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Thursday, May 15, 2014

Move all the things!

   Move All The Things!


So it's time to complete the drywall and get the sewing studio looking all studio like. So today is "Move all the Things!" Day.

So here we go before 

"All the things!" Will be living in my bonus room for about a week. 


Really, there are a few things. 

Off we go. I like to use what I have, what I have is common sense, and an 18 ft flat bed trailer and minions. Seriously common sense is so uncommon it should be a super power. 


Load it up!


Move it out! 


Move it back in! 





Thursday, May 8, 2014

A quick corset lacing post

Occasionally I am asked to show how to lace a corset. So let me start by saying this is not "my" method. Most modern corsets are laced much this way. However, it is nice to have a photo guide to remind you if you find yourself in need of removing and re-lacing your corset. 

Corsets can be tied with one, two or even three laces. I use one lace and get good results. I wear corsets as foundation pieces for historical costuming. I don't tight lace, that is generally where two or three laces are found. 

So, from the top...


Start with your lace at the top of the corset, the center of the lace starts under the corset, and the ends come out through the first grommet. 


Then much like shoe laces you cross over and lace through the second grommet.


At this point you could continue laceing like a shoe. However, after the lace is centered and anchored with the top two grommets I like to lace one stide of the string skipping every other grommet as seen here. Stop at the top of the waist. To do this simply note which two grommets are placed at the smallest part of the waist. Depending on the corset this may be below the middle of the grommets. The loops used to adjust the corset will be made here. 


Next lace down the other side picking up all the grommets you just skipped and stop at the top of the waist. 


Make your loops. To do this I generally pull the string out to the front edge of the corset then bring it back in to the grommets and place the string through the next grommet on the same side you are already on. These loops can be adjusted up and down to snug the fit of the corset once on as needed. 


Note the lace goes out and comes in on the same side for the loop and your laces are now coming out from under the corset. 


Cross the string so that the "shoe lacing" pattern can begin again. 


Bring each lace end out through the next grommet. 


Lace down to the bottom of the corset on one side skipping every other grommet again. 


Lace through with the second lace end picking up all the grommets you just skipped. 


Tie your laces off. I like to tie mine at a grommet on the outside of the corset. This is below the waist where, in costume, there is a great deal of volume and the knot will not break the line of your clothing. The knot being on a grommet and between two bones will also not dig into your body, this will be very much a boon after a long day in costume. 

And that is how I lace a corset. This is again a simple and common method that I feel does the job of securing a corset and allowing adjustments well. I hope this reference will come in handy. 

















Monday, May 5, 2014

Five foundations challenge...Finally!

So apparently I'm the queen of procrastination but it's cut sew time or go without time. As is often the case I'm starting with foundation pieces.
Thanks so much to Mistress of Disguise for coming up with the perfect challange to get me going. 

 Five Foundations Challange


On with my first of the five foundations. #2 is corsets and stays. I am making a regency era corset from the Laughing Moon pattern. The fabric is two layers of cotton linen.the pattern calls for cotton sateen, I for some reason have this notion that before Victoria everyone lived in linen. Silly I know but I purchased the fabric before reading the pattern, another vice, and I am just going to muddle forth. I have decided to hand sew this corset, less because it's historically accurate and more because my machine is currently in the shop for the next 10 days. So with it out for a well deserved and much needed tune up, I have the chance, without the catch net of a machine standing by, to make a corset by hand. Something I have always wanted to do but can easily talk myself out of. 


This is a new gadget I'm liking, it is a Fons and Porter making pencil which erases from fabric. The point is sharp for making accurate marks. The "leads" come in a dark or a white. 


I like long fine needles...long and VERY fine. English needles are my favorite however they become more difficult to find here in the United States. These are the latest needles I am trying and so far I am very pleased with them. So if your curious this is what I am using. ** edit- these are, after looking more closely made in England! So there you have it...want good fine needle? English. 


I took the advice given in the pattern to stay stitched around the edges of all the pieces first to keep the fabric from raveling. See? I'm not all sew and go, I can be taught. 


The wrong side of the first gusset.


The right side of the first gusset.


First cup complete.


One layer done.


The front piece of the corset and lining with gussets complete. 


The hip gussets marked and slit.


The first hip gusset in, here from the right side. 


First set of his gussets in progress. Today's reading of the pattern, tracing the pattern, cutting, and hand sewing totals up to about seven hours sewing time. All but four hip gussets (the lining) are complete at this point. 

