Silk taffeta ribbon?

I really want to post my recap of the Burnley & Trowbridge Brunswick workshop, which was amazing, but WordPress is being fussy and not posting galleries… and what’s the point of a costume post without pictures, I ask you?

So in the meantime, I will whine and ask y’all if you have any suggestions of where I can find silk taffeta ribbon (about 2″ wide-ish)?  I’ve been googling, and all over ebay and etsy, and all I’ve found has been the wrong color (I need ivory), or not silk, or not taffeta, or questionable whether it’s real heavyweight taffeta or just china-silk-esque, or something crazy like $50/yd.  I suppose I could get some yardage and do a teeny tiny hem, but… I just want silk taffeta ribbon!  Any ideas?

England Trip Report #2: What I Wore (and Made)

There was a mad rush of sewing to get ready for the England trip, naturally.

As previously posted, Michael’s doublet was nearing completion but he felt it was too tight.  I thought about piecing in a gusset in the CB, then realized that would just get wonky, so I literally took out the whole back and remade it.  Ugh!  I know I could have made him suffer, but I wanted him to be happy.  I really wanted to make him a hat, and bought the pattern and everything, but the timing was just too tight.  Maybe if he ever wears it again!

Final photos – and by popular request, a ruff (okay, some ruffled eyelet lace) for Sir Winston:

For me, the big project was a c. 1780 robe à la polonaise, which I took pictures of while I was making but totally neglected to do a dress diary… the reason for which will need to be another post! It’s made of red and white printed cotton (a duvet cover from Ikea), trimmed with red taffeta (which was supposedly silk when I bought it in the $7/yd silk taffeta garment district madness, but when Sarah burn tested her fabric, she reported it was not silk – bastards!), and yards of white organza ruffles.  I handsewed most of it, except I hemmed and gathered all the organza ruffles on the machine (hey, I’m not crazy!) except for the bottom ruffle on the petticoat, where the ruffling would show… and I ran out of time, so a lot of the sleeve was done on the machine.  I’m really pleased with it, especially the fit — I’m tired of always being the boobed wonder when I wear 18th c., so I made the neckline pretty cover-y — it might even be TOO narrow, but I’m not changing it now!  I do still need to add some braid to the back seams, but I can easily get that done before Costume College.  I’m thinking I’ll wear this to the Gala unless I get a wild hair to make something new… but that’s another post, too!  I promise to do a full write-up on the dress at some point, but again, more on this subject in another post.

I also remade my 1780s capote to have a poufier top (ie remade it in a couple of layers of silk organza), and retrimmed it as the green scheme made the outfit Christmas-y (I figured blue was complimentary without being matchy).  I used a vintage feather trim that I got at Costume College a few years back.  Finally, I wore the lace knitted mitts that I’ve been working on for a while – a totally modern pattern, unfortunately, as the only period patterns I could find were very butter churn-y and winter-y.

Finally, I did widen the neckline on the medieval gown — it was a rush job the night before we left, so I just put the dress on inside out, marked a wider neckline, cut some bias silk and finished it quickly.  I was worried it would stretch out or do something funky, but it seems to have worked!  I have a LOT of bust in it, but otherwise it turned out to be prettier than I’d thought and I had fun swanning about in the bluebells in it.

Oh, and I wore my green Venetian, but that’s very this-old-thing to me these days!

England Trip Report #1: Costume Events

Or, I Went to England and All I Got Was 500 Photos (ok, and a spoon and some books)

Home from the trip of a lifetime!  The plan:  rent a fabulous period house in England, get a bunch of friends together so as make an instant party and cut down the cost, and have as many costume events as we could pack in.  After a ton of work, we found a 16th c. manor in Suffolk with tons of period details and gardens waaaay out in the country.  Sadly, there was only room for a limited number, plus we wanted to make sure everyone would get along, so we had to keep the invite list short.  But what a fabulous trip we had, and maybe it will inspire other groups to do the same!

We rented the house for 4 nights/3 days and packed in a ton of costumed events (altho if we did it again, I’d rent a place for a longer period and space out the costume-y-ness — it’s hard to have the energy for multiple events in one day, what with all the food prep and cleanup!).

The first day, we had a 16th c. lunch followed by some period music and then a walk to the local church.  The countryside was gorgeous, and the church was really quite close by, which was good because it was WAY colder than I’d pictured.  I thought we’d be eating out on the lawn everyday, but it was only day #2 that was warm enough to spend any decent amount of time outside!  The area around the manor was gorgeous — we’d just missed the daffodils, but there was a lime avenue (any fan of Marie Antoinette knows how exciting that is!), lush green fields and trees, bluebells and other tiny flowers, and fields of yellow rapeseed flowers that just glowed.

That evening, we had our big event:  a 16th c. dinner in a 16th c. house!  In a period room!  With paneling and a huge fireplace and portraits of the house’s various owners!  We had tons and tons of delicious food made from period recipes.

Day #2, I went for a long walk in country lanes (and kept thinking of Persuasion: “Why does everyone assume I am not a good walker?”), then we had our 18th c. lunch (macaroons! tea sandwiches! yummy desserts!) followed by lots of wandering in the gardens and some lawn bowling.  Luckily, this day it was warm enough to be outside!

That evening, we’d planned an informal dinner followed by a Pre-Raphaelite Cocktail Party.  Fortunately and unfortunately, the dinner turned out to be a 7 course French meal (which was amazing), which ran late and left me and some others feeling not up to putting on yet another costume!  Braver ones than I still got dressed up, and we lounged in the (supposedly haunted) attic sitting room.

Day 3 was the Victorian or wear-any-era tea.  Since I hadn’t worn my medieval/Pre-Raphaelite dress the night before, and had been planning to re-wear 18th c., I went medieval.  We had yet more yummy tea sandwiches and desserts, then more garden strolling and general silliness.

That evening, we adapted the Lumieres Salacious Salon to be the Salacious/Spooky/Seditious Salon.  Everyone dressed down, Edmund performed a magic show, and we had silly and spooky readings.

And then, sadly, it was time to go!  It was all too short and I’d do it again in a heartbeat.  Wearing historical costumes in what is, to me, the motherland (okay, France is the other motherland, with Italy running a close second… but still!) was really pretty amazing.  It was fun that my husband came along too and bravely wore his hampants (and took some great photos!).  It was great spending time with friends and eating great food and indulging in this crazy hobby we all share!

I took waaaaaaaay too many photos, which if you’d like see, are all on Flickr.

Coming soon – posts on the costumes I made, plus the various costume museums I went to.

Get Yourself to New York ASAP!

The Metropolitan Museum of Art and Brooklyn Museum are both holding fashion exhibitions this summer to showcase the Brooklyn Museum costume collection.  May 5-Aug. 15, the Met has American Woman: Fashioning a National Identity, while from May 7-Aug. 1, the Brooklyn Museum has American High Style: Fashioning a National Collection.  You can see images of all the exhibited garments online:  here’s what will be at the Met, and here’s what will be at the Brooklyn Museum.

Some standouts to me:

You can preorder the catalog from Amazon — it comes out June 15, 2010.