Wednesday, 18 October 2017

Child's 1950s vintage pleated skirt from IKEA remnant in ONE HOUR

I bought only 30cm of this fabric in IKEA for £1.80 because I wasn't sure what I would make out of it. I also bought black and white striped material, more later.
It is quicker to make this skirt than to go round IKEA's maze.
I started box pleating randomly to make a child's skirt as I had decided I was not going to make any home furnishings with it. It is too small. I cut the striped fabric such that the black was the outside of the waistband and the white was the inside. I also cut interfacing of the correct width to a stripe.
Pleating from one end first.
Pleating the other end


the black and white striped fabric I also got in IKEA
Sewing the pleats once pinned, plus interfacing

Ironing the waistband inside and out.

Now sewing the staystitch on the outside to press down the white side of the waistband.

Draw on the button hole
Stitch rectangle around the buttonhole and cut it
I don't have a fabric pen. They cost a ridiculous £7.80, so I used a colour pencil instead.

Hand finish the buttonhole
I have used pink thread and a red velvet button, no reason, just for a bit of contrast and for fun. I didn't want it to match the skirt.
Wa-lah!
Hem the skirt





Thursday, 21 September 2017

Vintage style Daisy Dress for wedding event FREE PATTERN

I purchased this magazine called Simple Sewing with a pattern included without any idea of when I would be making the dress. However, an opportunity came up and I not only made one but two dresses (one for me and one for my 6 year old girl. The reason being I am quite frugal at cutting and can always something else out of the fabric allowance. Firstly I bought quite a lot of it in my opinion - it was 3m. Secondly, it is vintage light blue Italian silk and I was very lucky to have seen it in Oxfam years ago for only 1.99. Unbelievable I know. This is a great pattern to use again. It has a flattering full skirt which is vintage style. The dress can be formal or informal. It is very versatile. 




For the hairstyle I chose to do a Brigitte Bardot kind of French twist or French pleat. (We're in France, right?)

This is a selfie on the SNCF.

This is the back view which I am not very pleased about because I look like a bodybuilder.
The front view I am fine with, but I should have made the belt tighter. It is just a Topshop belt but it is real leather.
Here are the patterns. Feel free to enlarge as there is a measuring tape included for scale.



Here are the instructions.


Joining the bodice to the skirt.

Darts

Back bodice joined to back skirt.

Ironing the waist seam.




Front joined to back. Bottom joined to top. Structure is technically complete.


Probably most irritating task in the world. The concealed zip. Pinning.

Finished pining.

The interfacing cut out.

Pinned and ironed to the neckline and arm holes,

Trimming excess seam allowance and snipping the notches.

Turning around and ironing the pleats

Snipping again armhole seam allowance excess.

Saturday, 15 July 2017

How to replace broken zip on Converse All Star backpack

 

This Converse all star leopard print backpack is a treasure. It has been to a few countries with me and it is the perfect size. I actually had to fix the zip because I cannot find another backpack which is so perfect for me. If it is too big for a daypack, things will just get lost in it. It is just nice for an umbrella, a book, a cardigan, a small makeup kit, and the usual, wallet, keys etc. It is ideal for night or day. I use it for ballet. I use it for trips with the children or to the city or to the park. Needless to say, the leopard print makes it hard to lose or to steal. You will always notice it. No stealer will want to walk around with it unless they want to look like a cartoon character saying "look at me! I stole this!". Wherever it is in the house, you will find it. Sadly, the zip went and it was through frequent use, i.e. wear and tear.

Photo of the broken original zip and me taking a seam ripper to it.
TIP#1: Never take apart something unless you have examined it closely and taken photos to show how it was put together. No one can help you put together something in reverse order, you have to know this yourself as everything could possibly be put together differently even though it is a standard item like a zip. TIP#2: So for this task I measured the original zip required BEFORE taking it apart. Do not waste time unless you are sure you can get one. I had to buy it on Ebay. It was a 22" or 55 cm zip and because the old zip is a fashion lightweight kind I was not happy that it was not longlasting. I bought an industrial heavyweight big teeth red zip this time so that it can withstand wear and tear. It was very cheap, I think only £2.15 on Ebay.

Slice away one stitch at a time without touching original fabric or bias binding.
View of the defunct zip and original zip pull. See how small the teeth are? This is a lightweight zip.
Using a seam ripper, rip out a few seams at a point near the start. Once opened up, use the razor to slice away more of the stitching as shown. This is quite an agonizing task because you will have to grip with left hand if you are right handed, and with the right hand cut away the stitching very carefully (i.e. one stitch at a time) without cutting the original fabric or anything else - just the stitching. You cannot do this quickly - believe me I tried and I am real fast at ripping. You just can't because the fabric is waterproof and tough. This stage took 45 minutes.

Once you have done one side of the zip, do the other. A zip has two sides after all! Obvs.

Now using your record photos as a guide, remember how to sandwich the zip in place within the fabric and the seam bias binding. Hand pin the entire length of the new zip followed by hand tacking it in place.

Once you have done one side, unzip the zip and do the other side.

Once tacked by hand, zip up the whole zip and shut the backpack. You can see the black hand tacking in this pic.

Check balance. Lay flat. Make sure there is no pulling, wrinkling or puckering of the fabric, it should be totally smooth and like the original!

Now use the machine to stitch over the hand tacking. Use the record photos again to check - and it so happens I have yellow ochre thread to overstitch the outer or the right side of the fabric, with the under bobbin thread in black.

On the other side of the zip, it is black on the bottom and top side of the fabric. Use the machine to stitch this.


Finished!

No original pull but I will get a small piece of red or black webbing to sew a generic pull.

Checking to ensure that is it all neat, no gaps, puckering or pinching of the fabric. Fabric against zip must be perfectly smooth as the original.
Whole job took 2 hours and 45 minutes including the seamripping and broken zip removal. So proud of the Converse leopard print backpack. Now it will and should last another ten years.

Frugality is so tedious. It takes time because all things take time which are worth the time. Why not take a look at the book I wrote? It is a literary thriller and features themes of excess in the 1980s.