And with that...I have officially accepted the Five Foundations Challange! 
















Thursday, April 24, 2014

Seven outfits eleven weeks.

Well thats the long and the short of it. In eleven weeks I need to be ready for Costume College 2014. We have friends from Northern Ireland coming for a visit in July, after they head back across the pond I will have about a week before I fly to California. I need that week to clean house and pack. So dear ones, that means counting backwards from the visit I have eleven weeks for seven outfits. 

Now the good news, they are not all insanely intricate, tedious, or grand Victorian gowns. So time for some projects is much shorter than others. The bad news, I am at the moment disgustingly lacking in corsets and will need a late Victorian, and a 1910 and a regency at a bare minumum. I'd like to have a 1903 and a black 1910 to round out the undies but I can get by with three..not less. More news on the nervous side. I am tackeling a regency dress and bonnet and need the whole era from the skin out, why this makes the hair on the back of my neck rise I will never understand but there you go- butterflies over a simple line with minimum undergarments. 

While all these thoughts float around my head I am smack in the middle of insulating my studio and drywalling. Which happily is going so much faster than I could have dreamed and has made a huge (huge!) difference to the enviorment in my little zone 9A south TX metal building studio. Once we get drywall up I will be removing everything from the studio that is not coco required. This is a tactic to keep me focused and limit my ADD/OCCD where by I sometimes get so distracted by ideas I get little done. Looking at my stash through tranlucent bins can trigger this effect. 

So I will have my cork boards with dress images, to-do lists and project drawers. I will most likely be listening to "Time management from the inside out" on a continous loop. Yes this is me giving myself a hard kick combined with a pep talk. 

Here is the studio... I know you are thinking where in the name of blogging are the pictures?! 





A bit of a mess no? That is ok, I actually enjoy cleaning and organizing, very cathartic that. The white white insulation makes the room very bright indeed and something about white space is very productive for me. If I paint it will be a pale color so close to white as to be barely noticable. 

So what will I be making? What is on this list of must? Without giving too much away here it is. 

Regency corset
Victorian corset
1910 corset 

regency petti 
plain bloomers

a bathing VBS or a 1940 easy breezy dress (one or the other not both) 

a 1920's dress
short black petti 
cloche hat 
reticule (optional) 

The Wearing History Suit Along (note to self learn to link with the ipad app!) 

Regency dress
Regency bonnet

Gala dress (yep thats all I'm gonna say about that!) 

Breakfast gown

Black Ascot (because seriously who does not love that theme?) 
Epic hat 

So thats it, seven outfits with various pieces to flesh them out and underthings to make them lay.

Brought to you during my retreat week with the hubbie...see what happens when I have time to think?  





Wednesday, February 26, 2014

Regency Era boots by American Duchess!

I am not normally one to enter contests but my goodness I could use some regency era boots! So here goes! Look! American Dutchess is doing a give away and I'm hoping with fingers crossed! Check 'em out!


You can pre order them here 




Screen shot from the American Dutchess blog. 




Wednesday, January 15, 2014

Historical Sew Fortnightly 2014- Make do and Mend


http://thedreamstress.com/the-historical-sew-fortnightly-2014/ 


For the first challange of the Historical Sew Fortnightly "make do and mend" I needed to mend my new pink tea gown. I managed to wear it twice with a piece of trim missing and so I mended it. I also cleaned and pressed the dress so it will be ready to go the next time I want to wear it. 


Here is my dress, notice the bottom left of the photo the trim is missing. 


this trim is made by cutting a 3 inch piece of fabric on the bias and cut with a pinking blade for a rotary cutter. 


A close up to show the edges. 


Then the trim is hand sewn onto the dress. This trim is part of trying a new era for me. I am most comfortable in the Victorian Bustle eras. So I am working up my courage to try the 18th century. 

Here is te trim all sewn on. 


And thats that, one tea gown mended, cleaned and ready to wear again when needed. 

Fabric: Cotton

Pattern: trim is made of pinch pleats, sized by eye. 

Year: The dress pattern is 1878 tea gown from Truly Victorian 

Notions: thread.

This mend took about 1.5-2 hours. Split between the trim and cleaning and pressing.

Total cost $0 as the trim and thread were already purchased when the dress made. 












  

Tuesday, December 31, 2013

The dreaded end of year post.

