The Kirtle with Under-sleeves 1/10/05: Changes for the kirtle With some nice, new, fluffy fabric for the overdress, I started hating the brocade for the kirtle. Again, I couldn't stomach doing all that work on a cotton/poly blend. Yes, I know I'm a snob that way, but I have to wear this stuff in heat. It makes a huge difference. I dug out all my silks from the stash and started looking at color combinations fresh. The one dupioni I have that is not pictured in the color test entry on 6/14/04 is, of course, the one I really like and the one I had reserved for my friend's surcote. It's a weird celery color and I have 5 yards of it at 45" wide. None of the other colors had enough to make a whole kirtle anyway, but it doesn't matter. I am completely enamored of this weird green with the teal. My brain tells me the combo shouldn't work but it really does. Now I am excited about this project again! It's been a few months since I drafted the pattern so I checked my kirtle pattern again and started cutting. The skirt is patterned after the Alcega "Woman's kirtle with a low-cut bodice of cloth rash (f.60 in the 1589 book) and the bodice is my own draft of a plain, square-necked bodice shape with back-side lacing similar to the one in that same Alcega diagram. This cutting pattern gave me my kirtle with a ~200" hem and a 3" hem guard for the lining in just over 3.5 yards. This leaves me with just about 1 yard left to make under-sleeves, but more on that in a minute. Perfect. I just receive in the mail 10 yards of 3.5 oz linen and 5 yards of 7.9 oz linen from fabrics-store and it's fantastic. After washing it, I have cut two layers of the 7.9 oz canvas as bodice interlining. This stuff is pretty heavy duty so I'll probably stitch the boning casings between the layers, add the silk on top and leave it at that. I don't think it will need too much boning either since it's so sturdy. We'll see. I'll probably line the skirt half with the 3.5oz linen but I might try and dig up some cheaper cotton. I'd hate to waste this lovely linen on that lining, but if I do it sure would give it a nice weight and drape. We'll see. Sleeve planning Now I have just over a yard of the celery dupioni for the under-sleeves. The main problem I have is that I'm not really enamored of the striped and slashed sleeves on that PDSvN dress. I made a cotton mock-up of the diagram in the book and it's also too full for my tastes, especially to be under those pendant over-sleeves, so I am going to do something else entirely. I have always like the idea of strapwork and haven't had the opportunity to try it myself. A challenge! I really like the layout of the strapwork jerkin in POF, pg.24 figure 155. I re-drafted and narrowed the sleeve base I started with from the PDSvN diagram and went to work planning the strap layout. I have just enough fabric to cut all the straps in the celery, and for the base fabric I can use the lighter apple green from the color test swatches. I also like the embellishment of the jerkin straps so I'll look into getting some very thin silver cord or braid to couch down the strap edges and some silver embroidery thread to make the french knots. I think it will be lovely if I can get it together. 1/21/05 Well, I've cut my sleeve bases in apple green silk, and cut up all the remaining celery green into 2" wide strips, on the grain. There wouldn't have been enough to do bias strips and it wouldn't matter anyway; I don't need any stretch. I ironed all the raw edges under so they are now 1" wide strips. Then I made a little template to cut them so they have a 45 degree angle end (to the edge of the sleeve panel) and a flat 90 degree end (that tucks under the next strip). The plan is to lay out the strips on the sleeve base, stitch them down so the raw edges of the ironed under strips won't have to be finished in any way, the couch or run-stitch the silver cord down over the first line of stitching. Oh yeah, I found some silver gimp. LOL! It's actually a metallic silver 5-strand braid but it's made of the same stuff that would have cost more total if I bought it as single-strand gimp. I think I paid $1.19/yd and got 10 yards which means I actually have 50 yards of the gimp. Hmmmm, what can I do with that? If I use up 20 yards for the sleeve strips that leaves either 30 yards of gimp or 6 yards of braid. Nothing to sneeze at. I'm sure I'll find a place to put it. I cut my sleeve bases into 4 panels each for laying out the strips - I want to encase the raw edges into a seam rather than try and cover them with the trim. I thought of laying down a strip of celery to lay the trim over but there won't be enough. Anyway, I must have laid out those strips 4 or 5 times before I got the perfect angle. The very first strip must be perfect or else the center of the design will migrate to the left or right of the panel center and eventually leave me with too little length in each strip to tuck under the next piece. I finally got it right and will use my straight edge to gauge the angle for the next panels. It looks like I'll have enough of the apple green silk and celery strips to run a panel of strapwork down the front of the kirtle, between the silver braid. This will make the dress deviate even more from the original, but I like how it would tie into the under-sleeves. We'll see... can you tell I don't make decisions until I have to? I might also have some left over thinner silver trim to add onto the sleeves. I want to make them very sparkly but I'm not sure I want to add pearls or stones. I think encrusting them in silver will work wonders. Oh, I found a pic of the celery fabric, and it even has the apple green next to it. This is, of course stolen from the surcote project, but I have plenty of banana yellow to compliment that. 2/7/05 Well, things are slowly moving along. I actually tried sewing yesterday while my daughter was awake and watching TV. She decided it would be more interesting to sit on the table and draw on my machine with a marker. *sigh* Back to sleepy-time-only sewing. The good news is I've gotten 5 of the 8 sleeve panels strapwork pinned on to the base silk. I originally thought I'd have enough to make a panel down the front of the kirtle skirt but then thought that would look silly without continuing it up onto the bodice. This gave me the excuse to try out my sewing method with the silver soutache edges and see if this whole scheme was going to work, or if I'd have to un-pin all those little strips on the sleeves. It worked, and I breathe a HUGE sigh of relief. It's also gong to look very cool :-) I have finished sewing down the strips and silver gimp on the bodice center panel. I will hand sew down the silver braid along the edge, then sew the bodice together tonight. I bought some jute twine at the hardware store (they didn't have any hemp!) which I'll use to stiffen some places - I've sewn channels up the center back on the bodice interlining. I want this to be fairly comfortable so I plan on only sparingly using the cable tie boning. My goal is to make this kirtle wearable without the overdress if I want to. Best laid plans... 