I got up nice and
early today and drunk copious amounts of coffee in preparation for a BIG sewing
day. At some point eldest daughter will
turn up to start sewing her own dress so I at least want the ‘unexpected’ dress
(I shall now call it UD to distinguish from the dress daughter will be making
at the same time, hereby called DD) to have the bodice cut out so that I am at
the same point with UD that daughter is at with DD.
I am hoping to have
enough fabric to make two bodices, one day dress and one evening for UD. The downside of all this is that I do not have the
daughter around to get measurements so I am just hoping that I have enough knowledge of her body that it will fit. Luckily I come from a world where when a daughter asks for a Wonder
woman corset I make her one and I therefore, in the bottom of my pattern drawer
somewhere, have a pattern drafted to fit her that I can use for sizing and
drafting a bodice. I do have a preference for hook and eye fastenings and would
have preferred to do that, but due to the lack of the body UD is supposed to
fit I will do lacing at the back of the evening bodice.
After Googling frantically last night I have
decided this simple dress will be the first bodice;
As the fabric is
semi sheer I will also have to underline it for the evening gown, I have loads
of white muslin so that will have to do (Q. Why is so much of what I do based
on what is available in my stash? A. I don't know but it proves I need one so
who cares!)
Both DD and UD will be
underlined and this involves cutting out two sets of pattern pieces, one in the
fashion fabric and one in the lining fabric.
These are treated as one and sewn together. It is a relatively quick and easy way of
giving a lighter fabric some substance or, as is the case with UD ensuring you
are not making a completely see through dress that your daughter will refuse to
wear on modesty grounds!
The day dress will
not be underlined as it will be based on this.
I can see two
advantages to this: First is that it doesn't have a fastening so if evening
dress doesn't fit daughter will definitely fit in this one! Second, I can tell her to bring along a strap
or tank t-shirt to put under this if I don't have time to make a chemise!
But back to this
morning...
I have taken the front
pieces of my corset pattern and pinned it to my board. To start with I left the side front as it was
the one which dealt with the majority of daughters curves (there are quite a lot
of them!)
I was basing this on
the ‘Patterns of Fashion (2) 1860-1940’ pattern of an 1861 evening dress. I know there is seam allowance added to my
pattern so we are good to go!
I drew
round the pattern pieces and joined the middle front to centre front, then
added the shoulder pieces. I will check
the measurements for the shoulders with other daughter when she arrives as she
is similar size in most areas except the boobage! I shifted the middle
front piece over and re-drew in red. The
corset had a high top so I lowered the neckline to the centre front and also
raised the sides as the corset went over the hips.
At this point I
would love to say I made a toile, fitted it to my daughter and made minor
adjustments to ensure it all fitted correctly.
Unfortunately I can’t say that, what I did do is sit staring at it and
wonder if I had done anything wrong.
I
then made a cup of coffee and pondered it a bit. I sat staring a bit longer, drank the coffee
while staring, stood up and looked out the window, sat down and stared. Contemplated cutting out the fashion fabric
then stared a bit longer. Looked at the
fabric, reminded myself it was only £1 a metre (oh yeah, it was only £1 a metre
so if it goes wrong no great shakes).
Then realised that the skirt wouldn’t go wrong so if nothing else she could
wear a shirt with the skirt and look ok for the event. Second realisation was that I also had the other bodice to
make that doesn't need to fit exactly. Then realisation number 3 that I could check the measurements against the book for
back up! Lucky I did that! As I measured
I realised that I had reduced from 3 pattern pieces to 2 and not taken away the
seam allowance! So back to the drawing
board and removed those seam allowances from the pattern.
I then had an even
more brilliant idea! I still have the Wonder woman corset! I put the corset on the dummy
and pinned the pattern to it.
Daughter has more
boobs than the average Victorian and this was always the issue when trying to
make this bodice. All of a sudden I could see where the pattern was wrong! A quick snip with the scissors and another
piece of sticky tape and the pattern fitted the corset perfectly (lets hope the
corset still fits the daughter perfectly).
Well the front of
the pattern was ready...all I needed to do to the back was add the shoulder
straps.
All done! Then I get a text from daughter saying she is
coming over tomorrow so I will have the body to work from! Although after all that effort I may just go for it later today!
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