teen

adult's clothing, sewing, teen

Style Arc Joy woven vest #2

After sewing Stella’s Style Arc Joy woven vest, she asked for another one the next size up.  The first one is quite snug!  So I reprinted the pattern and cut size 6.

Style Arc Joy woven vest

This time around I used a striped fabric that I’d bought on my excellent visit to Stonemountain & Daughter with Sue. It’s got an interesting weave and includes three colours that Stella wears often.

vest fabric

Because I’d sewn it not long before, it was very straightforward to make a second time. I did have to be careful to not overhandle the pieces as the fabric was prone to fraying. Rather than use self-fabric to line it like I did the first time, I found a smooth cotton/linen in stash in beige and lined it in that.

Style Arc Joy woven vest

The buttons are brown shell buttons that I am pretty sure I bought from Thailand via Etsy.  The pockets on this vest aren’t pockets at all, just non-functional pocket welt-style flaps that are there for decoration.  I did need to ensure that they lined up and were at the same angle!

Style Arc Joy woven vest

Stella recently turned sixteen – yes! sixteen! – which reminds me that I started this blog when I was pregnant with Stella.  Sixteen years of blogging, good grief!  It still serves me well as a sewing journal, even though blogs definitely aren’t what they used to be once people switched to Instagram, YouTube and lots now on TikTok.  Anyway, this is the outfit that she wore for her birthday party (at home, with a few school friends).  Her earrings and necklace are mine, from the 80s!  Her shirt is from Uniqlo, and the chocolate brown suede skirt was found in the Goodwill store in Haight-Ashbury, San Francisco. White loafers from Cotton On.

Style Arc Joy woven vest

adult's clothing, sewing, teen

Style Arc Joy woven vest

Finally, the last of the 2022 garments!  I finished sewing the buttons onto this vest just before we called the taxi to take us to the airport in December, and she wore it on the plane!

Style Arc Joy woven vest

Stella had been asking for a vest for a while, and she’d tried on a few in the shops but they were always way too big for her frame. Luckily for me Style Arc had recently released a pattern for the Joy Woven Vest.

Style Arc Joy woven vest

One of the joys (see what I did there) of Style Arc patterns is the size range. The vest started at size 4, and that’s what I used. As it turns out, it’s on the small side! From the Style Arc website:
PRODUCT DESCRIPTION
Faux welt pockets at front
Princess line
Button opening, 4 x buttons
Cut away at centre back
Easy fit
Fully lined
FABRIC SUGGESTION
Woven fabric including linen, cotton.

Stella was really hoping that this would be done in time to take away, so I just sewed it up straight out of the pattern without making a toile or individual fit adjustments. So it’s not a perfect fit, but it’s way better than anything she’d tried in the shops. She wanted to be able to wear it both as a top on it’s own and layered over a shirt.

Style Arc Joy woven vest

Here she’s styled it over a Uniqlo shirt and op shopped jeans (low waisted and wide legged). She’s worn it with a few different outfits since this.

Style Arc Joy woven vest

The fabric is another holiday souvenir – a hand-woven sarong length from Thailand. This is a fully lined vest and I just used the same fabric to line it, figuring that the cotton would be comfortable against the skin if she was wearing it without something underneath.

Style Arc Joy woven vest

The metal buttons used for the closure were from stash. Stella has asked for another vest, and I have a length from my visit to Stonemountain and Daughter with Sue that is earmarked for it. I will go up a size next time though and sew the 6.

adult's clothing, Friday Pattern Company, teen

Friday Pattern Company Saguaro Set

I am still catching up on 2022 makes – there are a few more to go.  I sewed up the Saguaro Set, by Friday Pattern Company, back in winter/spring, so the weather was still cold and Clare didn’t get the opportunity to wear it.  Fiji provided us with a perfect location to get some blog photos!

Saguaro set in SCF cotton

This is the sort of outfit that I love the look of, but wouldn’t wear myself (I feel too self-conscious in anything that exposes my waist/belly). I really enjoy getting to sew these styles for my daughters, who are keen for waist definition and don’t mind exposing some belly!

