The Dress Over the Christmas holiday I've drafted a new pattern with raglan seams for this and the Anna Meyer dress. I really like the way it fits and have high hopes for it. Sorry for the bad blur... I had to break my rule and go buy a yard of black linen to line the sleeves with because I didn't have enough of the velvet left after the guarding was cut. I'm going to make the upper sleeve like the Augsburg pink dress, and probably detached lower sleeves like the Anna Meyer. The skirt for the dress and kirtle are both gored. Since I had more pink fabric than red (and the original plan was to line the pink with the red) I made my gores as large as the red would let me. I wanted fairly mild gores so I'd still have enough fabric at the waist to roll pleat, and I tried several layouts but the best one was in the pic to the right. The fabric is 3 layers thick so I got two full gores and one with a center seam. All my pieces are cut and I have spent many hours thinking about how to put it together. Now if only I could get to my machine... 1/30/06: Can it be? Did I actually DO something? Some of this is thoughts from my livejournal, but it really belongs here... After having 2 migraines in one week I didn't sew much, but at least I got going again on the 25th... Being raglan seamed, I have to (well, it's easier if I) get the upper sleeves done before attaching them to the bodice. Well, it's damn hard to get them done if I can't decide how I want them to be! I finally decided on making them paned instead of pure slashing, just for washabilty, then putting the black guard just above the elbow. I broke my rule of using only materials I already had and bought a yard of black linen to put under the panes but it didn't fit right. I may baste in a new layer after it's done but for now it's ripped out again. I took the hint and bought some of that scrummy black silk satin someone posted in lj (Koshka? Sarah?). I almost broke a fever deciding how much I could get. Another great find that figured into this project was a ball of 100% silk 3/4" velvet ribbon for $5. It was light lemon yellow but I figured I could dye it whatever color I needed, and it turned out to be almost 15 yards. So I get my pink panes and black cuff pinned together and I look at it and think BOOOOOORING! Then my eyes catch that lemon yellow silk velvet ribbon and think hhhmmmmmmmmmmm. I made up a small pot of scarlet dye, dipped a tip of it in, let it dry and it was PERFECT! So then I popped 3 yards into it but it was in too long. Have I mentioned I am the WORST dye-er in the world? It came out the most wonderful vibrant orange, but not the right color for this. So, I tried again on a new piece by just running it through like a conveyor belt and it worked out really nicely. The fuzz took more dye than the ground so it looks similar to the linen since the ground is still pretty yellow and the fuzz is pinkish-orange. This I took and slashed with an exacto on the bias and wrapped around the edge of the black cuff. That gave it right pop I was looking for. I got the sleeves put together and into the bodice, got all the hooks up the front, and pinned together with the skirt on my dress dummy just to see how it will look. The black guard along the top is laid on just to give me the idea of what it will look like, and there will also be one or two black guards along the bottom. So, here's the dress so far on my dummy over the kirtle.
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The front
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The back
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The sleeves are long enough to puff about this much over a hemd.
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The color matches better in real life.
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This pic exaggerates it, but there's a slight color mis-match because I rotated the warp/weft of the linen on the bodice. oops!
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2/23/06: Pretty much finished! I was not happy with the pleat spacing of the skirt so I did end up ripping it off and re-attaching it. I got the skirt sewn back on and I'm MUCH happier with the pleat spacing. They are all even and more fabric is in the back half now. Next was the bodice lining. This was the first time I integrated the hooks & eyes into the garment rather than adding them on last. I think this made them stronger by being able to sew cleanly through all layers before the black guard went one, but by tacking the lining down so close to the edge, it also helps tremendously with the front edge smoothness. No funny pop-up ridge with the hooks pulling the lining out. :-) Last for this dress was hemming and the black guard along the bottom edge. This gives the hem a really nice weight and "flick" for dancing even though the skirt fabric is so light and flow-ey.
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You can see that the guard at the hem adds a nice flippy weight to the linen skirt
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You may not think it's a big deal, but I have never had the INSIDE of a dress look so nice...
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Integrated hook & eyes worked really smoothly with no pop-up ridge from a pulling lining
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I've cut out the lower sleeves that will be separate and just pull on, like the Anna Meyer. I should finish those up in the next few days. So, here's the finished product! so far, anyway...
5/22/06: Upgrades and a Day at the Faire To reach my goal of 5 outfits for 5 days at the faire this year, I had satisfied 4 of them; the Big Pig, the Venetian, the Saxon, the Fitted English Gown, and the Augsburg. The problem was, once I started planning for the last weekend, I started to think that this dress was just a little too casual for this run. I'd had great fun playing all year with court and I made this dress specifically for hot days I wanted to dress down for. I looked into finishing the PDSvN dress - never gonna happen in time - then at the Red English dress - which I actually made some progress on. Days came and went, my brother got married, time slipped by, and I did not get far enough along on the Red English dress to finish it. The Augsburg dress has been on my dress form since I finished it, so I stared at it a lot then went back to my original inspiration images, which were of an upper class dress. I dug through my stash and found some gold zardozi trim intended as a v-collar and cuff trim set for a salwar kameez. The cuffs fit perfectly on the black guards just above my elbows, and the v-collar design I cut apart to fit onto the bosom area in the same placement as the Dorothea Meyer portrait. This spruced it up a great deal but it bothered me that the gold trim did not continue around the shoulders and across the back. I found a lot of random gold trims but only one plain soutache that matched the bright and slightly pink gold of the zardozi trim. I braided it, hammered it flat, and tacked it around the neck opening and I think it balanced it out just enough. Then I grabbed the small scraps I had left of the shot pink silk I used to trim Claire's dress and pieced together a long bias strip for the belt. Of course, because everything has to be a**-backwards for me, I found some pyramid nailheads in gold AFTER I sewed up the belt put I did figure out a way to get them on without unstitching it. I also found some pink silk tassels I had that matched. Serendipity! I took a poll on my livejournal about going with the shot pink silk accessories or black accessories and the pink won out. I put a wider silk satin hat band on Claire's Italian bonnet and added a feather piece I had and I was all done! Voila
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