A New Resolution

So I’ve made a new resolution:  sew for an hour every weeknight.  See, I used to be really really good at this — just a little bit of work each evening.  But for the past few years, I’ve come home exhausted and just flopped all night, leaving most of my sewing (except for hand finishing) for weekends and holidays.  I really want to avoid last minute rushes and panics, so this week I started implementing this resolution, even going so far as to calculate what time it will be in an hour and holding myself to it.

And it’s been bearing fruit!  Not tons of fruit, as that’s not the point, but it’s meant that slow and steady progress is being made, where normally it wouldn’t be.

I’m also trying to be disciplined and stay focused on my must-do list and to ignore any more CADD — if I can get through my must-sew list, then I will be free to do whatever I want!

So I’ve been working on the sleeve pattern for my Gothic Fitted/Pre-Raphaelite dress.  Being totally new to this era, I mostly followed Charlotte’s clear and useful instructions.  She’s right about the shape of the sleeve head — my dress armscye measurement was WAY longer than my bicep measurement, and even though I thought I’d flared the top of the sleeve a bit, I still had NO arm movement possible.  I futzed through a few mockups, finally flaring even more at the top and making the sleeve head curve relatively shallow, and got a nice sleeve top with some reasonable arm movement.

However, I was also getting some upsetting elbow-region wrinkles, and Tasha’s article on the “elbow hinge” was super helpful.  I ended up pinning a tuck (sort of shaped like a fish dart) in the sleeve where the wrinkling was happening, then repatterned with a straight edge for the top, measured out the width of the fish dart, and took all that out of the curved top of the bottom part of the sleeve.  It’s by no means perfect, but it helped.

I think I ended up with the seam connecting the upper & lower sleeves too high, however — I marked in Photoshop where I want to lower it to (on the last picture).  I also want the hem of the sleeve to hit my knuckles, so I need to add about an inch there.  So probably one more mockup before the pattern is finalized.

The one other good thing about this slow & steady approach is that normally, I would have made the above mentioned changes to the pattern and then just gone ahead without a final mockup (in my impatience to just get to the real deal). But since I was done with my hour of sewing for that night, I could resist that impulse and do the sensible thing of one final mockup!

I Finally Ordered Boning

Lethargy (it’s winter!) and CADD!  They are distracting.

I finally ordered boning — thanks to everyone for your suggestions and input!  Unfortunately it looks like not many places carry the extra hard boning (I’ve only found it at Farthingale’s — not even Greenberg & Hammer!) — Corsetmaking.com has it, but they had fewer lengths in stock vs. Vogue Fabrics.  And nobody seems to have the German plastic boning readily available — from Vogue, you have to order 100 meter rolls, Corsetmaking.com has to special order it, Greenberg & Hammer has “European” boning but I’m not sure if that’s the Wissner/German stuff (and I’m sorry, but in this day and age I refuse to have to make a phone call to verify that kind of info and/or make an order.  I promise to start using them when they start doing online ordering).

Phew!  So I decided to order my steel from Vogue, and then I’m going to get some plastic boning (for the horizontal bones in this corset, and enough to do my next version of these stays, which will be the hand sewn/German plastic boned version) from Farthingale’s Canada (expensive, I know, but I can get it by the meter or 12 meter roll there!).

So the boning showed up, I sewed my pieces together, I fray checked my edges, and I got to put it on.  And WOW, do I LOVE this shape.  I put one of my 18th c. dresses on over it, and that confirmed what I had thought — I have a FAR more bowed bust vs. my old pair (which I think are the Diderot stays, or something close — the pattern came from a workshop at Costume College).  I feel like the prow of a ship (in the best possible way), and I don’t even have any of the horizontal boning in yet!  The hard steel is SO supportive, it’ll be a real change when I do the version with the plastic boning (and will be interesting to compare).

The one thing is they are feeling REALLY tight around the waist.  I measured the waist and compared with my recently made 16th c. corset, which is SUPER comfortable, and there’s only a .5″ difference.  So I’m debating whether I should let it out a bit at the waist, or wear them around the house for a few hours and see if things stretch & settle?  I haven’t yet cut my tabs, do you think that would make much difference?  One thing is I only did lacing holes to just past the waist, and you can see how it’s pulling open in back.  I think I will go back and make more lacing holes so that it goes the full length of the CB, and just sew over the offset spiral lace hole that I currently have in there.  I’m not sure if straightening the back out will make the waist even tighter or not, however!

Oh yes, and jeans and a t-shirt ARE the best possible things to wear when trying on your stays!  And at some point I really should pattern some straps, shouldn’t I?

Fixing the Fit

It’s taken me a while to pick this back up again, even when I knew I only had to do a relatively easy fix.  Lethargy and CADD are to blame!  If you’ll recall, I’d put the basic dress together and all the lacing holes, and had Scary Mooshy Boob.  I let out the CF lacing as far as necessary to achieve Relatively Normal Boob, then put a piece of paper over me and traced the opening shape.  Then I cut that in half, and made a pattern for a small gusset to go in the side seam.  I put that in and it seems to have MOSTLY dealt with the problem, so since this dress is all about being good enough for government work, that’s done!  I am getting some horizontal wrinkles around my waist, particularly in back, but I’ve decided I’m just going to live with that.  I’ve got one front gusset that’s pulling — I did resew it, trying to create a bit more seam allowance, but it’s pulled again.  Harumph.  I will have to rip out the top of that gusset and try some fray block or something!

I also took some scary flash photos of the full length of the dress, just so you could see the skirt.

The Basic Hat Is Done!

I did realize that I forgot to glue crin tape on the edges, over the millinery wire.  oops!  I realized this after I’d mulled and put on the fabric cover, so no going back now!  Luckily I can’t see any rough edges, so I’m hoping it won’t matter.

Now I’ve got to decide on trim — it looks like a lot of these stripey huge hats only have a bit of flowers on them (makes sense, as visually it’s very loud).  But I do still like the contrast with the green ribbon on the red & white stripey hat fashion plate, so I’m going to poke around and see if I can find something that will work.  Solid, definitely, as this is already pretty over the top!

Also, I love millinery!  This is making me want to get back onto my Edwardian suit, just so I can make the hat…

Further Mulling

(no millinery-related puns intended)

So nothing further was accomplished on this today due to 5 million other things to do, other than getting some Heat N Bond tso that I can double my buckram (can I just say formally that I hate any thing with “n” in the name instead of “and”?  Come on people, use an “&” if you’re feeling the need to be snappy).

But I have spent the day worrying about something, and that is how this sucker will stay on my head.  I was trying to keep the proportions/shape of the hat to purple/black striped fashion plate, which I think I’ve done successfully.  But I’m never quite sure how to attach hats to a hedgehog wig, given that most of the hedgehog comes from ratting.  My capote sits far down around my forehead, so that’s not a problem to keep on.  But it looks like in this and other fashion plates, it’s not really sitting down low around the forehead so much as perching on top.  I do wear a wig for hedgehog, so I could do a bun on top of my head that sits under the wig, which gets a hatpin through it… but I don’t want to spend the time to make a hat, only to have it flop around unsuccessfully!

So then I was thinking maybe I need to widen the crown and wear it lower, like the Vigee Le Brun painting (a look I don’t like as much, but which could be more practical).

There’s no great front shots of the hat from The Duchess, but the few there are again look perch-y, not low-on-the-forehead-y.  Update: I found another hat worn in The Duchess that’s a similar style, and it’s definitely a percher.  So I guess bun & hatpin is the way to go?

What do you think?