Showing posts with label medieval. Show all posts
Showing posts with label medieval. Show all posts

Medieval Yule Feast

Here’s the timeline of me not getting my act together until the very last second.   Hey, at least my fails are very well documented...
Sept 4th
Been spending a lot of time thinking about SCA wear, unless I want to miss Yule for lack of anything to wear. 
Besides clothes for everybody we need some feast gear and where to get that? Need to shop garage sales for any old-looking plates, knives and cups, and a basket to carry stuff in. 
Can I sew anything? Still after these months don't have a dress even for myself, but enough about that. 
Note to self!  As the writing teachers tell you, thinking is not doing! 
Oct 12th
At the goodwill I found a great, thick white organic cotton bathrobe for me for $7!  And looked for feast gear, but was unsure what to get.  I did get two plain blue pottery plates. 
Oct 13th
This morning I looked at a lot of pics online of people’s feast gear.  Dave looked around downstairs and came up with a couple of crockery cups that'll work very well. The blue plates I got are ideal, we need a few more like that. And a basket! And candles, I didn't think of that but what fun to eat by candlelight! That'll give it atmosphere! Andrea asked about garb.  She asked what the kids are going to do?  I said I'm going to make the kids something. She asks WHEN, and haven't I saved enough pictures and should actually sew something now? That's a very valid suggestion. 
Oct 14th
Went to Goodwill and found some great inline skates, and bought two more plates for medieval feast. 
Last night I woke up in the middle of the night wanting a steak.  Went to store today, looked at filet mignon, it’s $15 / lb, and apparently top sirloin is next best.  There was a lady in the meat section, what a beautiful lady!  Small, with a pretty face, nice even features, a friendly and pleasant expression, clear skin, classic blue eyed blonde, sure you see them like her quite often, but not back in the meat section stocking shelves with bloody slabs wrapped in plastic. 
I told her I’d woke up wanting a steak but didn’t know anything about steak.  She said that rib eye was very nice meat, but chuck eye is the same and is cheaper, it was only $6 / lb.  It looked very nice, and it cooked up very nicely, too.  The lady pointed me towards tenderizer, but unfortunately I read the ingredients, so I just salted that meat up and cooked it slowly on both sides.  It smelled funny at first, and then started smelling extremely delicious and tasted delicious.  It was as soft as chewing on candy and tasted BETTER.  Had it with a salad and I must say that was a very satisfying steak. 
I digress. 
Oct 26th
Sigh, even going in there to sew a square to cheer up doesn't work, when I should be doing medieval and I know I'm just gonna fall down on that again too, we won't have anything to wear to Yule etc etc, stupid woman. 
Yep, berating self.  How useful and helpful! 
Nov 4th
Made a couple steps on the new blue dress, but I'm gonna shelve it right after it's basically together, must work on medieval and not swerve, must get act together for Yule!
Okay, off to bed now
Now pep-talking self!  But you notice that no actual steps were taken towards Yule sewing. 
Nov 6th
I MUST sew for Yule feast, the reservations just came by email…
Translation:  on Nov 6th, I didn’t sew for Yule feast. 
Nov 9th
Found more cool feast gear at Goodwill, three nifty old pottery looking goblets and some other stuff. 
Nov 19th
Right at the moment, dinner’s over and they're watching a movie, I have a bit of precious TIME on my hands, but I don't care if my story gets written or our Yule clothes get sewn, my fiction is stupid, boring and pointless and Yule probably won't work out, it's too much work for one short event at which I'll probably feel uncomfortable the whole time anyway. 