From the website: The Saguaro Set is a two piece woven set made up of elastic waistband pants and a pullover top. This is the perfect outfit for road trips through the desert, sunset walks on the beach, or dancing the night away. The pants feature roomy pockets and a waistband with a drawstring. The top has a plunging V neckline that includes an optional tie closure. You can wear the top backwards or forwards. This flowy set is easy to sew and fun to wear with endless options for customization.

Saguaro set in SCF cotton

The fabric is cotton madras woven check from Super Cheap Fabrics (no longer available on their website). The colour combination was right up Clare’s alley, and the light weight makes for a very cool summer outfit.

Saguaro set in SCF cotton

I didn’t have enough fabric to cut the whole outfit out in a ‘with nap’ layout, so the checks don’t match up in the pants. I did a pretty good job across the front seams, but the pants back stripes are in the reverse of the front so don’t match along the side seams. The pants hems are still green checks, so it doesn’t jump out at you. Still better than lots of what I see in the shops!  You really do need to take some time and care when cutting out checked garments so ensure that things are centred and colours flow nicely.

Saguaro set in SCF cotton

The pants drawstring is functional, not just a decorative tie, although the pants have an elastic waist. There are also pockets set into the side seams.

Saguaro set in SCF cotton

I did a narrow shoulder and small bust alteration on the top, as per this YouTube tutorial by Paige Joanna. There is a wealth of sewing information and tutorials on YouTube, but usually I don’t have the patience to sit through a full tutorial to find the information I want! I much prefer to go to written material. That said, this was a very helpful tutorial that saved me from having to think. I am trying to remember to check if there are tutorials out there for patterns that I want to sew when they are ones I think could be tricky or require alterations. As it turns out, Friday Pattern Company have sew-along tutorials on YouTube for a few of their patterns!

Saguaro set in SCF cotton

The topstitching on the wide waist elastic on both the top and the pants gives a really nice finish, and the optional tie on the top – which we included – provides a little cleavage coverage. Clare has worn the pieces together and separately with other wardrobe items. Definitely a successful sew!

Saguaro set in SCF cotton

adult's clothing, sewing, teen, Vikisews

VikiSews Leoncia dress

Clare chose the VikiSews Leoncia dress to wear to the wedding.  We began the planning process a few months prior, although the dress didn’t actually get finished until the week before we left!

Vikisews Leoncia dress in crepe back poly satin

This is the line drawing for the dress. It’s all cut on the bias. Clare and I had done some formal dress try-on sessions at the local shops some months earlier where we’d determined that bias cut worked nicely on her, but it really needed me to sew it to grade up through the hips. In the end I cut size 2 (Australian size 6) for the bodice, and graded it up to size 4 (Australian size 8) through the hips, which was very straightforward.  I bought the 162-168cm height range of the pattern.

Vikisews Leoncia dress in crepe back poly satin

The fabric is crepe backed polyester satin, bought on considerable discount at Lincraft (of all places!) with mint green bemsilk lining. The blue fabric in the photo is the poly satin I used for her Marla dress.

Vikisews Leoncia dress in crepe back poly satin

The dress was actually fairly straighforward to make, especially because there are no closures, as it slips on due to the flexibility of the bias. The spaghetti straps that hold the entire dress up have sliders to make them adjustable. If I sewed this again I would move them in a little – the straps ended up being a bit wide-set on Clare’s narrower shoulders.

Vikisews Leoncia dress in crepe back poly satin

Before I attached the sleeves I had Clare try on the dress. It actually looked really cute on her without them! It wouldn’t be at all difficult to adjust the pattern to make it sleeveless. Nevertheless, we continued on with adding the sleeves.

Vikisews Leoncia dress in crepe back poly satin

I had complicated things slightly by deciding to fully line the dress. The upper front is fully lined, but the back neckline is finished with a facing. I cut the skirt pattern pieces out in lining fabric and attached the back pieces to the back facing, and the front skirt piece to the upper front self-fabric lining, and then continued on with construction pretty much as per the instructions. It all worked out okay!

