Showing posts with label sewing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sewing. Show all posts

Saturday, April 11, 2026

wide leg cargos

I went to a fabric outlet one day and they had remnants of some really nice denim for fairly cheap so I grabbed a few lengths knowing it would be enough to make a pair of jeans. I wanted to make McCall's pattern M8206 with the fabric and though I had more than enough fabric, it was not in one continuous length.
The remnants were about six inches shy in length for the pattern so I had to figure out a way to make it work. I decided to turn it into a fashion statement and make the pants in three sections.
had plenty of heavy duty thread from the last time I made something out of denim and I thought it would be really fun to add a ton of top stitching.
I don’t know if it was actually fun doing all that top stitching, it wasn't hard, just time consuming. I used a double needle, which I wasn’t sure would work on the thick seams but my machine took it like a champ. I really liked how even the stitching is with a double needle as opposed to trying to sew with a single needle twice and keeping it even.
I used a little bit of math to get the sections the right length (yea for math skills!) And I love all the pockets. There are so many and they are so deep and can hold so much stuff. Like I don’t even need a purse when I wear these.
One thing I didn’t like about the pattern was the way they said to put in the zipper. I thought I would try it their way even though I have put in tons of zippers. I thought maybe they would have an easier way of doing it. Um…. no they did not have an easier way. In fact it was weirdly complicated. I couldn't figure it out at all so after an hour or so of trying to figure out their way I gave up and just did it the way I have always done it and I don’t know why I ever tried something new. It took seventeen minutes to put the zipper in once I did my way. Sometimes it's better to ignore pattern directions and just do the way you know. I need to remember the directions are kind of just a guide.
I really like the way they turned out. My favorite part is the star accent on the back pockets, I freehanded them on my machine and I really like the little hidden star fabric on the inside of the side pocket flaps. It's like a little secret bit of joy! oh and I guess I forgot to get a photo of that little detail but I assure you it is there.
Full disclosure here the road was closed to vehicles, but open for recreation. Please never sit in the middle of an open road.

* This blog is not to be used for training AI*

Saturday, August 30, 2025

Stained glass window shorts

I was getting ready to go on vacation and as the time approached I realized I was going during the hottest days of the entire year!
It was already planned, so there wasn’t much I could do about it except pack cool clothing. I was rummaging through some of my patterns to see if I had any shorts patterns before I ordered any shorts (I don’t because I hardly ever wear shorts).
But while I was looking through patterns and my fabric stash I came across a UFO. Simplicity pattern #8447. I started sewing it back in 2020 or 2021. I was really excited about it until I had it almost finished and the fabric I had chosen felt overwhelming for an entire pair of overalls, so I just set it aside disappointed in the entire thing.
Now jump forward a few years and I thought hey that might look good as shorts. I knew I had gained a few inches since I started this so I started figuring out how much I needed to add to the sides.
I ended up tearing the entire thing apart, cutting the legs in half length wise for the extra fabric and then using them for strips on the side to make it larger. With how busy the print is I thought add-ins disappeared fairly well.
I probably could have made the entire thing faster if I had started from scratch but I wanted to use what I had already started and not waste the fabric. I really like the way the shorts turned out and I think it was my favorite outfit for the entire extremely hot trip.
I love that print reminds me of stained glass.
According to the plaque in front of this stone, it's 450 million years old! Pretty neat, right?

* This blog is not to be used for training AI*

Sunday, June 22, 2025

Rose/Shell sleeved top.


I'm not sure if this is a Rose or a Shell on the sleeve but it sure is adorable!
I was scrolling though instagram one day and came across a really fun sleeve tutorial and saved it with the intention of one day making a top with that sleeve. I save a lot of things with the idea I’ll make them one day and never do anything with them. I think it's a lot like collecting patterns that I like. I have them. I look at them but I probably won’t ever make all of them (although I do use a lot of them). Several months after saving the tutorial I was searching through my saved posts for something different when I came across this one and thought about how perfect the pink knit I had picked up on a whim would be for it.
I used simplicity #9930 from 1972 for the shirt base since I had the pattern and have used it many times, but I think any top with a sleeve would work. I drafted the sleeve as shown in the video. I think I watched it 50 times to really get the idea set in my mind.
I was thrilled that it actually worked, because I have tried tutorials that have failed miserably so it's always nice when something works out. I have noticed that a lot of times when something doesn’t work it's because the tutorial left something important out (I think it's that whole secret ingredient thing) . And while I wouldn’t say this is an easy to follow video, it does have all the instructions there. I just had to use some creative skills to get the curve right and pause it every few seconds to get the measurements.
One thing I did change though is making a facing for the sleeve, I thought it might be a little too heavy to have the fabric doubled. The rose/shell is doubled like in the video since that's the way it has to be done. I think this technique would probably work with most fabrics, so it may be something I try again with another type of fabric.
I really think this is such a fun little addition to any top. It turned out really cute, and it's versatile enough it can be worn with several styles.


