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

An Actual Patchwork Dress

This IS what they meant by patchwork dress  :-) 
Here's the story:  I'm so persnickety about what I'm going to wear, that I end up with just about nothing to wear.  It has to be 100% cotton, it has to be a dress with a gathered skirt with flowers on it, it has to be made in the USA and I have to be able to afford it, unfortunately there's approximately one way to meet those qualifications, and that's to get busy.  I do get around to making a dress every once in a while, but then, it's usually a nice dress that goes into the closet for going to town in.  So what do I wear to mow or chase chickens?  Some pretty disreputable-looking raggy outfits sometimes.
So I set out to use up some of my scraps (to please the daughter of parents who loved to tell me about the Great Depression, in which they apparently had a rollicking good time stuffing cardboard in their shoes to keep their feet off the road, etc, and rule #1 was not to throw anything away, ever) and to make something extremely casual that can be worn outside to get dirty on purpose. 
Success! 


Showed "this ridiculous dress" to husband and he said it was pretty. 
I said I wouldn't exactly wear it in public, he said, "Why not?  Have you seen some of the things they wear?"
That's not comforting! 
Anyway I designed it for gardening  :-) 

Patchwork Dress - this is not what they meant

Go me!  Another masterpiece cut out with no thought for fabric allowance!
I knew four yards wouldn't be enough for this but started carving anyway.  The second to last piece has a seam in the middle and the very last piece looks quite interesting from the wrong side.  It's okay, it's a floral, nobody'll ever notice.

I have SUCH a problem with getting my act together and getting started on projects!  Yet, I require some sense of accomplishment or my self-respect nosedives.  I've been needing some new clothes for a while now and haven't gotten started making any.
This morning I had a whim to sew myself a jumper before leaving.  Didn't manage that of course, but at least I got one all cut out which is a quantifiable, documented step in the right direction. 
Tomorrow I'll sew it, God willing. 

Cardboard Device Holds Buttons for Sewing

Here's the gadgie I made out of cardboard for sewing on buttons.
It holds the button still, and lifts it above the fabric so the thread forms a shank. 
The two pen lines are where the edge of the fabric should be, to keep all the buttons the same distance from the edge.
Pretty cool, no?  



Three-Cycled Washcloths

So, our money's been devalued and all the factories are in China!  Now that the debt bubble's burst, cheap imported crap isn't gonna be so cheap any more.

I needed more washcloths, and after putting it off for about a year, I went shopping.  There's some as thick and luxurious as tissue paper for $3, or halfway decent ones for $7. 

Long ago I made bathrobes for the children out of bath towels.  Three towels made a nice robe and the price was reasonable, even for good quality towels.  After fifteen years of use the robes are outgrown and shreddy around the hoods, but the rest of the towel fabric is still thick and nice.  I hated to throw that away.

Old towel-bathrobe too disreputable to give away:


Sleeve to washcloth: 


They serge the edges of real washcloths, too. 


If only I had not been too lazy to change the serger thread. 


Eight washcloths for $0


Boy pants

I thought my boys would grow up and not want to wear homemade pants any more. Nope, they say they prefer mine, and don't want store-bought pants. Mine are more comfortable!
The seams up the middle were the seams of the denim skirt I cut up to make these.

ISO the brown fabric I ran out of

Yay!  Nice floral fabric on sale for $2 / yd!
So I bought all they had and cut out a dress for myself, with a tiered skirt.  Fabric allowance?  Who knows, I just cut a pile of straight pieces for the tiers and it looked like a big pile  :-D  
Got the top done and the first tier before I realized I don't have anywhere near enough.  Walmart's all out of it, and I've checked three local Walmarts.  It was already on the discount pile when I found it and there was some lag time before I cut it, so it's really all gone by now. 

Perchance anybody out there in Net-land have more of this particular fabric? 

Frugality Win - Tablecloth Dress!

As long as one doesn't mind walking around wearing a tablecloth.

And I don't.



Wild and Wonderful Fleece Animals - Linda Carr

Wow, only ten bucks??  And the hardbound version which is really nice, that's only $14.
I'd gone looking for it on Ebay after borrowing it from the library, and couldn't find it for anywhere near that price... I'm gonna go buy that right now!
I digress, I was just gonna share the pics of what Andrea made with it  :-)

It's a COOL book!  Andrea opened it right up, traced the patterns and cut out this little bear, and it went together with only a little help from me.

And then I embroidered the nose and mouth.  Mike told me it didn't look good and I was supposed to do it like the picture.  Gotta love honest little kids  :-)

 

My second Singer got fixed!