Vikisews Leoncia dress in crepe back poly satin

When Clare tried it on, she found that her arm movement was a bit restricted. I let out the bicep area of the sleeves, which improved matters considerably. Then we discovered that she really needed to wear the dress hiked right up to her armpits, with the straps set fairly short in order to provide a really good danceable range of movement. Double-sided tape helped to keep the bodice in the right spot! She accidentally found out if she tucked the sleeves inside the dress she could wear it sleeveless and you couldn’t even tell there were sleeves inside – an unexpected versatility bonus.

Vikisews Leoncia dress in crepe back poly satin

When I started sewing the dress I sewed over a pin and completely threw off the timing of my machine and jammed it. Yikes! I sent the Pinnock off for repairs, and switched to sewing on the girls’ machine, a little Bernette. Once I got the hang of things it sewed quite nicely. I used the overlocker to finish seam allowances. I used an old Big4 pattern to sew up a matching pouch for Clare to carry her phone etc in. It wasn’t my best work, but it was fine on the day!

Vikisews Leoncia dress in crepe back poly satin

Anyway, Clare looked fabulous! The dress turned out beautifully, was comfortable to wear (other than having to apply double-sided tape to the top edges of the bodice) and she received many compliments. It turned out that it was highly danceable too!

 

Vikisews Leoncia dress in crepe back poly satin

Vikisews Leoncia dress in crepe back poly satin

Vikisews Leoncia dress in crepe back poly satin

Vikisews Leoncia dress in crepe back poly satin

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adult's clothing, sewing, teen, Vikisews

VikiSews Tally bustier top – modelled photos!

Wow, what a wonderful holiday we had!  I know that some of you followed our South-West USA and Fiji trip via Facebook or Instagram and were spammed with my daily updates.  It really was the trip of a lifetime.  And the wedding – the whole impetus for the trip – was superb!  I’ll share more photos later, but first off am adding to my last blog post about Stella’s VikiSews Tally bustier top with some modelled photos.

Vikisews Tally bustier top

Vikisews Tally bustier top

Vikisews Tally bustier top

Vikisews Tally bustier top

Vikisews Tally bustier top

20221221_160454

Vikisews Tally bustier top

The wedding was in Winter Park, Colorado. A snow storm raged outside while we enjoyed a beautiful ceremony and fabulous reception inside. Just superb!

adult's clothing, sewing, teen, Vikisews

Vikisews Tally bustier top

We’re heading to the USA very soon (via Fiji) to attend our nephew’s wedding in Colorado.  Which means that I needed to do some wedding guest sewing! The dress code is formal (suits, gowns, cocktail dresses).  We bought Dan a new suit from our favourite menswear retailer (it had been a long time between suits) and the girls and I went shopping to see if there were any styles that we fancied.  Stella decided that she wanted to wear a suit, but with a pretty top underneath.  I’ve been travelling for work quite a lot this year, and knew that it wasn’t really viable for me to sew her a suit with all the fitting that might entail. We found her one at Forever New, and I found the Vikisews Tally bustier top pattern.

Vikisews Tally bustier top wearable muslin

I wasn’t going to cut into ‘good’ fabric until I’d worked out any fitting tweaks. I bought the smallest size pattern (US2/UK6 – Stella is an Australian women’s size 4 in the shops) and printed the shortest height range.  Although Stella is around 160cm tall she’s a little short-waisted so I figured that would work best in this style.  I found some mid/heavy weight poly satin in stash and decided to use that for the hopefully wearable muslin.

Vikisews Tally bustier top wearable muslin

There was no way that I was going to make the bias strips to topstich over the seamlines as per the pattern – not in this poly satin! But they’d be great in something lighter weight or something like a linen.

Vikisews Tally bustier top wearable muslin

I still needed to take up the shoulders a little, and decided to bring in the centre front panel a smidge at the neckline.

Vikisews Tally bustier top wearable muslin

The fancy plastic separating zipper that I used at the back was found at Jimmy Buttons. It’s a fraction too long for purpose, but I managed to fudge it adequately enough. So, the finished bustier? It’s a success!

Vikisews Tally bustier top wearable muslin

Vikisews Tally bustier top wearable muslin

Vikisews Tally bustier top wearable muslin

She’s been wearing it both as a top on it’s own and styled over a white shirt. Hooray!