Whoops, sometimes we get interrupted by an outgoing message from the pit. 
Dec 2nd
… and here's an email from the SCA, they’re going to have a "sewing day" and it’s during the daytime!  It’s a long way off, but I could leave all the kids home and make a trip down there for some sewing help and advice, this Yule thing is kind of assuming importance in my life…
Well, I’m not going to the sewing thing, I had an idea for what to do for the boys after looking at the medieval coloring book, I CAN DO THAT therefore I must get busy and do that, oh poor me, the talking of self into things that I have to do! See, I'm in here talking to you.  I don't know if anybody would understand this NEED to psyche myself into stuff, blah. 
Wait, I remember finding … sitting in front of a Steven Seagal movie and telling me he was "getting himself into the mood to exercise", at that fail-proof age I thought, But if you want to exercise why don’t you just go start exercising??? 
Anyway yeah, must go in there and unearth some black and some white, cut out a shape for the boys, come on, I know the steps, just gotta DO it!
And later: 
Yule also seems particularly pointless. Why am I going through all this? Their food won't be any better than mine at home, so why bother?  Just for the challenge level?  For the fun of sewing something different?  I sense possibility of public embarrassment which doesn't do anything for me.  Oh well, can't give up right at this point... on we go.
Translation:  I didn’t sew today. 
Dec 12
Zooming out of the house only… I got no further than the end of the driveway.  And I really should have noticed sooner.  I even commented that the van didn’t feel like it wanted to drive today!  The tire was completely flat, flat as a pancake, down to the rims.  I backed up just to get back in our yard again, and the tire started flopping!  It was going very dramatically wrong, driving on rims on the ground and the tire coming all the way off.  I backed only far enough to get out of the way and stopped right there. 
I probably should have stopped at the neighbors but I'd rather cut the tire all up with the rims and have to buy a new one than be marooned blocking the road and have to work on the tire out there tomorrow morning!
Went in house and got dirty clothes on, tried to get rim off with crowbar, way not as easy as the tire guys make it look.  It was already pitch dark and freezing cold out there.  I told Ed about the tire, and he came right home instead of buying chicken, but he really didn’t intend to work on the tire in the dark!  So there he was home and we had no dinner.  Scramble.   
It’s been freezing out there all day long, even when I went out at three in the afternoon to get eggs the whole ground was covered with frost, crackling and white, very pretty, but you don't want to be out in it. 
So the van was gets to sit on the rim on the tire all night, and there’s nothing I can do about it. 
Dec 13
Hard to get out of bed, it's so delightfully cozy with a feather blanket!  VERY COLD air rushes in as soon as I move it.  Took me a while to talk myself into getting up. 
Gotta have some van adventures today, get on the phone early, hopefully get a spare on there and drive to Costco. 
Remember my last flat tire?  Various helpful people in a parking lot couldn’t get my spare loose or the rims off, and I've neglected to tell anybody afterwards to do something about either problem.  When they aligned the van I could have asked them to practice getting the bloody spare loose.  Could have.  If. 
I did Walk It Out for a brief time to get myself warmed up a little.  It's 60 in the house!  My fingers feel too cold to type. 
Hey, done by 2:30!   That wasn't so bad. 
