirt length (but then a 15 cm ruffle, so the finished length should be similar, except that I took a 2” hem on R’s.

I felt more comfortable with my construction decisions this time around, so I decided to go for it and draft the exposed top yoke I had imagined for R’s but not had the guts (or masochism?) to go for. I took it slow, making the piping for top and bottom and basting everything in place, double-checking that I liked my proportions, but most importantly that I had all the layers in the right order, which is always a bit brain-breaking when a facing is turning to the outside, and made even worse this time with the addition of the straps, piping, and our choice of “wrong side” of the print. I decided to have the yoke extend around the sides to the side-back piece, but then hem the centre back piece, so it would be more flexible and “crumple” more easily when the dress was laced in. I don’t know if it actually makes much of a difference, but that was my thought.

And that’s about it. In hindsight I should’ve added an underlining to R’s dress, at least for the bodice portion, as the seams are already pulling since she likes to lace things tight. And the top edge flares a bit much—I might have had a better result with proper slash-and-spread style lengthening of the bodice part of the pattern. But they’ve both been wearing them any chance they get, so I’ll take that win. I’ll also take spring, whenever it decides to come and stay.

Perfect for fridge-top tea parties

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A wee little thing

In a rare (these days) burst of energy a few weeks ago, i made a baby onesie.

I used the free onesie pattern from Small Dream Factory. (Apparently somehow I don’t have any baby onesie patterns?) I didn’t go back to the page to check the instructions after I managed to get it printed, but it’s pretty simple. The one thing I’ll recommend is make sure you mark the shoulder on both front and back pieces so you can line them up properly. The drafting is maybe a touch odd at the bottom of the armscye, but the finished garment seems to work well enough. And the pattern could’ve been tiled to use less paper, but it’s hard to get too fussy about something free. 🙂

I cut it out entirely using my rotary cutter, which is nice for small pieces and wiggly knits, especially since I took over some of the countertop in the basement kitchenette to have my cutting mat at a comfortable no-bending-required level. It’s especially nice for cutting perfectly even binding pieces, which helped a lot with the bound edges in this thing, and I do think they turned out pretty nicely, if I do say so myself.

I did my usual triple-fold binding, which has a tiny raw edge on the inside, but is much easier than trying to make a knit stay in a double-fold configuration, and I am NOT up for hard right now. Sherry of Pattern, Scissors, Cloth covers the method, except that she overlocks the unfinished edge to look nice inside, whereas I just trim mine close as needed once it’s stitched down.

The smallest hammer-in snaps I had for the bottom of the onesie were these pearl snaps, and they’re a bit heavy duty. I should probably have added some interfacing or something to support the fabric, too. So not really ideal, although I like the colour.

Obviously I can’t try the onesie on a baby yet. From comparison with some storebought ones we’ve received it’s a little on the wider, shorter side, which is certainly how my previous babies ended up, but I’m not at all sure how the twins will start out, at least.

I don’t have any more of this fabric, having turned the last few scraps into Watson Bikini underwear, but I wouldn’t mind making a second onesie for a wear-home-from-hospital set, if I can figure out something vaguely coordinating.

I realized (with some dismay) this past weekend that I’m no longer comfortable lifting and moving the various stacked plastic bins that hold my stash, which means that I either need to make do with the fabrics I already have out or ask for help to reach stuff in the bins, which isn’t impossible but will definitely make me think twice about things. So there may or may not be a second baby onesie… we will have to see. At the moment even getting off the couch feels fairly strenuous. On the other hand I will be reducing my work hours and even going on leave in a few weeks, so it’s possible I’ll have energy for something else, but I’m reluctant to set any lofty goals, even if I am fantasizing ceaselessly about things.

The 30-week belly

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