Vikisews Tally bustier top wearable muslin

So you ask, why couldn’t she wear this top with the suit? Well, the suit is dark green and the blue/teal satin doesn’t go with it at all. We auditioned many fabrics as potential options for the ‘real’ top, and ended up with a brocade from The Cloth Shop. Which happened to be left over from MY wedding guest dress. Yes, Stella and I are going to match!

Vikisews Tally bustier top

Vikisews Tally bustier top

I made the same alterations to this top as I did to the satin one, only to discover that the armholes were now a fraction too high! Good thing I had her try it on before I lined it; I was able to re-sew the shoulder seams to have the tiniest seam allowance possible, and that fixed it.  Phew! This zipper also came from Jimmy Buttons, but because it was a metal zipper I was able to shorten it to the correct length. There is a good video tutorial on shortening a metal zipper for the back of a bustier here – starting at 7:53min.

Vikisews Tally bustier top

I don’t have any modelled photos of this bustier on Stella to share with you, but here’s the outfit!

Vikisews Tally bustier top

Don’t worry, I’ll spam you all with modelled photos from the wedding!  I’ll blog my wedding guest dress soon, and Clare’s just needs a few tweaks and the hem done.  We leave in less than a week!

adult's clothing, sewing, teen, Vikisews

Vikisews Marla dress (and top)

Clare is finally able to enjoy a social life (after the events of the past couple of years).  As a result, she needs some fancy clothes!  We had an excursion to the local shopping centre a few months ago where she tried on a variety of styles and we figured out more about what she likes, what she feels good in, and that if we want good fit, I need to sew for her.

Vikisews Marla dress product photo

Vikisews has a number of patterns that are very current and appeal to my teenagers. She sells her patterns in height ranges, which works well for us. Some are available as multi-sized patterns and others are single sized. You can find them on Etsy and on the Vikisews website. The designer is Russian, so many of the patterns have instructions/markings in both Russian and/or English.

Marla bodice toile

I started with a bodice muslin, both to get an idea of sizing and to understand the construction. I figured that I’d be able to convert the bodice muslin into a top. The floral cotton has been in stash for ages; it originally came from GJs, back when they were in Brunswick.

Vikisews Marla dress as top

The pattern came with step by step instructions with photos of each step. There was also plenty of general fitting and construction detail. Although these long tutorials don’t lend themselves easily to being printed, and are better read from an iPad or laptop screen during the sewing process, the instructions were very comprehensive.

Vikisews Marla dress as top

I inserted an separating zip in the centre back so that the muslin could be worn as a top. The zip was really a fraction too long for the bodice depth, so the insertion is a bit dodgy, but that’s on me. I found the zip at Jimmy Buttons.

Vikisews Marla dress as top

The top has only been worn a few times, because it was made back in winter! Anyway, on to the dress that the top was really all about. I had sewn the top in size US 2 / UK (and Aus) 6 / EU 34, and chosen the 154-160cm height range. Clare is a little over 160cm tall but she’s proportionately shorter through the torso, so I felt that would be a better fit. I hadn’t needed to alter the top, so was able to cut straight into the poly satin that we’d bought from Lincraft (for an absolutely bargain price of around $2 per metre!). I did my own free-style grading up the pattern from the waist to the hips at the side seams and centre back seam, as Clare is more an Australian size 8 through the hips. It seemed to work!

Vikisews Marla dress

Vikisews Marla dress

Vikisews Marla dress

The dress is completely lined and I chose to self-line (I had loads of that bargain satin). The instructions make sure that you stabilise the seamlines of all relevant pieces with fusible tape, and I think that really helped with keeping everything in shape and making it easier to sew. The back of the dress closes with an invisible zip. I have a few photos of the dress turned inside out to share with you.

Vikisews Marla dress - hanger photos

Vikisews Marla dress - hanger photos

Clare wore this dress to a 21st birthday party back in August, accessorised with my jewelery and my grandmother’s fur jacket. She looked fabulous, and apparently the skirt split allowed for plenty of Greek dancing. But any tighter through the skirt and she wouldn’t have been able to sit comfortably!  I swear that poly satin photographs terribly and shows all sorts of wrinkles and folds that aren’t an issue in reality – but you still get the overall picture; she looked gorgeous!