I went outside in the freezing, got the van owner’s manual and read the directions, got the spare down and then realized how silly that was.  You only need a spare if you’re not in your own yard.  I am in my yard.  Hm.  Followed directions and put the spare back up again. 
The idea here is to jack up the van and take the wheel off.  The little jack that comes with the van works really slick!  Got the flappy flat tire off and phoned the bus.  It was 11:20 and they happened to have a ride going in at 11:45.  Of course ALL the kids wanted to go on a bus ride, I mean what a huge thrill!   So we had to scramble. 
I used that short piece of thick yellow rope (which has come in so handy so many times) to carry the wheel down the road to the bus, sharing the burden alternately with girls.  That wasn’t so bad. 
The bus is never any fun!  The bus is nice and the driver is nice, but oh, the company you end up with! 
A bus trip every now and then is good for me.  It makes me love my veeehicles that much the more!  I wanted to French kiss Ed's truck when I finally got to it, sitting there shining in its crappy Maaco paint job glory. 
Went into tire shop, carrying this popcorn-looking wheel on a yellow rope.  That great guy who owns the place said, “Wait-- you were on your tire swing and it broke?”  and the next guy over doubled over laughing so hard he had to sit down. 
I got a lot of astonished looks from people this whole trip which did a great deal for my spirits!  One guy came by while I was holding the folded rope while waiting for the tire to be worked on, and asked if the rope was for beating them to make them work faster!  Ha! 
So they said the tire was okay, showed me this gigantic hole that had been punched in it, patched it and remounted it, and away I went with it.  At least now I can roll it instead of carrying. 
Came home, jacked up the van further and put the tire back on, and I was feeling very HOT I assure you, for accomplishing this thing, my very first tire change of my life! 
All that happened instead of the second SCA sewing day that I didn’t go to. 
Dec 14
Went to Jo-Ann, and as usual was totally inspired to leave without buying anything.  Looked at baskets for feast, they want $12 for a stupid junky basket made in China, EVERYTHING in there from China, even the trim was from China! And I would rather wear a plain boring unadorned dress than benefit China by yet another $3 / yd!
Looked at grommet pliers too.  They're only grommet pliers (the ones that I had and can’t find now also did snaps) and they're like $26, they were actually made in USA but that doesn't mean I want to buy a duplicate of something I know I already have somewhere at home!  I simply despise that habit which some people I know have, of buying another instance of an item because you can't locate the first one among your piles of junk. 
Day before the feast: 
Really need to go shopping today, we need a bunch of things, but I really must not. Trim for blue dress, headgear for me, purse, and something to carry dishes in, black pants for boys, and the applique on their vests, what else? All of that TODAY.  By rights we should go shopping, it's almost the last Saturday before Christmas, but I did sign up for this Yule feast back in July! 
By 3:30, I've basically accomplished a purse.  That blue dress is so ugly I'll be ashamed to be seen in it, but I'm going to go, and get through this, if I can.
Best I can do right now is to not lose my temper at the kids.
Just been outside searching the surrounds for what might have flattened the tire, with no such luck.  I thought a breath of air might help, it didn't. 
Court isn't until four tomorrow and feast at 6:30, so we don't have to leave here before two, I can assemble some kind of burlet tomorrow morning.  