2013 was just not a costume productive year for me. I do not have oddles and oddles of costume projects to repost and share, thats been bothering me for a couple days. "I don't have a wrap up to blog about..." (insert possible feeling sorry for myself whine) 

But then I took a look at my 2013, I reeeeealy looked at it. Because while I do not have much sewing to crow about. Ladies and Gentelmen, friends and neighbors 2013 was a life- changing- amazing year. 

January - After 21 years of honerable and courageous service in both the Navy and the Air Force my Hubbie Matthew retired as a Master Sargent. I was so proud I could burst. We have had an amazing and interesting and neat and fun and challanging time of it and I would not change a thing. We met in the Navy many many moons ago so the military has mostly been our life and now its not. If nothing else happened, this one thing would have made this year special. 


Here we are many moons ago just starting our life together. 


And here we are at retirement...a wonderful moment. 


Then before we knew it he was off to a new job in Texas and we were working hard to wrap up a school year and while visiting Matthew for a week there was a tornado in our home town and the world stopped and stared. 


It was three days before we knew if we had a home. We spent those days trying to contact friends and neighbors and praying. We prayed for all of our friends and everyone touched by this storm. We finally got word that out block was still intact and made our way home. 

We started getting back to normal when Matthew found a car...no Matthew found THE car. So for his birthday in June we headed to PA to get it. We stopped along the way at a McDonalds to take a break only to catch live on the Weather Channel another tornado cutting accross Oklahoma City. This one was even closer to home. My mom and our children stayed with neighbors in a large underground shelter. We all waited out the storm via phone. Again our home missed the path of damage and we decided to continue on our trip. 


Here is Matthew in THE car getting ready to take to the Texas World Speedway track with his professional driving coach Wade for his Christmas present recently. The trip to PA ended up being romantic, lovely and just the together time Matthew and I rarely rarely get. 

While we were gone...we prayerfully decided to change our plan to move to Texas in the summer of 2014 and put our house on the market. With so many people in need of homes, it sold to the first family who came to look at it. They needed that home more than we needed to be in Oklahoma. So to Texas we came. 

But I didnt stay there long, it was summer vacation and I had the opportunity to travel East and visit some old dear friends I have not seen in a few years! 


What a joy to hug them all and catch up! In 2014 if all goes well we will be hosting our friends from Northern Ireland here in Texas. 

Oh lets not forget...I also took a little trip out to Henderson NV to help a friend who was recovering from a surgery move after her home sold. Four of us ladies took wing man in turn and we managed to get her through it with flying colors. Girlfriends are a precious precious treasure. 


Here were are "leaving Las Vegas!" Good-bye Hades like heat! It was not all bad however.

    

Then as life often does things sped up, got smooshed together and slipped by very quickly. 

I went to Costume College for the very first time!! Woot!! My dear friend Gina had a back injury and could not come with me (BOO- HISS) 

I bumped into lovely new costumers I have just met in 2012. Jen from Festive Attyre. 




I got to make this ball gown into a Pirate dress for the ball, I love the way Victorians took an old gown and re-made it to suit a new season or in this case a fancy ball. Also my tri-corn hat was super fun if I do say so myself. 


I finished a long overdue fantastic girlfriend dress project...The save me (from myself) sailor dress.


This for the reccord is the last time I can remember having my bustle...sigh. But that is for another post. 


We did it! We all have stunnng sailor dresses! My dear friends Gina, Beth and I. 

We moved...lets just take moment and say that again. We moved! 


Again, if nothing else happened in 2013 this would have been enough! I squeezed in a Charity SASS match at Fort Parker. 


and wore the Absinth tasting dress intended for the SPWF that never happened. UFO no longer undone! 

Then life sped up again and there were chickens 


and goats...


and the chickens have grown 


and I now have a huge space all my own to sew in that will soon be a dream space, now its just telling me it needs to be organized. 


and the Christmas SASS convention was here- just like that. 

I wore this dress 

hosted a tea with some lovely friends 



and yes I put documenting and photo taking back on my goal list for 2014 (again...) 

I also made my first Edwardian skirt. 

started a blue black and white dress which will also go on the UFO 2014 list 



 

I wore what is becoming my "this old thing" suit...but I love it. In 2014 this suit is getting a bigger better pop of red. 


So this year I learned that even when it seems like nothing is getting done and all your dresses are hanging forlornly in the closet. Life is good, it is short and it is very very sweet. May all of our costuming goals go by the wayside in 2014 with joy, if life comes calling for you to dance and may we take them up again with pleasure in Gods perfect time. Happy New Year! 































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