LA Garment District Shopping Report

Bunny is right, Costume College IS new year’s for costumers… what’s with this end of the (calendar) year wrap-up? CoCo is when I finish things and make evil plans for the coming year. With that being said, we went fabric shopping! (Yes, photos and recap of CoCo coming soon).

I was mostly good — my plan was to fill out planned projects for which I already had fabric, and I mostly stuck to that except for one big failure… I need new corsets for every era that I do, so I bought some green and gold (greener in person) silk damask at Home Fabrics, as well as some dark red silk taffeta ($6/yard!!) at Valentine’s to go with the red and white indienne print ikea cotton that I have slated to be a polonaise. I was being good, I swear, when this cream and cherry striped silk taffeta jumped out and bit me at Home Fabrics (okay, Mela agreeing that it was perfect and Sarah nodding so hard she got whiplash didn’t help)! I’ve ALWAYS wanted a stripey silk francaise, ever since I saw the 3 striped francaises in Revolution in Fashion (and the Kyoto fashion book) — and that stripe was just such a great color, plus the groupings of the stripes were so much more right for the period than most striped taffetas… so then I went back to Valentine’s to get the cherry (less bright pink in person) silk taffeta also in that picture for a petticoat. Stripes! Yay! Oh, and Sarah bought the same fabric in yellow and true red, with a true red solid for the petticoat… while normally I would die if I had the same fabric as someone else, I actually talked her into buying it, because – hey, we just need one more and then we can recreate that Kyoto/Revolution in Fashion 3 striped francaises photo!

So the plan for this year, so far, is:

1. New 16th c. corset. I need it – my current one is on its last legs. It’ll actually be patterned off my Nell Gwyn bodice, but psh I say to those who sneer. It’s a great pattern, more flattering than something with straighter bones in the front, and I don’t care if it’s not period — it’ll give me a good shape. (And besides, with only 2 surviving LATE 16th c. examples, we don’t really know enough about how they did it!)

2. New 18th c. stays. This is what’s on my mind right now. After admiring the tone on tone damasks that Trystan and Loren had Sarah use in their new effigy corsets, I looked everywhere in the garment district for something similar — only to discover that embroidered silks are in and damasks are out! So I got 2 yards of this silk from Fabricguru.com and it’s on its way to me. Am I crazy to think about handsewing these? I really am. But then I’m also debating linen (evil stretchy!) versus coutil, and I’m definitely using metal boning, so then I’m wondering if handsewing is superfluous. But then I’m trying to costume for ME, right? Not for anyone else’s expectations. Hmm. I want to bind it in cream and use cream ribbon/braid on the seams, but I’m hemming about what exactly to use — linen tape is period, but is that too middle class-y with the silk? Maybe use petersham? I’d love to use something silk, but it’s so hard to find silk ribbon that isn’t semi-flimsy satin.

3. The cherry stripe francaise will be for next year’s CoCo gala (the theme is Steampunk, to which I say meh!). I’m looking for a good cherry-colored faux-fly-fringe, and contemplating making my own (someone hit me!).

Somewhere in there, I need a new 18th c. shift and new 16th c. roped petticoat. Nothing exciting about those. I’m also thinking about the maja dress, the red & white ikea polonaise, and this fabulous very 18th c. silk sari that needs to be something 1780s, but I’m not sure what… the fabric lends itself to a gaulle/chemise, but I only have enough fabric to make a fitted bodice. Hmm!

Okay, this was long!

Costume College Day 1!

I am at Costume College! Yesterday we went to the garment district where I was VERY BAD, to the tune of 12 yards of embroidered/striped silk taffeta for my 1750s-ish French court dress. And some white taffeta for an 18th century masquerade dress I’ve been planning for a while. And 2 more yards of the purple & white striped so I can make a day bodice (the Daniel Deronda dress!) for my 1870-1 evening dress. And jewels for my Tudor dress. eep! Took a class today on historical influences in fashion, off to fairy wings in about 30 min. Wearing the 18th c. tart and looking fabulous, as does everyone else! Yay! More soon.

Fabric Shopping Fabulousness

So while I was heavy into trying to find my dream fabric for my upcoming 1584 Venetian dress (musn’t sew! must pack!), and trying to find online fabric stores that I hadn’t previously heard of, I came across Fabric Whore. In addition to having a great name, it’s the best, most comprehensive listing of online fabric stores that I’ve found. In particular, two that I wish I had heard about earlier: Design Diva and Fabric Guru.

In other news, I am in Packing Land, with movers coming Friday. Then it’s off Friday night to the Central Coast Renaissance Faire (aka SLO). THEN I can finally start unpacking, and start thinking about sewing…

Costume Con Documentation!

And no, not the historical masquerade variety! I have been SO wiped since Costume Con that I didn’t even upload my photos/video until yesterday. But I finally got it together to post my photos to Flickr (posted there because most of them are very, very random) and videos (most of which will be boring if you aren’t in them – the cupcake dance, the cupcake dance pt. 2, and a bit of the Eugenie ladies standing on stage after receiving our award [I do like Trystan’s fist pumping action!]). Also, Trystan posted the latest Frock Flicks podcast, recorded live at Costume Con 26 – please to enjoy!

I am working on getting all the info up on the Eugenie dresses, but unfortunately am waiting for the official Con photographers to post their photos from that night (altho there are lots of photos of us out there, most of them aren’t the clearest).

On Saturday I went to Cain’s Crossing Renaissance faire with a few others from Bella Donna – no stage show, just lots of singing and having fun. Now I am seriously jonesing for a new Venetian dress, but of course not for the fabric I already have! Where oh where can a girl find a green & gold damask (in silk or cotton/rayon) without spending $10,000, I ask you?