I have reached the point where I think a clean out of my costume cupboard is required. Okay, yes, and I do need more of that horribly important stuff called money for more costumes. Currently I am on a very tight budget due to the upcoming purchase of a house -yay!- so I have made a rule for myself that I must sell something in order to sew something else. I'm feeling terribly frugal!
You can check out my items on Etsy here, this is the only listing at the moment, but I will be adding more when I can get them photographed.
I am selling this black Victorian corset because it does not fit me perfectly. What was I thinking when I decided on the pattern sizes? I gave myself too much room at the hips and bust. But happily I have learned from my mistakes and once I've sold this, I will be able to produce the perfect corset.
Hopefully it will go to a good home, since it has a lovely shape.
It is from the Laughing Moon Silverado pattern, sewn with one layer of heavy black satin, lined with one layer of tea dyed coutil. All bones are spiral steel, except for the lacing bones at the back, obviously.
And I have been busy sewing despite blog silence, so I will post more soon. Buying a house is time consuming!
Friday, 25 October 2013
Saturday, 31 August 2013
Regency Corset
I have been very lazy with my blogging lately. But here is something I finished a little while ago, and have only just got around to photographing it. It is a regency corset from Jean Hunnisett's 'Period Costume for Stage and Screen'. This is my second attempt at this corset, the first try was ghastly. Mainly because I didn't scale the pattern up enough, so it was too small, and I used stiff coutil instead of soft cotton drill, so the silhouette was very Victorian with a nipped in waist. It was truly awful, so I am never posting pictures. But more about that later.
Here is the corset flat. I used two layers of soft cream cotton drill. This is strong enough, while still not being too rigid. There are four white steel bones at the front instead of a busk, on the other side of the bust gussets and at the back lacing. The rest are spiral steel.
Now let me share with you some things I have learnt about making Regency Corsets.
-Do not make your corset/stays out of stiff coutil, as I made the mistake of doing with my first one. Regency is all about willowy lines, not a Victorian hourglass.
-Do not use a plastic ruler as your busk! This might seem obvious, but I did this in the horrible first attempt, because I read on another blog that someone used this and it worked for them. Not me. I was afraid of snapping it when I bent over, and they are just not made to be put in tight garments. I used four white steel bones, which are comfortably springy while keeping the bust separated.
-Use cording. Please. It makes a huge difference under the bust, even if you don't use it anywhere else. I found that in my first corset, without cording, there was a definite desire for even my small bosom to creep away. Cording has become my new favourite sewing technique, because although it seems hard (or it did to me), I found that it is actually amazingly fun. I used this cording tutorial which is fantastic and easy: - http://www.jennylafleur.com/study/runners.htm
-I used spiral steel boning throughout the corset, except in the boning channel beside the busk. I would have used plastic cable ties instead of spirals, like Romantic History's lovely example, but when I tried the corset on, the plastic ties twisted because the channels have a decided curve. So I went with the spiral steel for flexibility.
In the channel beside the bust gussets, I used stiff white steel boning. This keeps the bosom from creeping sideways, which it was doing with the spiral steel and lighter weight steel boning.
Finally, my findings are this: I think if you are using cording under the bust and stiff white steel bones on either side, it doesn't matter what you do with the rest of the corset, the front will do it's job of creating the proper regency silhouette.
Another thing I changed with this pattern, which is drafted to fit a modern size 10, was that I shortened the bust gussets by about an inch. Leaving them at the level of the pattern made them no higher than a normal bra.
Also, do not be tempted to make the bust gussets small and tight, thinking that is will push up the bosom. I made this mistake again on my first corset, and it was unsightly. Not to mention uncomfortable. This corset I made the gussets slightly bigger than I thought I would need. When the corset it laced, it fits perfectly. And if you have added cording and straight steels to keep them in place, the bust will be cupped nicely.
The only thing I would change about this corset is the lacing. It is annoying to get in and out of, since there is no Victorian separating busk, so I will one day buy some fan lacing slides when I have enough money for more corsetry!
Look at that lovely shelf! |
-Do not make your corset/stays out of stiff coutil, as I made the mistake of doing with my first one. Regency is all about willowy lines, not a Victorian hourglass.
-Do not use a plastic ruler as your busk! This might seem obvious, but I did this in the horrible first attempt, because I read on another blog that someone used this and it worked for them. Not me. I was afraid of snapping it when I bent over, and they are just not made to be put in tight garments. I used four white steel bones, which are comfortably springy while keeping the bust separated.
-Use cording. Please. It makes a huge difference under the bust, even if you don't use it anywhere else. I found that in my first corset, without cording, there was a definite desire for even my small bosom to creep away. Cording has become my new favourite sewing technique, because although it seems hard (or it did to me), I found that it is actually amazingly fun. I used this cording tutorial which is fantastic and easy: - http://www.jennylafleur.com/study/runners.htm
-I used spiral steel boning throughout the corset, except in the boning channel beside the busk. I would have used plastic cable ties instead of spirals, like Romantic History's lovely example, but when I tried the corset on, the plastic ties twisted because the channels have a decided curve. So I went with the spiral steel for flexibility.