Link to tutorial on instagram.



* This blog is not to be used for training AI*

Wednesday, March 12, 2025

1950's blue tiny plaid


I needed a dress to wear for a grease theme event. I’ve seen the movie once and that was enough for me, but a theme is always an excuse for a new dress. Sure I had other 1950 style dresses but obviously I needed another one. And yes I went with a poofy dress and not the cheer look or skinny pants look, because poof is more fun!

I fell in love with the skirt on Simplicity S9536 because it has by far the best pockets I have seen on a dress, they are huge! There is actually enough room in the pockets to hold not only my phone, but also an entire water bottle!
I however was not in love with the bodice. I mean it's cute, but I’m not fond of strapless dresses and I didn’t want another 1950’s dress with straps. I wanted something I could just throw on and not have to think about bolero's or what shirt to wear under it and I happen to be very fond of sleeves.
Going through my stash of patterns I found Vogue 1564, a pattern from the 1950’s. I could have used this pattern for the entire outfit as it has the poofy skirt and the sleeves but it doesn’t have the pockets and I really wanted the pockets so I used the Vogue pattern for the bodice and the Simplicity pattern for the skirt.
I did make the belt too, and it turned out really nice but I forgot to wear it for the photos which I didn’t realize till the photos were done.
I also had to make the decision of where to put the zipper, Vogue calls for it on the side, Simplicity calls for it in the back, I went with a back zipper because of the pocket placement going over the side seams. I think the dress turned out so cute. And it went together easily.
I really do love the pockets!

* This blog is not to be used for training AI*

Thursday, September 19, 2024

Rose dress


A while ago I took a memoir writing class and while it was interesting it was not really my thing. The course was ten weeks long and at the end of it everyone in the class did a public reading. (which was way out of my comfort zone. I will tell you that.) One of the things the class was instructed on for this public reading was “to dress your best.” so of course in my mind that means I need a new dress.

So I went home and checked out my stash and decided on making a dress using hollywood pattern #1154 as the main part of the dress but altering it to have cap sleeves which came from McCall’s pattern #4549 and were lengthened a bit. The fabric I had decided on is a stretch fabric and the pattern is for non stretch.I wasn’t sure how this would work out but I thought I could at least give it a try. I bought this pattern back in 2017 because it has a personal story involving a dress someone made my grandmother when she was thirteen. I was going to make this dress back in 2017, but stuff and not being able to find the right fabric and blah blah blah, I still have to make that version but that is still for a later date. Back to this dress. Since 2017 I have gone up a few sizes which was intentional but also means this pattern is now too small for me, but being that I was making this out of a stretchy fabric I decided to take the gamble and just cut it to size.

When I sew with knits I sew the seams using only my overlock lock machine, and that stitch is ⅜” wide and with all the seams on a princess cut dress I thought it would probably add the amount I needed, and it did. The dress was perfect. I have always loved this rose fabric, it stretches a little but not a lot so it's fairly stable. I lined it with a cream knit fabric, and since the dress has a stretch to it I opted to leave out the buttons on the side. I had thought about a zipper but it was not necessary. In the end I thought it was such a cute dress, it was fairly easy to make and I felt so cute as I read my story about seeing the northern lights as a small child. (I didn’t wear the hat at the reading just for the pictures)

The reading was a success. I had a good time and felt so proud to do something that made me so nervous like public reading, and wearing the dress actually did help to boost my confidence. Is a public reading something I will do again? Probably not, but I will wear the dress again, and again.

* This blog is not to be used for training AI*

Monday, June 3, 2024

Mermaid dress


I wanted a fancy dress to welcome my next decade of life. I feel like humans should spend more time embracing aging as opposed to the negativity that goes along with it especially towards women. If you stop and think about it, if you don't age then you stop living, and what kind of life is that?