The motor went out, and it's been sitting downstairs for more than a year, waiting for me to find time to look at it.  But I really don't know what I'm doing with motors anyway!
However I found a nice lady who works on sewing machines, knows what she's doing, and fixed the whole thing right as rain for $43.
I'm so tickled to have this one back and working again!
Our friends gave this to me, complete with all the dozens of attachments that came with it (including a ruffler, which came standard!) and all the pattern cams.  It's got all metal gears inside and is "ENTIRELY MADE IN AMERICA" as the manual boasts!

Singer 403

Pillowcases

Bought new fabric /$4.50 yard, couldn't resist.  One yard of each, to make three pillowcases for daughters.

Next question, which for which?  I assume the horses for Karen.  Kitties for Victoria– but Andrea's not into birds, and Karen is.  Andrea likes horses.  Hm.  I'll let them decide!  I only get the fun part:  making!



The blue dress

I read in a book long ago that you can sew clothes even if you have only fifteen minutes a day for it, if you just do one step each day.  The key is to leave the sewing area with everything lying just where it should be, ready for the next step the next day, so you don't have to waste any time finding your place again.That works for me.
Today, I was suddenly done!  I love it when I'm just stitching along, get to the end of a seam and realize that was the last one.
I even smiled at the camera (sort of).

I know this is the design in the illustration of "what pudgy ladies should not wear" but... but... I like it! 






Swimwear

We went to a water park recently and I was impressed with the swimwear... some people look carefree in their swimsuits but many looked uncomfortable and just wished they could be a little more covered up!  I saw just ONE girl in a homemade, modest swimsuit.  It looked just like a dress, but with short skirt and short sleeves, made of swimsuit lycra.  She was so comfortable and pretty! 
I decided my daughters must have this.
Bought four yards of nice textured lycra and started cutting.  I have this Kwik-Sew book with a whole bunch of patterns in it, patterns for everything and the book was only like $15.  I used the leotard pattern with short sleeves and just added a skirt, and the pattern for short shorts. 
It came out SO WELL!
I used the serger a lot which made it super easy.  The serger's differential feed means you can set it so the front feed dogs go a little faster than the rear, so the fabric's slightly gathered instead of stretched, and the seams come out perfectly smooth.  It's tough to make knit fabric come out smooth with a regular machine! 



REALLY talented is when you can hold it up and take the picture at the same time  :-)
I actually tried it on myself and it fits me too, just a little tight!  I'm going to get more fabric and make myself one too.  I'm not so important because I'm the one who's in charge of the group, not one of the swimmers...


The dress was too tight at first, because I cut it as for a swimsuit.  You don't want a dress to dip in at the middle back like a swimsuit does.  So I had to slice it open and add a triangle... now it looks just fine.  That's why I bought a floral pattern! 


All done...


Matching shorts. 


Andrea refuses to have her face in the picture  :-) 

the Pleated Dress Project

Big idea I just had to try  :-)
What if I evenly pleat across a width of fabric, sew along the pleats partway down, then cut a dartless bodice shape out of the pleated middle section and let the skirt form naturally?
Here's how it came out.

My calculations of how much to pleat in order to gather the full width into the width of the bodice pattern I was using. 





Pfaff and fabric

They just called to say my Pfaff is done. It was very dry and needed lubrication badly, that's why it was making the noise and odd smell. I asked what he would guess the history was. I had rather wondered if I was the first person to sew on it... that was my impression because after sewing a while, I noticed lint in places there hadn't been lint before. He said that made sense, because he found it very dry and dirty in an unusual way, as if it had been stored for a long time in a dusty place. Sewing machines that were being used regularly didn't look like that inside.
I think I can pick it up today! I'm going to buy some of the thread, too. Just a couple spools of white for now... I'll have to use up that "junk" Coats and Clarks thread in the other machine, I guess!

Look at the cool $1/yd fabric I just found on the discount table. That's prettier than cheap fabric normally is! And it came out of the dryer beautifully smooth and ready to go. There was a little more than five yards of each!