In the channel beside the bust gussets, I used stiff white steel boning. This keeps the bosom from creeping sideways, which it was doing with the spiral steel and lighter weight steel boning.
Finally, my findings are this: I think if you are using cording under the bust and stiff white steel bones on either side, it doesn't matter what you do with the rest of the corset, the front will do it's job of creating the proper regency silhouette.
Another thing I changed with this pattern, which is drafted to fit a modern size 10, was that I shortened the bust gussets by about an inch. Leaving them at the level of the pattern made them no higher than a normal bra.
Also, do not be tempted to make the bust gussets small and tight, thinking that is will push up the bosom. I made this mistake again on my first corset, and it was unsightly. Not to mention uncomfortable. This corset I made the gussets slightly bigger than I thought I would need. When the corset it laced, it fits perfectly. And if you have added cording and straight steels to keep them in place, the bust will be cupped nicely.
The only thing I would change about this corset is the lacing. It is annoying to get in and out of, since there is no Victorian separating busk, so I will one day buy some fan lacing slides when I have enough money for more corsetry!
Wednesday, 15 May 2013
Innocent Fabric and Some Very Evil Dye
My SWATH (Snow White and the Huntsman) costume is not going well. I haven't even started sewing it yet, and already trouble is brewing. Over the weekend I went shopping for the material. Green suede with some brown dye to render it more earthy, cream cotton for the underskirt and white cotton which I planned to dye with a mixture of grey and blue. Or so I thought.
Deciding that I would only need the grey colour, I put the grey dye in a giant bucket and stirred it up with boiling water and salt, following the instructions. Trustingly, I asked my Dear Mother's opinion of the colour, which I thought looked too purple. She said to drop it in and get it out straight away and we should be right. This is what came out. -Sniff-. Not the silvery-pale blue on the left, the navy blue on the right. I nearly cried. My only consolation is that it is actually a very nice colour, so I can eventually make something else out of it, but not my underdress.
Goodies! |
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Good & ... |
...Evil! |
It was put through the washing machine immediately, but didn't lose any of the colour. So I guess its back to the shops for some pale blue cotton, in a shade near enough to what I want, since I am too scared to make another attempt at dying more. Needless to say, I will be VERY careful and only put the tiniest pinch of brown dye with my green suede, since it is almost the right colour now. It only needs a light wash of brown.
And this time I will test a scrap, instead of being lazy. I have learnt from my mistake already. =)
Friday, 10 May 2013
Snow White and the Evil NonStep-Sister
My last post was all future Regency clothing joy, ahh, glee. Visions of skipping through flower filled meadows in the spring and all that. That was until The Event happened. Yes, my sister has been the cause of this evil. She was supposed to be planning and sewing, to my joy, the costumes that she, my brother and I would be wearing to the Abbey Medieval Fair this year. Her costume ideas are amazing, I constantly find myself jealous of them. In a good way! She is good at creating, I work well from someone else's idea. Hence my love of re-creating movie costumes.
I only hope I will finish it in time, but I will post pics along the way. If I remember to document my sewing exploits, which I am notoriously bad at.
Anyway, yesterday she announced out of the blue that she had come to the conclusion that she will not get the costumes finished for this year's fair, in two months, and will save them for next year. Eeeek! Luckily I have an outfit I've been dying to sew, and this gives me an excuse to go and Shop For New Fabric. Haha!
Snow White's dress from Snow White and The Huntsman. I will be making the full length version she only wears for the first part of the movie, but there are no costume shots of that. I know that the overdress is made of green suede, but I can't find any reference for the underdress. I'm thinking perhaps some kind of pale blue cotton. Hmm.
I am armed with Simplicity pattern #1773, which I will modify to look more like the movie costume. Maybe just using less ghastly fabric will help ... =)
Tuesday, 16 April 2013
Despair and Doom ... And a Challenge!!
I think I am stuck in the Corset Hole of Despair and Doom right now. Nothing is going how I planned. I am halfway through my long-line 1912 corset, a pair of 18th Century stays and two Regency corsets, both short and long.
But, I have a Plan. I have challenged myself to some Regency sewing. It was originally going to be that I would sew all Elizabeth's gowns out of the latest Pride & Prejudice movie, but I don't like/need all of them, so I am going to be sewing selected gowns from three Jane Austen movies and mini-series!! I have given myself the rest of 2013 to complete this project in, since it will probably take a while.
Hopefully having a project will goad me forward out of the lazy rut I am in. I do have to finish one of the Regency corsets I'm working on before I can start, so I will post progress soon. I hope.