Friday, March 19, 2021

Sophie's Easter Dress

As I mentioned in my last post, both girls got to choose fabric for me to make them an Easter dress this year. This post is all about Sophie's. 

Sophie is really into woodland creatures. I didn't blog about her actual birthday party (just the birthday day) back in January, mostly because I was super disorganised, but also because it was postponed thanks to a potential COVID outbreak that sent all of Brisbane into a snap three day lock down. Just when you thought the drama from 2020 was over, there it was reminding us not to get comfortable in the first week of 2021. 

Anyway, Sophie had this great squirrel cake, as well as other woodland themed foods (watermelon hedgehog, owl veggie platter, mushroom cupcakes and meringue mice). So it's not surprise that when choosing fabric for her dress, she chose one that was covered in woodland animals. (Yes, these photos of the dress are un-ironed. Don't judge me.)

I used the same pattern that I did for Rachel's dress, but the next size group up (the patterns come in 4, 5, 6, and then 7, 8, 9). I've been trying to think more critically about store bought patterns of late. Lots of reading blogs that go on and on about how you need to measure the person and then make to the measurements. That the "size" is just a number and because we are all uniquely made, none of us (or very few) will actually fit the given measurements for the designated "size", thus the importance of ignoring the sizing and using measurements.  

I had started to see their point when I noticed that my mum always made each dress for my girls exactly as the pattern said, but often they came out really roomy, or long enough, but swimming on the top. Why make a size 6 for Rachel, who is six, when it won't fit? Why not make the size 5, just longer, so it does fit? It's the beginning of a revolution. 

I did measure Rachel and make her dress to her measurements by adjusting the pattern slightly, but when it came to Sophie's the pattern was actually different! Being a bigger size set, the bodice now had some strange curve things happening towards the bottom, probably to allow for the non-existent hips that my 8 year old was supposed to have. Ludicrous. Sophie also measured with in the ranges for two of the three measurements (bust, waist and hip), but at least 10cm out for the third. 

Given that I was trying the pattern for the first time (weird hip shaping and all), and the measurements were so different, I only made small adjustments and hoped for the best. I think I based it on the size 7. If I were making it again, I would completely re-draw the bodice, because the ridiculous hip curve was just wrong. It probably didn't help that I'd only bought a meter of the fabric, and it turns out that's not enough any more to get a complete dress for my 8 year old. There was a lot of creative cutting, and I ended up using the contrast fabric around the waist which, to me, only highlighted the problem. 


I feel the regular person, who didn't make this dress, would not notice, but to me, it's super annoying. Even more so because Sophie loves it and wears it a lot. Oh well. I'm also critical of the flutter sleeves, which I feel have the right amount of flutter, but stick out too far and don't go round the arm scyc nearly enough. Is everyone this critical of things they make themselves? Is it just this dress, or is it just me? Not sure. 

I lined it with some scrap fabric from skirt making, and at the end of the day, it's a fun wearable dress for this girl who loves her woodland animals. So I guess it's a win? I've also learnt a stack about trusting my instincts when it comes to looking at patterns (especially patterns for little girls who are very straight up and down kind of body shapes) and I practiced putting in zips again. Not a total loss then. 


Wednesday, March 17, 2021

Rachel's Easter Dress

I keep mentioning dresses that I've made for the girls over the summer, but as yet, there has been no post about it. I am seemingly disorganised in my blogging this year. Oh well. This is me trying to rectify the situation slightly by telling you all about Rachel's dress. I haven't got photos of Sophie in hers yet, so that post will have to wait. 

I was originally intending these to be made around March/April, for Easter, but the girls got really excited when I took them to Spotlight to choose material, and I had time when we were on holidays. So I made them early. I don't usually take the girls material shopping, (actually, I am always trying to use up what's on hand, so they don't get much choice most of the time), but Spotlight had 40% off and I wanted to treat them. 

I used a pattern that mum has used to make the girls dresses before. I measured Rachel and looked at the pattern size and made her a size five, even though she's six and a half. Even the five is too big in the bodice, so I'm glad I did. I added a bit of length to the skirt and did some random things with the sleaves. Also played around with a feature on the waistband. It's fun to try new things on a dress just because. 

I am pretty satisfied with how it all turned out and Rachel is happy that her fabric choices became a dress she can wear too. 


Oh, and at Rachel's request, I added pockets. They are a little low down, but they are functional. Her hair in these photos is her "Bee Hair", which she wore when she was being Bertha the Bee for Book Week last year. Strange little Rachel, we love you. 

Monday, March 08, 2021

A Year Later

A photo memory came up a few weeks ago, of what the garden around the water tank looked like when we put it in a year ago. It has changed so much since we finished it! Even though I've seen it grow, I'm still in shock about how much life it has there. 




