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Showing posts with label Amy Butler. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Amy Butler. Show all posts

Saturday, October 6, 2012

a shirt for D

I made a shirt. For little D. She wasn't as excited about this shirt as she was about the dress I made for her. I think she likes dresses better. 

Lucky for her, I know that she cannot only have dresses, but she needs some tops to go with her jeans and skirts, which she also loves.

 D has a shirt that I love, but it is too small, so I tried to copy the style for this one.  It's a pretty close copy, the main difference being that there are less pin tucks on the front of this one and I didn't add bias tape and buttons on the cuffs.


I used some fabric I'd been hoarding for who knows how long, knowing again that I wanted to make something for D with it.  It's from Amy Butler's Love collection, Water Bouquet in Midnight.  

I love the deep colours.


Since I had no pattern for the shirt, I just mashed together a collared button up pattern with my own modifications - the pin tucks, no collar, long sleeves, button placket (which worked waaaay better than on the dress), and slits on the bottom sides.


For some added shape, I also put a bit of elastic in a casing and sewed to the inside of the back. 


D reluctantly tried the shirt on for me, so I think it fits good, but she wasn't cooperating very well and refused to stand.  Thus the wall pictures.
Anyone getting sick of my wall?

I hope this shirt does fit as good as I think because we have family pics this afternoon and I'd love for her to wear this.  With her blond hair and the fall backdrop, I think it would look good.

Thursday, October 20, 2011

Hokey Smokeys, What a Bag!

Wow.  That was one mean bag I finished sewing up.  A challenge, that's for sure.  And I found the hardest part to be the top-stitching!  That never happens!  That part is always the most satisfying in my books.



My sewing machine and I pushed limits I did not know existed!  We sewed past the hours of sunshine and worked into the wee hours of the evening... We pressed on and on with our friend the iron and sewed till we could sew no more.


Okay, so that's a bit of an enrichment of the actual story...  ahem.

But really, this was a challenging pattern the got me just a bit frustrated at times. I tried to find other reviews of the pattern online, but the only posts I found were ones of frustration.  Broken needles.  Snapped threads.  One blogger even almost threw the handles away until she was saved by a friend.  Really, sounds like a horror story to me, and yet I thought this was the perfect bag for my swap partner, so I persisited.

The pattern is from Amy Butler's book Amy Butler's Style Stitches: 12 Easy Ways to 26 Wonderful Bags.  It is the Miss Maven Ruffled Handbag.  Sounds friendly enough, eh?  

Let me interject here with this fact: 
I in no way consider myself and Experienced seamstress as the pattern calls for.  I just didn't think the bag looked all that hard. And I like a challenge.

Well, to start, I have never cut out so many pattern pieces in my life.  Main panels, interior panels, handles, pockets, cell pocket, tabs, and all with interfacing.  Yikes.  At least 30 pieces. 

Since other bloggers cited the handles as being the nightmare, I though I would start with those first.  Yup.  Get the dirty stuff out of the way first.  Well, let me say, the instructions, though very polite ("Please set the exterior aside for now"), were not all the great.  Maybe that's just me though as I like a good visual to help me along.  The book only had sketched diagrams and they were not all that helpful when it came to the handles.

I did what the instructions told me and then I wondered how in the hang these were supposed to look good!  I did not take a pic of the 'finished as per instruction' handles because I was too impatient to make them look a good finished.  But believe me when I say that the inside curves were not at all pretty.  So I took matters into my own hands and made and added bias tape to the curves.  And though the corners are still a little wonked, overall, they look waaaaaay better.


Now that the 'hard' part was over, I went on to the easy part.  The next problem people seemed to have with the bag was the ruffle.  I don't get that problem, because that was probably one of the easiest parts for me.  I have some ruffle experience, you know, pulling threads and all to get a good ruffle, and I did not snap any threads.  One trick I did do when attaching the ruffle was using a twin needle so my stitching was even and I was done in one shot.  I did have to take it slow through the ruffle because of all the bunched fabric, otherwise I may have had a broken needle.  Since I have to travel about an hour to get a new twin needle, the few I have are very precious to me and I take very good care of my precious twins.


Then it was on to bigger things.  The construction of the whole.

This went fairly well, though because of the fused fleece and the layers of fabric, this was a little frustrating.  I almost needed a long arm sewing machine to get this all together.  Really.  It's true.

Anyway, at one point, the point at which the handles were attached, the pockets were in place, and I had only to sew the top together, the bag looked like this:
 Pretty, eh?

But it worked.  I got the bag all together and then it was time to topstitch and add the tabs with the magnetic snaps.  That was the point I nearly quit.  Bah.

No worries, though.  Little D helped by showing me that it was all okay because we recycle.  She lined up the cans from the recycle bag for me to show me, well, I really don't know what.  Because it really didn't help me with top-stitching. 
Um, yeah, that's my sewing space.  Small, cramped, and rather unorganized.  I need a room for my hobby.

Anyway, 2 days toil and this is the end result.
Ta da!


Was it worth all the effort?  I don't know.  We'll have to see what my partner thinks when she gets it.
Secret swap, so I am not showing the inside or telling any real details about it since that might give it away.

Overall, definitely a difficult pattern, but not impossible.