Vikisews Marla dress

Vikisews Marla dress

Vikisews Marla dress

Vikisews Marla dress

Vikisews Marla dress

I have another Vikisews formal dress pattern just waiting to be cut out and sewn for Clare before we head to the USA in five weeks time. Had better get cracking!

refashioning, sewing, teen

jeans to skirt

Stella recently asked for a denim skirt, jeans style but with a pleated skirt.  Some of her requests don’tprogress past the request stage, but this one became reality!

jeans to skirt

This is her inspiration photo, from her Pinterest ‘outfits I like’ board (which is very useful for me when attempting to sew or buy clothes for her).

jeans to skirt inspo photo

Once I looked at the photo I figured that I could make her a skirt from a pair of jeans! As it happened, I had a couple of small pairs of op-shopped jeans in my stash. They were originally planned for an upcycle into bags, but I wondered if one of them would work for Stella’s skirt. She tried on both pairs, claimed one pair to be worn as regular jeans (did you know that low waisted jeans were a thing again?) and said that I could transform the other.

jeans to skirt

I started off by just chopping the legs off the jeans through the crotch, just below the back pockets. This then entailed some unpicking and resewing of the bottom couple of inches of centre front and back yoke seams to straighten them out a bit. After Stella tried on the jeans yoke, she asked that it be shortened even further – rendering my unpicking and resewing redundant! I opened up each of the legs into flat fabric and cut out a length of fabric on the grainline of each one. Then I sewed the two lengths into a loop, and started on sewing maths. I subtracted the circumference of the yoke from the circumference of the skirt strip, worked out how many pleats I wanted, and then divided the difference between the two circumferences by the number of pleats to work out how deep each pleat needed to be.

jeans to skirt

Had I already mentioned low waisted jeans? As it turned out, when Stella tried on the skirt it didn’t fit according to her vision. The proportions weren’t right to wear it on her hips, but that was where it needed to go to fit properly. She yanked it up to sit at her waist, and it looked way better, other than the waist being way too large.

jeans to skirt

At first we thought that she could just wear it with a belt, but then I took a better look inside the waistband and realised that it had buttons inside it – and adjustable waist elastic! These jeans were a children’s brand! I fished around and found the elastic, and simply tightened it up until it was the right measurement for Stella. And now it’s part of her wardrobe!

jeans to skirt

Stella is an avid gamer – Minecraft, Zelda, Animal Crossing, Sims, other things I can’t remember the name of – and enjoys dressing her Sim in outfits that she’d like. I think we’ve done pretty well matching the vibe of this one!

jeans to skirt inspo

adult's clothing, sewing, teen

McCalls 8037 for Clare

I need a dress to wear to a red carpet (student) film premiere!  And it’s in a couple of weeks!

Okay – I can make you one, but it will need to be something straightforward to sew, probably a knit so that fitting is less of an issue.  I don’t have lots of free time at the moment!  Let’s take a look at some patterns online that meet your brief and mine. How about this one?

Oh yes! That could work! Can I have the sleeveless version, full length – but no train? And what fabric? Let’s go to Darn Cheap – they usually have plenty of knits!

McCalls 8037 for Clare in progress

So many options – maybe we’ll ask Instagram which one they think? Although we’ve pretty much narrowed it down to two favourites. Okay, let’s get that one. It’s poly/spandex, just under $20 per metre. Two metres should do it.

McCalls 8037 for Clare in progress

Right, what size? The 6 or the 8? You’re more of a 6 top but an 8 bottom – how about I grade between the two. Let’s start with the top; there’s every chance that once it’s done we’ll need to make some short waist alterations. Oh bloody hell, it’s a stretch velour so has a nap – I forgot about that! It’s going to take some serious pattern tetris to fit this on the fabric! Good thing that we need to shorten the skirt length anyway given that you’re 160cm tall – otherwise there’s no way that I could eke this dress out.

McCalls 8037 for Clare in progress

Oooh, that’s looking good Mum!

Thanks! I decided to cut strips of the same fabric to face the back neck and the armholes. No way this fabric would just turn and stitch nicely on those curves as the instructions suggest. Okay, I’ve attached the skirt. Now try it on!