DAY OF FEAST!!!! 

The problem with the blue dress is that it looks too much like an underdress.  That’s what I intended it for at first.  So, I got up THE DAY OF THE FEAST and started an overdress!  I cut it out of a dark green queen-size sheet (cutting around a cigarette burn hole—I wonder who I got this from?) with satin orange sleeves and collar facing. 
I cut the orange sleeves a bit snug.  I don’t know if it’ll work, but it’s gotta go together now, one way or other!  So I sewed like my tail feathers were on fire.  PANIC is such a great motivator!!! 
I started at 8:00 and skipped breakfast.   Dilbert says, “If it wasn’t for the last minute, nothing would get done.” 
So, we don't have a basket for our feast gear, but the boys have those two large beach bags of simple striped cotton with canvas handles, they'll do. 
I don't have cloth napkins, so I'll just smuggle a roll of paper towels and keep them hidden.  I scooped up some candles and candlesticks that don’t look too modern, one carved marble and two brass. 
I machine topstitched the reverse collar facing.  At least it'll look okay from a distance, it will not bear closer inspection.  Later on, I'll hand-embroider over the top of it to hide it.  (Sure, I will!) 
There was no time for any hem but fold over and zigzag, and I was zigzagging as fast as the machine will go, which is very fast.  I usually don't do that because I don't like that machine-at-top-speed whizzing sound.  This was about the time the event was starting, fifty miles away. 
Found grommet pliers, right where I put them, and neatly labelled too.  With them in hand, putting laces in the back of Karen's dress too minutes.  Yes, that's a shoelace.  We're down to the wire now...
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The girls got dressed and looked really cool.  They were in extreme doubt about the advisability of trying to make a dress for me at this point, but then all of a sudden it was done!  Suddenly it was ready, and it looked nice, too! 
I’d cut out a veil, machine-hemmed the edge and basted it to the burlet, and to my shock it worked just fine.  I was afraid it would blow right off or fall off, but it didn't, it seemed to magically cling where it's supposed to be, and it was the finishing touch which made it all look properly medieval. 
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So I was ready, and I actually felt like I looked good!  What a great feeling!  Like the fairy godmother had been by and I get to go to the feast. 
What a relief too, when it was so unplanned and I wasn't sure how it would look, but that "striving for perfection and accomplishing nothing in the meantime" is what held me back all along.  At zero hour there's nothing else to do but hurry in the most promising direction. 
There was SOME foresight, you know, such as paying the extra money for a contact lens prescription last time I went in, and buying those $1 each single-use lenses.  And the shoes!  We have three pair of ladies black suede boots around here, which I bought with exactly this in mind.  The boys’ last pair of everyday sneakers were chosen for their quality of being plain black and unadorned by any bright colors or logos that would mark them as obviously modern. 
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Imported necklace that I couldn't resist for $9 at Forever 21.  It's got that foursquare cruciform look that I like so well, and I think the "cheap China crap" clunky quality actually makes it seem more convincingly medieval.  Maybe should have lost the tassel, but didn't have time to decide on that. 
The green drawstring purse I made is substandard in so many ways and should have been totally different, but hey, it’s there and it works.  All that junk modern people have to haul around with them fits in the bag and it looks okay to just carry the bag in my hand. 
So we hopped in the van (which already felt weird; the van is NOT period accurate) and off we went. 
Had to stop first into Toys R Us to get the Toys for Tots contribution we’d been asked to bring (which in lieu of any fee for the event was surely reasonable).  Honestly, I was hoping for some reaction in there!  The door greeter said he loved my dress, he said he really, really loved my dress (with emphasis in order to pass along that it was his genuine opinion and he wasn't just doing his job right now) but aside from him, everybody else was scrambling around crazily shopping for Christmas and nobody batted an eyelid!  I was a fair bit disappointed!  At least the cashier should comment, I hoped, but she didn’t seem to notice anything out of the usual. 
Americans are used to ignoring very strange things, I guess. 
So we drove out to this nice large hall out in a rural area, where the event was.  On the way there I had a full blown nervous fit complete with breathing and heartrate, and was lucky to be able to keep driving.  It’s true what they said, “You poor thing, you don't get out much, do you?” 