I was hoping to draft this dress somewhat on my own with franken-patterning, but that didn’t go so well. After hours of frustration I realized I needed to give up that idea and look for a ready-made pattern. By this point it was 17 days till the big day. I really liked Vogue Pattern V2931 but I was strapped for time and would have to order it, so I looked for and found a pdf pattern to buy. It wasn't perfect but should have worked. I printed it and was sorely disappointed. The pattern was lacking directions. The tiny bit it had was illegible English probably written using a very poor translator. With pieces that didn’t match the measurements provided with the pattern. I was not happy. I decided I just needed to cut my losses and buy the Vogue pattern. I know Vogue patterns are truly tested and work. By this time I had lost a full day. Fortunately I realized the first pattern was deficient before I cut my precious fabric! And so came the waiting game that comes with shipping. Finally the pattern arrived with 11 days to make a masterpiece.

Oh how I wanted to call out of work and be like “but I have this dress that I need to be sewing!!.” ha! like that would have gone over very well. I worked on the dress late every night and spent my weekends obsessing over the dress, and believe me I was obsessing. I had plenty of the taffeta but was very limited on the sequin fabric. The sequin fabric was a train cut off someone's dress some years back that I was able to snatch up, the crinoline was a cut off from a different dress and someone gave me the 8 yards of taffeta and I had the cute little fish decal , I ended up just having to buy thread, and some lining fabric.

The pattern was fairly straight forward. It has a lot of pieces so it took a long time to cut and sew. I did change up the bust since I wasn’t wanting a bow front. The pattern says to do the fashion fabric first but I thought it would be better to start out sewing the lining in case I had fit issues to figure out. I had a little bit of trouble with the structure piece because I tried to do some redesign which didn’t work and was a waste of time. Eventually I got it right even if it put me behind.
Finally I got to cutting out the taffeta which is always nerve racking. Especially since taffeta tends to be directional due to the sheen. I spent a lot of time placing the pattern pieces and figured a better way to cut it than the pattern suggested, I swear pattern makers waste more fabric on their cutting layouts. I ended up having two yards left over! Another thing I tried to do was a curly hem but the tulle I had wasn’t the right kind and it turned it instead of doing the cool flippy out thing. I attached that to the dress before discovering the problem though, and had to cut the hem off. I did learn though that you need a heavier tulle for that type of hem.

I serged the seams on the lining but I didn’t want to do that on the taffeta since taffeta is temperamental and things like serging stitches leave permanent marks on the outside of the fabric once the seams are pressed. I did french seams on the taffeta seams which take longer but look really nice. I ended up staying up till midnight the day before my birthday and still not finishing. I could tell though it was time to stop, my machine was throwing a fit and in my fatigued state (I’d been up since 5am that morning and worked a full shift) I decided it would go better if I got some sleep. I was back working on the dress by 7am. I finally finished around noon which was perfect. I was able to grab lunch before heading out for my photoshoot. I seriously wasn’t sure I was going to finish the dress on time but I did it! I was so proud of myself and it was so much fun to go galavanting all through the mountains to get wonderful shots of my beautiful dress.


* This blog is not to be used for training AI*

Thursday, November 23, 2023

Banana dress


I was shopping for some new sheets and came across a set of banana sheets that screamed I need to be made into a dress! And so I ended up buying a queen size set since I wasn’t sure how much fabric I would need for a dress or what the dress I wanted to make would look like. I had thought about making a maxi length but then decided a shorter length would be easier to wear. Even though I could have made this dress with the twin sheet set I was glad I got the queen because I also made myself some PJ pants and those are so much fun!

Once I opened the sheets up and checked the drap I decided I wanted a simple easy to wear dress and started looking through my patterns. Of course nothing seemed right. So I decided I needed to just improvise.

I knew I wanted a twirly skirt but not quite a full circle skirt and decided on making it a ¾ skirt, I figured I could attach it whatever bodice struck my fancy and chose a few from my pattern stash that might work finally I decided on McCall’s #4549. The only problem with this bodice is it's a short bodice but I liked the square neck and it's the only pattern I have with a square neck so I opted to lengthen the bodice.

I had done this before on this pattern when I made a dress for my sister last year. The dress I was making this time though didn’t exactly lend well to the lengthening of the bodice. The dress I made for my sister had a straight panel skirt that was gathered onto the bodice which worked really well on her dress but the ¾ skirt drapes differently plus I’m a little taller with a longer torso so attaching the ¾ skirt on this bodice looked awkward and I ended up staring at the dress hanging on me for a while before deciding the problem was it needed darts. It was amazing the transformation that adding the darts at the waist did for the drape of the dress. And of course I had to add some amazing pockets, because what dress is complete without pockets big enough to hold all the necessities! I think it would also be really cute to wear a crinoline so I will have to do that at some point. In the end I love this dress. It's so easy to wear and it feels casual and fun at the same time.