My poor Pfaff, and the rest of my stable

The other morning I started sewing as usual, only it made a faint squealing noise every time it started. I was worried about that, and my daughter came in the room and wanted to know "what's that strange smell?" and decided it was coming from the machine. Wha...??
My beautiful Pfaff!!
I hadn't had it serviced when I got it because I couldn't afford the $80, but I could do $80 now, and just hope it's not something else going haywire in there! I hauled it over to the Pfaff store.
And how very HOT I felt carrying my Pfaff into the Pfaff store!!
The lady asked when it was serviced last, and I told her the story. She asked if family had given it to me? Surely not a stranger? And I said a stranger had. She said that was interesting because she was trying to reconcile herself to giving a Pfaff away, a very nice high-end machine that a lady who was going into a nursing home had wanted to donate to someone who would appreciate it. This lady (the one who ran the shop) had immediately thought of a mother of five kids who currently sewed her kids' clothes on an old Kenmore that only did zigzag. I said, "I have five kids too!" and she felt that was definitely a significant coincidence. Her husband came to look at my machine and she told him about it. So I think some lucky mother of five is about to get a really nice machine partly because of me :-)
Anyway, back to me. The man started looking at my machine. He wanted to know if that was really a Singer needle in there? I said I thought my daughter had done that (it's possible it was my daughter, it's also possible it was me) and he said sternly that we must not use Singer needles in a Pfaff, it'll wear away the something something, and ruin the threader, too! Yikes. Then he asked if I wasn't really using Coats and Clarks thread in this machine?? And I had to admit sheepishly that that was the case. No, no, they said, Coats and Clarks is made in Mexico and it's junk! The thickness varies, and it has little knots and snags, and it'll ruin the tension. I simply MUST buy the quality German thread from them! They said it'll be cheaper in the long run, because I'll be getting it serviced less often.
(Actually it's cheaper right now, or at least not any more expensive, because the nice thread is $7 a spool, but there's 1000 yards on a spool... C&C is only 300 yards!)
Then he asked me if that was me who had written all over it! Yes, that was me. I always use permanent marker to make a note about which way the bobbin goes in, so I don't forget and do it backwards. I said, "Don't tell me that can hurt it somehow!"
He said, "Well, you never know, this is a German machine, maybe it doesn't want you writing all over it in English!"
Hahaha, yes he was teasing that time!
They said they hoped I didn't mind.
I don't mind.
I can come pick it up in a couple weeks. So it's back to my old machine for a while. Here we are:



I bought this machine when I was first married and didn't know better. Visible on left, the famous rubber bands. It didn't have a foot pressure adjustment, and the foot was pressing so hard it was basically impossible to sew with. For a long time I thought I was doing something wrong! I resorted to holding the material in front and back and pulling to keep the layers feeding evenly. One day I ripped out the spring and strung rubber bands in there instead. Now it doesn't press down very hard at all, and I've still got to use my hands on both sides, but too little pressure's a lot easier to deal with than too much! The rubber bands break from time to time, and I replace them.
It's still a huge improvement over sewing by hand!
I have two other machines. A good friend gave me a lovely Singer made in the Fifties-- "Fifties" gets capitalized, don't you think? The Fifties must've been a great time, to hear everybody talk about it. It was after the war, and everybody's rich and happy and wearing huge skirts, and having lots of babies. And that Fifties Singer was a wonderful machine, a pleasure to sew with, but the motor burned out with smoke and everything. It happened when I had zero money, so I just set it aside and went back to the old machine. I also have a White that I paid $25 for, and it's kind of okay... it's decent, sorta. It's so clunky! It's very noisy, and I don't know what's wrong with the feed dogs, they just kind of go all astray. It works great on blue jeans, big heavy jobs and such, but it ruins anything more delicate.
I have a certain affection for my rubber-band machine. Any time you invest something of yourself it's hard to hate it later!
And, you'll notice, my rubberband Singer has an external belt? I hooked it up to my treadle base and it works dandy. When the power goes off and the computer goes dark, I can sew :-)







I just made that with it.
Check out the top right where it skipped three stitches in a row, and the lower left, alternating long and short! I think I'll do more ordinary sewing in the meantime and let the next potholder wait until the Pfaff comes back.

Camping Shirts

More free fabric! By the way it was cut, I think it was intended for
curtains. There was plenty to make two shirts for the boys! And they LOVE their shirts. It's so cute and makes me so happy when they boast about wearing clothes that I made for them. It's best in their opinion when they have a shirt AND pants on that were both sewn by Mom.

the Pfaff buttonholer






The Pfaff buttonholer is like the coolest thing EVER. I hadn't used it before this! It is so easy and perfect. The attachment holds the fabric like an embroidery hoop and does the moving for you. There's a setting for how long to make the buttonhole. Just push the foot pedal and watch it do its thing and then it stops automatically when it's done. Sweet...

the peasant dress pattern comes together



That's how the skirt prints out! Next step is testing.



And one of the dog. Because.



It is real amethyst! Just not gem-quality :-)
I paid $1 for it and it's on my desk now.