Infest the Waters: A Blog About Design, Life and Making Stuff

Sewing Sunday: August Edition – Silky and Skirty

Zipper

I’ve had this lovely material from, you guessed it, The Resource Exchange (Have you noticed this is a theme with my sewing projects?) for a couple of  months.  It’s  a lovely silk that looks olive green in some lights and beige-y in others.  It has big flowers on it in brown, orange, gold and olive green, and it makes me think of fall.

Vogue pattern 8882I thought the big print might make it too much for a dress, so I decided to make a skirt from it. I had found this great Vogue pattern for a very full skirt with crinoline underneath (see picture at left), but when I measured the amount of material I had, I discovered that I really only had a little over 2 yards, which wasn’t enough to make a super full skirt.  Bummer, but I’m sure I’ll find another reason to make that skirt in the future!  With my yardage constraint, I went searching for a different option.

Butterick 3402From the stash of my grandmother’s patterns at my mom’s house, I had taken an old pattern that my grandmother had used to make me a skirt in high school (see picture at right).  I remembered really liking the skirt, but I didn’t have it anymore.  It was bias cut, lined, and it had a good twirl factor (meaning I could twirl around in it, and it would flow gracefully around me–this was very important as a kid).

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Adventure Playground Playground Adventure

Adventure Playground building

One of the distinct benefits of choosing the career path I’ve chosen and having the lifestyle that I do is that sometimes I get to spend time working on projects simply because I believe in them, and those projects can happen during traditional working hours.  For a couple of weeks in July, I was helping with one of these very kinds of projects.  There’s a project going on right now at the Smith Playground, a gem located in Fairmount Park here in Philadelphia that provides a safe place for kids to get away from the concrete jungle, revel in bucolic splendor and just play.  And did I mention there’s a hundred-year-old wooden slide there, too?  Seriously, it’s a pretty amazing place.

The project is part of the run-up to Greenbuild, which is the U.S. Green Building Council’s annual conference set to be held in Philly in November.  Each Greenbuild has what’s called a Legacy Project, a way for the conference to leave a legacy in the place where the gathering is held.  Philly’s Legacy Project entails building an Adventure Playground at Smith.  (You can read more about the nuts and bolts of the project in my articles on Grid and iSpring‘s blogs.)  What’s an Adventure Playground, you say?  Well, it’s just about what you’d expect from the name.  It’s a space for kids to build their own adventure as they play with free-form materials to make stuff, storytell and imagine themselves in a different world–all as they engage with the natural environment around them.  Sounds pretty cool, right?  I assure you–it is.

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Sewing Sunday: July Edition — A Simple Summer Sheath Dress

Sheath dress neck facing

A couple of months ago, I got this amazing fabric from The Resource Exchange.  It came from a designer, and I’m not sure whether it was hand-dyed or not, but when I washed it prior to making anything out of it (to pre-shrink the material if it was going to do that), the fabric gave up so much red that my wash basin looked like I had killed someone in it.  I washed it several more times to make sure I had most of the red dye out that was going to come out; hopefully this will cut down on bleeding during future washes.

Because the fabric pattern was so cool (and somewhat busy), I knew that I would have to make something relatively simple out of it.  Something that wouldn’t violate the large, geometric pattern too much and wouldn’t detract from how cool the fabric is.  Since I’m a little short on more business-appropriate summer dresses, I decided that a shift or sheath dress would work well.  The dress lines would be simple so the fabric pattern could stand out.  I found a New Look pattern online for $7, which seemed quite reasonable, so I ordered it.  I’ve never used New Look patterns before, but they’re made by Simplicity, which I have used before, so I figured it would probably work out well.

Sheath Dress PatternSizing for patterns is different from sizing for clothes you buy in a store, and according to my measurements, I’m a size 14.  When my grandmother used to make clothes for me, we occasionally would have the problem that when she made the clothing according to the size I should be based on my measurements, it would come out too big, and she’d end up having to take it in considerably.  I never really understood what the problem was, but now I do.  When I cut out the pattern, I noticed that it had listed on the piece for the front of the dress what the final measurements would be.  A size 14 means my measurements are 36-28-38.  According to the pattern, the finished garment size was going to be 40-34.5-42.  Um, what?  Basically, it meant that if I made it my size, it was going to look like I was wearing a sack.

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