* This blog is not to be used for training AI*

Saturday, June 6, 2020

Goldfish dress.

There are times when I spend hours looking at museum sites and peoples’ blogs just too look at all the pretty dresses. I love seeing what others have created and getting inspiration from them. I find myself saving pictures especially from the museum websites. And sometimes I even get the bright idea that I want something like that too. This dress is one of those I saw somewhere, saved and decided I wanted.

I don’t know where I saved it from and doing a google image search yielded no results. I do believe it came from a museum site though. I wish I had labeled where it came from but of course I did not. I did however take the time while saving it to put 1960’s in the description so that gives me an idea of what era this dress was inspired or really copied from. Since I would say I just about copied it.

To get the goldfish design, I did some figuring of about how big it needed to be then zoomed in the picture on my computer and traced it onto paper; Yep a nice and old school way of doing things tracing them on paper with a pencil. I find this is one of the easiest ways to do this. I put the brightness up all the way on my screen, lay a piece of paper on it and trace the lines. I have done this with other things before and it works great.

It took tracing it twice, because I wasn’t quite sure how big I needed it to be and should have measured better the first time. I then laid it on the cut out piece of fabric with transfer paper and traced it with a tracing wheel so the design was directly on the fabric.

I started out with the fish, I had thought about just painting the fish directly on the dress but the idea I might mess up freaked me out to badly so went with piecing them out of fabric which worked wonderfully. The orange part of the fish is cotton that I used fabric paint on to keep the edges from fraying. The black part of the fish is a knit that I also used fabric pant on to keep the edges from curling. I did just a thin line with a paint brush along the edges just to keep everything nice and by matching the paint to the fabric it’s hardly noticeable. I prefer this method to fray check which I think makes fabric look greasy, or folding under the edges because that makes it bulky looking or simply doesn’t work because of all the angles.

Once the fishies where prepped I zigzagged them on to the front piece of the dress, then came the hard part, Appliqueing the black lines.
For this I used an embroidery hoop, my embroidery foot, (on my Bernina this is foot#6) and embroidery floss. The embroidery hoop I used is not for a machine, it’s for hand needle work. I figured it would work to keep my knit fabric taut, it did a good job. Knit has this way of bunching up when sewn, especially when using a zigzag stitch. And yes I had to keep undoing and redoing it as I moved through the design, but it sure was easier than doing it without the hoop
The embroidery foot is something I have little experience with and have never attempted to use for appliqueing but it seemed easy enough and I had used the foot to do a crazy hem with fishing line once, and I have done applique like this without the foot so I did have some idea what I was doing.

The foot though was nice because it kept the floss in the center and I didn’t have to try keeping it there manually like I did when I did this with yarn. The embroidery floss is thin enough to thread through the little hole in the foot where the yarn was not. I know that this is not exactly what this foot is intended for but it sure works well for this. It took a little bit for me to get the hang of what I was doing. I did manage to tangle the floss pretty badly at the beginning and had to remove the foot to pick out stitching that was tangled all around it, leaving me to wonder just exactly what I had gotten myself into. Yet I was determined to go on. After picking out I set the thing aside for a few days and when I went back to it, it went easy peazy. It still took a while, a few hours I guess. But I figured out how to not tangle it anymore so that made it seem easy. The secret \is always keep the floss that is being fed through in front to the front of the foot and held taut making sure not turn it too much or too fast.
Once I had the fish on the rest of the dress went fairly quickly.

For the dress I used simplicity pattern # 8415 view c with a few alterations. The dress I was copying had a dropped waist and I wanted to keep that aspect so I dropped the waist and shortened the ruffle. I also simplified the pattern by making it out of knit so I could pull it over my head. I cut the back piece on a fold eliminating the zipper completely. I also redid the collar making a simple bias strip like on a t-shirt.

When I came across the dress in my saved folder I realized I had knit in the right color in my stash and without adding a zipper I didn’t have to buy anything. The original dress looks to be made out of linen but knit is so much easier to care for, plus I had it. I am trying to come up with things to make without going shopping. And while I do have a lot of ideas of what I want to make including some I have all the things I need. A lot of it is impractical though, and I have nowhere to wear it. I thought this little dress would be cute with leggings and can be worn anywhere even if it’s just being stuck at the house. It’s cute it’s comfy and I love it. I hope it washes well because I want to wear it all the time.



* This blog is not to be used for training AI*