But walking into there was definitely a wish come true.  We were there, and we looked respectable enough to hold our heads up.  Everybody else had a very varied assortment of garb, and we fit right in! 
We had our feast gear.  They said to just sit anywhere, so I looked for an open table.  Basically the only spot left with enough seats was right up front with a great view of the thrones.  I suppose it's natural that all the sides along the walls and in the back would be taken first, maybe human instinct to get a defensible position, or modesty?  But as far as finding somewhere to sit to enjoy the show, our spots were premium. 
I didn't want to walk around or interact, I was happy just to be there.  Look at that, it really did work out and I'm really here!  It had a certain familiarity, because I’ve looked at so many photo albums of feasts on the internet, with all the lords and ladies walking around, and this was kinda like that only real, and with no right-clicking, but with a better view of the details. 
An extravert sat down and introduced himself, and started giving us all kinds of interesting information about how the whole crown system works and stuff.  I said it was my first event, and then felt like a liar twice; as I’ve not only been to the Port Gamble event which it turns out this guy used to organize, I've also already met the chatelain at a different meeting long ago.  Well, I meant it was my first real event where I was dressed up!  It gets no more real than this, except for entering a contest. 
And then there was the king.  OMG it’s a KING!!!! 
Have definitely never seen such a thing before.  I had been wondering how I was going to handle all that.  Will I be an American butthead and have to be told to bow?  I really hadn’t decided about that yet. 
Well it was actually SO MUCH FUN to see a real freaking KING, and everybody bowing or curtseying to him or even to his empty throne as they walked by it, and I was so impressed and thrilled that I seriously wanted to play along, too. 
But, oops:  it didn’t work out for me.  I actually walked right by the KING on his throne at one point, not realizing what I was doing until it was too late, and I couldn’t manage anything:  not through unwillingness, or any desire to have my head lopped off, it was just that my intractable uncooperative American knees didn't bend. 
Blah. 
Anyway, the KING and the QUEEN (for our next thrill, yes, really!!) were both totally lovely.  They were regal and sweet and gracious, and humorous.  F’rinstance, when the queen was presented with a little sheep plushie, she went on about how important sheep were to their whole economy, but, “It looks like somebody put this one in the dryer on hot!”
Someone warned me that court was going to be long and wearisome.  I didn’t mind.  I was just watching the court and everything was wonderfully entertaining.  Even though it did get a bit long, I didn't get tired of watching the people all around us. 
The group next to us at the table had it totally going on.  It was a mom and dad and grandma and three lovely daughters who were rocking Italian renaissance complete with luxurious tied sleeves and embroidered bodices and strings of pearls woven into the hair.  Whoa. 
But the couple on my other side were both wearing glasses and Nike shoes, who'd brought their Victorian-era plates in a plastic Safeway bag, the lady with her modern  purse and the gentleman with his can of pop, and no sign of shame. 
I decided at that point not to worry any more about my topstitching! 
I also noticed a lot of people with modern printed fabric in medieval-looking designs, and it looked fine.  I’m totally hacking up the gorgeous scales fabric and making it into something.  And we’ll bring some ruddy forks henceforward; everybody else has them! 
Besides the king and queen, we had two barons and baronesses, who proceeded to declare war on each other over the taxation of a baby—in loud angry voices with grins on their faces, which was perfect fun to watch! 
Then came the food.  Food was very tasty, although just unfamiliar enough that the kids didn’t eat much.  That’s okay, they came out with cake (it’s a chunk of a dragon’s tail, get it?) and the cake was recognizable! 
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So, I got to go to the ball.  That was my Cinderella event!  But I assure you I was all evented out by about 8:30 and just as happy to go home again  :-) 
On the way home Dave told me he'd encountered the KING in the restroom, and asked what his name was!  And he got a nice friendly answer.  The king’s name is Thorin. 
Dave wants to join.  He’s all over this one.  He wants into this organization, wants to compete and get awarded a rank and be recognized before the KING.  Mike too.  Andrea wants to do the archery...

