Showing posts with label Sewing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sewing. Show all posts

Sunday, May 16, 2010

 

My dear hand-sewn dress is now complete; laundered and
prêt-à-porter ... This was a first for me and I have no pattern. This dress is all rectangle pieces sewn together by hand!

Needless to say, alternatives are immense and this morning I had fun trying a few and wanted to share them with you :)


With a nice Indian cotton scarf and again a handmade necklace with Ottoman pieces and turquoise;



a beautiful silk scarf, ear-rings and a necklace by a local artist made of glass with patina (these glass beads of the necklace are made from the broken Roman "tear bottles" found in Afghanistan which is a good + 2000 years);


with a handwoven cotton scarf accompanied by silver, needlelace and pearls;


or silk, gold and agate :)

 

Thursday, May 13, 2010


Almost finished!






I need to stitch the hemline and then shall post one more picture once my hand-sewn dress is completely finished :)

Monday, May 03, 2010

Saturday, May 01, 2010

Progress on my handsewn dress :)



I was watching tv the other night and our female cat jumped down the sofa and started curiously watching something on the floor. I always check whenever she is alert. We live in the middle of nature and you never know what is visiting with us. This time it was a small scorpion who was released back to nature (outside our territory) after the postures below :)




Saturday, April 24, 2010

My "trial & error" project of airy dress after some good hours of work, has failed :( The decorative joining seam stitch did not work! The fabric is too slippery to be able to manipulate. A bit like viscose. I have not given up :) I have decided to make the joining stitches more simple and less visible and that seems to be working. I am using the wefts of the fabric as the hemstitching thread ...




Progress so far ... Another set of pleats will be stitched on the right side per picture below. Then, I plan to stitch in the arms and finally the neckline will be cut :)


Thursday, April 22, 2010


I want to make myself a nice, airy outfit for the hot hot summers here. I will use a handwoven cotton-linen fabric with a bit of sheen into it. I do not know the origin of this fabric, it is somewhere from Turkey and the width is 47 cm ( 18.5" ) with loads of colours to choose from. My fabric has been waiting for my attention for a while now and the colours is a nice khaki.


I tried to neatly hem the sides to join and will have to stitch two equal sizes (due to narrow width) together for both the front and back.



I have planned an all-oblong shape, something like a kimono, something that does not need a pattern. The arms and the body will not have any curves, just plain straight stitching to join the pieces. And once all the body is stitched, I will fold the piece from the centre and that is where I shall be cutting a hole for the collar :) ... Joining the arms could be pre or post collar activity!

I will do it by handstitching, I do not have a sewing machine and I looked into some decorative stitches to join the seams and chose Raised Chain Band for my project.


I have made a small change with the stitch though. As you'd observe with the video tutorial, instead of coming out right beneath the first straight stitch bar, I come out from the opposite side which will make a diagonal line under thus reinforcing the seam.

This will be a first in my crafty life and this project may end up being a "dust rag" but hey, so what!?

BTW Jude ... If you are reading this post, I was in the country yesterday visiting a nice lady with a farm who took me around and I saw this lovely white feather from one of her geese and surely thought of you :) Seems you have more influence on people than just being a pioneer in their crafty life!


Some snapshots from the farm; typical and universal!











Friday, February 26, 2010

Carolyn Dowdell

A fascinating article about Carolyn Dowdell ... This is not a recent story but I thought I'd share it with you, with those who have not heard of it ... Very interesting and indeed amazing!

Thesis project stitches together image of the past

By Ileiren Poon, ExpressNews Staff


Carolyn Dowdell talks about her thesis work:

March 11, 2009 - Edmonton-Unwashed, huddled by candlelight and sewing lavish gowns using only a needle, thread and her own worn fingers, a University of Alberta student has recreated the working conditions of a typical 18th-century seamstress and the fine garments she would have turned out for more fortunate women.

"It was long, and hard, sometimes grueling, sometimes painful, and very, very tiring," said Carolyn Dowdell, a master's student in the Department of Human Ecology.

"My hands got really sore. The set of stays, those were really tough. It's a really high concentration of sewing, and you're sewing through several layers. The stays are made up of wool satin, and behind that there are two layers of a linen canvass. So, you're making the boning channels through all those three layers. Then the bottom of the stays is bound with leather, and that's sewn through all of those layers. I was using pliers to pull the needle through."

Driven by a self-admitted obsession with sewing, Dowdell has spared no detail for her thesis project, authenticating six 300-year-old ensembles and the harsh working conditions of their makers. Even so, producing the complicated outfits in five months would have landed her in hot water during the period she was replicating-between 1750 and 1770.

"If I had been a seamstress back then, working at this pace, I would have been fired," Dowdell laughed. "One of these individual ensembles would have been done in about a week, so all these outfits would have been done in about a month. But those women would have been working even longer hours than I was putting in-12 to 18 hours a day, six days a week."

Following a trip last summer to view antique gowns in the prestigious Museum of London, Dowdell has been working almost every day in her cramped basement apartment to complete the collection of hand-sewn gowns. Toiling only by natural daylight or candle glow, pinched by a tight corset and wearing a plain work dress she made herself, Dowdell sat for hours in a hard wooden chair armed only with a thimble, cutting and stitching natural silks and wools true to the fabrics of the period.

"I wanted to get an idea of the physicality of doing this kind of work in the 18th century, even down to the sanitary conditions, which didn't allow for much bathing," said Dowdell. "These seamstresses were early career women, really, and this project is a way of recognizing their backbreaking work as well as the sumptuous fashions of the time."

All of the pieces are incredibly detailed with handmade, thread-covered buttons, one quilted skirt with about 25,000 tiny hand-done stitches, full ruffles and delicately scalloped edging.

"These are appropriate clothing choices for a middle-class English woman from that time period-merchant class, lower gentry, or clergy," she said. "She wouldn't have been working, but she wasn't wealthy."

The styles wouldn't have changed much as the social status of the wearer changed, said Dowdell. "It's a question of what they're made of-more luxurious fabrics, brocades, embroidery, silver gilt thread and jewels. Those were the things that cost money and showed how much had been spent on clothing. The cost for the labour that went into the pieces was almost nothing."

...