The biggest thing to grow was the passion fruit vine, which now covers the entire water tank, as well as all the balustrade down the length of the deck. It just grew and grew and grew! The flowers we originally planted took off, and in that garden bed I've also had spinach, lettuce and bok choy growing through out the year. 


One end of that long garden bed is still tricky to grown things in, so I might experiment with more shade option plants coming into autumn. We will see. Down the front garden bed, things are happy and healthy too. I bought a set of capsicum seedlings from Bunnings, three out of the four of them turned out to be banana chillies, which are not hot, but pretty disappointing when you were expecting capsicums. 

That said, they love their life in the garden bed and we have had so much fruit off them. Sometimes they grow so quickly I can't pick them in time. They aren't hot, but they are also kind of boring on their own, so mostly I feed them straight to our guinea pigs, who love them. 

Last time I went to Bunnings, Rachel was with me and asked if we could grow some eggplant. I wasn't sure but she's really into trying new stuff, so I figured, why not. I could always feed them to the guinea pigs if we had too many. The eggplants also like their life in the garden bed, and we've had some pretty nice fruit. I'm the only one eating them, but at least they are not growing as prolifically as the banana chillies are, so I can keep up. 

How pretty are snapdragon flowers? 

In our other spontaneous garden bed, things had gotten quite out of hand with regards to tomatoes and pumpkins that popped up out of the compost. We had tomatoes galore last year. I couldn't give them away fast enough. One week I gave away 7kgs of tomatoes, only to pick another 7kgs the next. There were truss tomatoes, grape, perrino and cherry tomatoes. So many tomatoes. 

The pumpkin vine grew around it all, but no fruit was forthcoming until we got back from our Christmas in Bundaberg and I wad delighted to see success! 


I left it to grow until last week when I got sick of all the weeds, and ripped out heaps of the old pumpkin vine along with them. There are still some vines there at the other end of the garden bed, so I'm hopeful for a few more fruits, but we will see. 


Got to be happy with that effort right? I'll have to take a video of the passion fruit vine because it's too stellar to capture in photos. Gardening is the best. 

Friday, March 05, 2021

Don't Know if I'd Wear It

I feel like the start of blogging for this year has not really gone to plan. Here we are in March and so far, only five posts for the year. Not that numbers matter, but it's a far cry from how things started off last year. Different priorities I guess, and actually, completely different life right now. 

Anyway, I feel like this dress is as good a place as any to start trying (probably in vain) to rectify things. I really don't know if I'll wear it. Let me explain. 


I made this dress in 2019, with some fabric that mum gifted me from one of their traveling adventures. I think it is Japanese. I really liked it, but I wanted to make a dress that was different to some of my previous dresses. So I cut up bed sheets and made a draft dress, adjusted it, tried it again and then cut into the real dress fabric. 

The finished product wasn't terrible. I liked it, but it also wasn't 100% fantastic. I'd successfully sewn in a dress zip, which made me super glad, but the bodice came up too high, especially under the arms. I wore it at Christmas (pictured above, with the Aprons that I'd made around the same time with much greater success than the dress), and then maybe one other time. After that, it languished in my cupboard. 

To fix it, I would have to take apart the entire bodice, which is always no easy feat, and then, as I had no spare fabric left (used every scrap of it in the dress), I would need to find matching fabric or adjust the dress somehow to get more fabric so I could lengthen the straps. Even the mention of unpicking an entire bodice alone is enough to put me off, but having to solve the problem of more fabric for the straps seemed to just put it over the edge. 

As I finished work for 2020, and did some tidying up around the house, this dress was one that I decided I'd may as well try to fix, rather than let it sit unworn in the cupboard for another 12 months. Of course, I took it out of the cupboard and it sat on the sewing machine shelf for at least six weeks first. Then I unpicked it (which, of course didn't take anywhere near as long as I'd feared), and it at around unpicked for another four weeks before I bothered to look at it again. What can I say? Fixing things requires procrastination. 


At last, I chopped off the excess at the top of the bodice and took it in where it needed it. I then proceeded to chop the entire hem off, rehemmed the dress and used the excess fabric to make new straps. Probably only took two hours, including re-sewing in the zip. 


But alas, I have no dress form, and had to have the girls try to pin the straps for me into place. So when I finally got the finished dress on, those very straps slipped right off my shoulders. I did unpick and make them tighter in the hopes that it would be enough, but it hasn't seemed to help. Maybe they needed to be placed differently? More in at the back perhaps? 

At this point though, I'm thinking this dress isn't worth too much more of my time. I have given it a good go, but I don't know if I can really fix it. Seems a shame to waste a perfectly good dress, and all that lovely fabric, but what can I do? I guess what I'll probably do is let it sit in my cupboard for another twelve months and decide then.