progress of garb, Dec

Made a few more steps since we last spoke!

You've seen the white underdress already,


and I also made a shorter underdress, partially to finish testing that pattern,

today I made an overdress, very simple with short sleeves, and either of those looks fine under it!


This is for Karen. I'm going to add lacing in the back to make it fit her.

Andrea's outfit, from this pattern,


is done except for the side lacing (I'm putting off learning how to do eyelets)
The sides aren't perfect, I kinda messed up that part, but I don't think anyone will notice.
For the record the surcote is forest green and the underdress is bright light blue.


But Andrea likes the cool-tone blue dress I made for myself under it better! So I'll try to make something else for myself, because the blue dress was a bit plain. If I don't have time then she'll just have to use this one.

I showed you the jumper idea I liked... I don't know what era this is supposed to be (if any)

Here's a pattern I went just far enough with to see that it comes out the way I want. Later on I'll add the gores and finish the test model for everyday use.

The plan was to cut it out of the gorgeous scales fabric! But I simply cannot get scissors near that fabric with that intention. My subconscious wants to save that for something else, I guess. So what am I going to make the jumper out of? Or what will I make the gorgeous scales into? I don't know yet.
It's so pretty!


In the meantime, here's the plan for the boys:

Enormous side-trip into bias patchwork for trim... no idea if that's the way it's done, but I was having fun.

Worn over a basic long sleeve shirt

That MUST have some kind of applique on the chest, which will make all the difference.
Ignore the camouflage pants. I'll make them some black ones (if time permits)

So the next tasks in order of importance are:
something for the head, for me (to hide the short hair)
handbag for me, cell phone and car keys being what they are,
and then cloaks for everybody, but it's not a disaster if we just wear our coats and pile them somewhere
napkins and something to carry dishes in, should be a big basket only I haven't secured one yet!

This is all terra incognita for me. One step at a time.

Feast Gear Shopping at Goodwill

What do you think, do these look medieval??
I've gotta make a few cloth napkins too :-)

The goblet and knife are on the paper towel because after freezing them (to kill germs) I sprayed the wooden portions with Scott's Liquid Gold.
An adult's going to have to use the goblet and even then it's risky. It's tall, topheavy and the base isn't very wide.


It's all foreign-made of course, but at least the proceeds are only benefiting the thrift shop at this point!

All of them 25c each!
The gold spoon was Mike's choice. That isn't gold plating, is it? I can't tell! It doesn't look medieval at all, but at least it's pretty :-)
The two knives are touching because the handles are magnetized and can't stay apart!

Garb Progress, Sept-Oct

Okay, here's what I'm working on.  Here's another old sheet testing the shape of the sleeves.  They're not very flattering, but they're about what I had in mind as far as the narrow fit, so I'm gonna go with this.  I don't like the wrinkles at the top, but I like sleeves that are built to be mobile.  Since childhood I've disliked sleeves that are fitted for having one's arms down at the side and there's a pulling sensation when the arms are lifted.  This sleeve's the opposite! 


Another picture of me in my nightie, for the internet :-)
I've got some actual LINEN, and it's such a gorgeous shade! I washed and dried it, and it came out just wonderful. Now I'm too scared to cut into it.

(How about that dramatic-looking wound on the arm? That's only a bit of primer where I reached past a painted corner, and it was already dry when I noticed. I tried scraping it off with my fingernail. Just a bit more and I'd've made myself bleed, yet the paint was still there. They were right about the stuff bonding to the surface, eh?)


So I made my first real test out of some content-unknown fabric I picked up on the clearance table.
But I like how this came out-- I like this A LOT. I think it looks medieval and it feels medieval. I've just got to decorate it, sleeve and neck trim, and it'll look really cool.
(It's poufy because I'm wearing the patchwork dress under it!) 
Maybe it FEELS so medieval because of the great amount of extra fabric "puddled" on the floor! In the old statues the noble ladies always have their extra skirt fabric piled artistically over their shoes. But mine's because I cut the gores much too long, and that will be trimmed.

My Garby Plans

First idea was that cool pattern for making a tunic from only squares and triangles.  This for example (not the original link, but that lady must've found hers at the same old link I did.)  It makes sense!  Of course the back-then people put so much time and effort into making their fabric, that they'd want to use every scrap of it and not have giant chunks of fabric wasted like modern patterns do.  I finally tested that idea using an old bedsheet. 

The results were pretty clumsy.  It was too huge with underarm gussets but didn't work very well without them. 



I stuffed that attempt into a box and was disgusted about it for a while.  A few months later I pulled it out and realized it wasn't as bad as all that.  It only needed better-shaped sleeves, and if it was made from a solid color and had some distracting trim added to it, it wouldn't be bad at all.

That's the point when I found myself unable to attend an event I had wanted to attend due to having nothing to wear.  Just as impending nakedness is what it takes to motivate me to sew my regular clothes, so that piqued disappointment one fine Saturday motivated me to get on with my SCA "attempt."