McCalls 8037 for Clare in progress

Oh wow! It’s so cute! That neckline is low, but it all stays in place. So good! Here, let me try the other way of styling it with the cowl neckline and a waist sash.

McCalls 8037 for Clare in progress

Oh, that’s cute too! Only thing is, the armholes are a bit high and are giving me an armpit wedgie. Can you fix that?

Sure – I’ll unpick the armhole facings, cut it down an inch, and sew them back on. And I’ll hem the skirt while I’m at it; it only needs an inch or even less thanks to our fabric restrictions. And I’m doing it on the machine with a zig-zag to secure. This isn’t a fancy dress; it’s a simple one for a one-off event. Make sure that you get good photos of it at the premiere so that I can blog them! These are just fitting photos.

McCalls 8037 for Clare in progress

McCalls 8037 for Clare in progress

Oh, I’m not going to go to the premiere now – it clashes with our trip away to Mansfield and I’ve decided that I don’t want to drive back and forth on winding roads just for the premiere.

So the dress is still in the wardrobe. I’ll photograph it fully styled one day, and add those photos to this post!

adult's clothing, sewing, teen, Vikisews

Dress becomes skirt and top (VikiSews Nola dress as top)

Back in 2018 Clare sewed a dress from a vintage pattern using vintage techniques as part of her MYP Personal Project.

MYP Personal Project dress

The dress has been languishing in her wardrobe, as the bodice no longer fitted. However, Clare really likes the fabric, and the full skirt. As it happened, there was still some fabric left in the stash. So between the dress, the scissors and sewing machine, and a new pattern, the dress became a matching skirt and top!

VikiSews Nola dress as top

The skirt was easy. I cut the original dress through the bodice, a couple of inches above the seamline to keep all the gathering intact. Then I did a double turn of the fabric to form a waistband, and hand-stitched it in place. I did think to remove the vintage side dress zip before wielding the scissors! I inserted a new invisible zip into the side seam, and added a couple of buttons and loops for waistband adjustability.

VikiSews Nola dress as top

The top was more complicated. It took a bit of trawling through pattern sites to find something that matched her vision. We ended up with the VikiSews Nola dress. The pattern is described as follows: Nola is a close-fitting dress with a trapeze silhouette. The front features a yoke gathered on the bottom, and finished with a channel for ties on the top. The back has side panels as well as a shirred center panel. The skirt has a slight A-line shape. Nola has a short, voluminous sleeve with gathers along the shoulder and a channel for elastic at the hem. The front and back necklines are quite deep, and the dress is above knee length.

VikiSews Nola dress as top

I figured that I could just cut the dress off at top length, and it would work out okay. I also modified the design by using elastic in channels in the back instead of shirring. Shirring looks gorgeous, and Clare loves it, but my sewing machine really prefers not to shirr!

VikiSews Nola dress as top

I cut the centre back piece double (I used a lightweight cotton for all lining pieces as I barely had enough fabric for the outer) so that I could sew the channels for the elastic. I also made a casing at the hemline and inserted elastic there to keep the top closer to Clare’s body. However, this pattern is designed as a dress without any fastenings like a side zip or similar. In this top version Clare can barely wriggle into it! If I was sewing this again I would definitely look at openings/fastenings to make it easier to get in and out of.

VikiSews Nola dress as top

The sleeve hem frill is created by turning a fairly wide hem and sewing a channel for the elastic. Easy peasy! And pretty. Here’s a closer photo so that you can see details of the bustline, sleeves and waistband more closely.  There is a drawstring along the top of the neckline that gives quite a bit of adjustability.

VikiSews Nola dress as top

I had so much trouble choosing which photos to include in this blog post because I think they’re all gorgeous! So here’s some photo spam.

VikiSews Nola dress as top

VikiSews Nola dress as top

VikiSews Nola dress as top

VikiSews Nola dress as top

VikiSews Nola dress as top

Clare specifically wanted this outfit to wear to the Valentine’s Day Picnic that she has with her friends near the Botanical Gardens each year. They like to dress pretty/fluffy/romantic for it! Here it is in action.

VikiSews Nola dress as top

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