3/18/05: How many jokes can I make about boning?  Not much to report here. I started on the skirt half of the kirtle. It is sewn together, lined, and I started sewing the strip of apple green down the center to put the strapwork on, but I didn't measure correctly and it's too wide. So I have to rip that off and cut it down. No biggie. Then I have all the layers worked out for the kirtle bodice. The outer layer of celery silk is flat-lined in linen, then there's two layers of linen canvas under that with the boning channels stitched in. I cut all my cable ties for the boning strips. Now I just have to melt the edges and I can sew the bodice up. I've made a bunch of bias tape in the apple green silk and I'll bind the edges of the bodice with it as I sew it down. I hope the eyelets turn out better on this than they did on my English Red. ugh. 3/22/05: "I'm meeeelting... What a world, what a world..." Small update... I melted all the edges of the cable ties. The only reason this warrants an entry is that I did find it was very important to do it with the windows open, and that the whole process was much cleaner and quicker if I used the gas burner on my stove instead of a candle. That's it. 5/30/06: I am in Hell I've spent a ridiculous amount of time trying to get the strips on the sleeves to work. The cutting, preparing, ironing, and pinning of the celery silk onto the apple silk bases is bad enough, but sewing the silver soutache down has been a nightmare. My machine rips up the metallic part of the trim, even with a size 9 needle and needle lube. The presser foot makes the trim slide around so it's not straight, and when I tried to hand sew it... well, let's just say it didn't work. I am now going to pull out all the fabrics for this project and see if I have enough left of anything to make totally new sleeves. grumble grumble grumble 6/19/06: Something accomplished! Sort of...  Well, I have decided that in order to deal with the limited trim issue I have to change the order in which I planned to make the outfit. Other than adding some more lacing holes to alleviate the pulling on the back, I have finished the kirtle bodice. Voila! I will not attach the skirt until the over dress is done and I know how much trim I have to use. No biggie! Now I need a new farthingale before I can do anything else. I can't deal with the skirt lengths and the trim amount issues without the proper hoops. So, next up - the Spanish farthingale. I'll be using the pattern out of The Tudor Tailor book. 7/14/06: Fixed  I skimped on the number of lacing holes since I figured this is for a kirtle that won't be seen under the dress but still, the pulling is bothering me. Of course, now that I have some lacing holes I'll have to put in twice as many if I want to do something about it. ugh. Still I like the fit of this bodice better than any of my others, and the apple green bias binding came out pretty as well, so I finally got the rest of the holes done and it fits a little tighter now, too. I bought some really cool suit-weight silk for a new farthingale and got it cut out. Now I'm just waiting to find a screamin' deal on some ribbon to make the boning channels. 3/11/07: Actually making Progress. No, Really! I've been working on this because I'd really like to get it done for Faire this year. I was really unhappy with the way the machine chewed up the strap-work on the sleeve panels I tried so I have abandoned that idea for the front of the kirtle. I found another wider silver soutache trim so I'm going back to something more like the original gown.  I finally hauled the skirt-part of the kirtle out and started applying the trim by hand - you can't use the machine on this stuff without destroying it. I also grabbed a remnant of some linen velvet I had in apple green and put a welt of that at the hem for wear. It also gives it a really nice weight since linen velvet is really thick & heavy. It's shinier in the picture than in real life because of the flash, but I'm really liking the way it's looking. On my screen anyway the color is pretty close in this pic, too. YAY! Now all I want to do is stay home and work on it! 3/16/07: Well, I did it. I just couldn't take it that the new trim looked so pretty and was going to butt up against the strapwork patch on the bodice that would not appear anywhere else on the dress. It won't show at all under the overdress - I know this! But I couldn't take just knowing it was there. I really didn't want to spend the time to take the strapwork off, and I really didn't want to risk accidentally slicing the bodice fabric, since I have no more of it to remake it if I ruin it. But I just couldn't stand it. So, out came the seam ripper and ripped were the seams. I was careful and managed not to ruin the bodice, then I applied the new trim to extend from the skirt to the neckline, re-sewed the edge binding and viola! I like it SO much better now! I still need to adjust my bumroll so the front of the skirt is just pinned on but the back is attached. 3/20/07: Done! Well, almost done... The kirtle is done! Except for some hand-finishing on the inside that I suspect won't get done before I wear it. :-0 I really like the way it fits. Needs pressing. And sleeves. I'll do those last since I still don't know what I want them to look like.  Now I get to start in earnest on the overdress. :-) |