Look!  I have a new goal!  "Medievaloid"
Something is medievaloid if it is not authentic to the middle ages, but looks medieval to the modern eye.
Dresses bought in a fantasy or renaissance faire store are usually medievaloid - they look medieval to the untrained eye but don't quite fit any one time, place or style.
In most cases, especially for beginners, medievaloid fits under the category of "best effort" and passes all but the most critical scrutiny. Where the line is between medievaloid and "just tacky" is hotly debated.

There.  That's going to be the mark towards which I strive, and then I have a chance of hitting it.  I'll just not waste any more time looking at the blogs (I typed "globs" at first) of these ladies who start with the sheep and end up in the 13th century.


The GOAL is to sew something, anything, that looks medievaloid to the untrained eye.  And I can do that! 

Actually this might be really fun.  I've always liked "Princess style" better than modern anyway and this'll give me an excuse to go with it.  My crayon masterpieces when I was little usually involved huge skirts and hennins.  I had a gigantic paper doll collection and spent hours drawing dresses for them. Not suits and briefcases, not jeans and a t-shirt...

One of my earliest influences:  





There, that's a good illustration of what can go wrong when you try to get too authentic  :-D

(But if there had been no spinning allowed for the last sixteen years, what was the princess's birthday dress made out of?  Imported polyester?) 

First thing to do, is buy some patterns that I'll end up not using.  I already had Simplicity 9929 in my collection, that I bought years ago when it was in print.  I had bought it because I loved it so much, but I thought a costume party would be the only opportunity to wear something like that, and I'd surely never be invited to one.  That was before I heard of the SCA or Renfaire. 



That looks sooooo comfortable!  Not sure about the collar though, and not sure about trying to make it without one. 

Here's Andrea's dream garb:


That's probably the only pattern that will end up being used and followed  :-) 

But I added another for me, just for fun, since the seller was into combining shipping:  


Don't know why; I'll never cut it out.  I like the style, but the neckline is too huge and looks hard to alter, the skirt looks funny and those sleeves would probably end up bugging me. 

After regretting that waste of $4 for a while, I got back to the drawing board.  I know I can make something up.  It doesn't have to be fancy, just an attempt, remember? And I'll probably just use my basic pattern that I use for everything else! 

I went through my pile of pictures saved from the internet, and made a collage in wallpaper size so all those images would be staring at me from my desktop every day.  Here it is in square shape.  This is my collection of favorites, of outfits that I would like to wear.

(All images are stolen, so apologies to everybody. On the other hand, it is kind of a compliment?  :-)


The long jumper over long-sleeve peasant blouse look, I can do that.

Here's my sketches which I keep on the ironing board and look at frequently to keep me going in a direction instead of wandering off into doubtfulness. 



I'll start with the jumper idea.  Here's as far as I've gotten as of last night.



I actually like that a lot.  It's comfortable and feels very me.  The neckline is too wide and gaps a bit, but that won't be a problem under the next layer.  I'm pondering what to do with the sleeves.

The kids were confused about the hemline:  "What's that hanging down part supposed to be?"
No, no, don't worry, it'll be trimmed off even! 

I'm snagged at the point where I decide what to make the jumper out of.  I was planning on the "gorgeous scales" fabric that I already posted about but it does seem a pity to use that for just a simple jumper.  It seems like fabric that gorgeous should be made into something even more gorgeously medievaloid.  It's been lying folded up on the sewing chair for a couple weeks while I give it further thought.

MUST get going though, must cut something out and make it into something!  Just cut!  Now!
(My standard anti-procrastination pep talk.) 

Meanwhile, back to what Andrea wanted...



At an estate sale she spotted a chunk of heavenly-blue light woven $1/yd perfect for the underdress, and cut it out.  I ended up sewing it together.  It has raglan sleeves and a curved neckline about which the directions order with a straight face "fold over twice to form a casing"  ARGH. 


Had to do some wiggling with Photoshop to get the blue color to show up right.  


The thrift shop had a perfect old tablecloth to use for the surcote.


I haven't cut it out yet.
That's the next step!