March 31, 2007
Plum blossom dress, part 2
March 26, 2007
Plum blossom (I think) dress, part 1
March 25, 2007
First attempts at babywear
March 23, 2007
progress update
I'm also trying to figure out where to start with my next recon project.
This is a shirtdress I made several years ago that I stopped wearing, partially because the ties ripped out of the back and partially because I decided I didn't like the style on me. It's hard to tell from the picture, but the print is very Asian-esque, with some kind of fruit (too pink for plum, but the fruits are too large for cherry) blossoms and little dark green people--I think it's geishas and samurai, but I'm not totally certain. Anyway, since I refuse to pick up on the pink and I couldn't find a good green to go with, I've gotten some tan cotton to work with. The end product I'm envisioning is very similar to this (though I had that picture in my head before I stumbled on the anthropologie dress, really!) It won't be identical--I'm trying to work out in my head how to get a v-neck look on this with the fabric trim, without it being too low-cut for my comfort. And I may end up with a tunic rather than a dress, since I do like the idea of the 3/4 sleeve with the trim so we'll see how much of the bottom I need to craft sleeves.
March 17, 2007
I'm dead-tired, but I'm done.
March 11, 2007
a different kind of scrapbook
March 8, 2007
Kimono pjs tutorial

These are the pieces you'll need. There are two sleeves, two front pieces, a back, the front facing (which goes around the neck and finishes the front opening) and a side tie, which is in two pieces. The front facing can be cut either in all one piece long enough to go around the angled front pieces and the neck on the back, or in two pieces sewn together to make a long enough piece (the seam would be in the center of the back of your neck.) I found it easiest to cut the two front pieces as rectangles and then add the angled cut after.
To give you an idea of the measurements: You want it to be wide enough to wrap around comfortably, without being overly baggy. Many of the measurements came from here, though I made several modifcations:
- Measure from the base of your neck to where you want the bottom of your pj top to be, plus allowance for hem and seams (I added about 1.25" for the two combined): this will be the length of the back and front pieces.
- Measure the width of your back from the center of your side over the ribcage from one side to the other. Then add about 4-5 inches (or less, if you want a closer fit), plus allowance for seams. (I did half-inch seams for everything.) For instance, my measurement was 18", so the piece I cut was 24". This will be the width of your back piece.
- Take your original measurement for the back width and divide in half. Then add several inches (they recommend 5) to each measurement, plus seam allowance. This will be the width of your front. (How much you add depends on how much overlap you want; I used the full five since I'm, shall we say, a little top-heavy. If you're smaller chested you may want less.)
- Measure the length of your arm from the top of your shoulder to about an inch past your wrist; add seam and desired amount of hem. This is the length of your sleeve (the part cut on the fold.) For the width, (how low to the ground the kimono sleeve hangs), this is really personal preference--mine ended up being about 19" (measured from the fold to where I cut.) Cut this as a regularly shaped rectangle for now.
- Take measurement #1 and double it, then measure the width of your neck around the back and add this number. This is the length of your front facing. If you wish, you can divide this number in half and cut it in two pieces, but don't forget to add seams! The width of this is 5" (it sounds like a lot, but it will be folded in half for the finished product.)
- Cut two ties that, together, will be long enough to wrap around your waist comfortably and tie. My ties were about 32" long and 5" wide (finished width is 2", since these are also folded in half. This measurement includes half-inch seam allowances.)
- For the angled cut in the front, stack the two pieces on top of each other. Measure from one side about 6 1/2" (or however wide you want your shoulder seam to be). Then make a straight cut from there to however low you want the V-neck on the long side (mine ended up being about 18" from the bottom, or about a 15" line on the angle. I know, this is a lot of geometry, I apologize!)
- For the cut into the sleeve pieces, with the two rectangles still folded in half, measure about 9" down from the top of the fold, and 3" in. Cut a rectangle out from here down to the cut edge.
Now you're ready to begin sewing. 
Step 1: Sew the front pieces to the back at the shoulder seams. Make sure the two angled sides face inward. Cut the curve for the neck out of the back piece (about the shape of the white line in the darker blue piece.)
Step 2: With the pieces still folded, mark the center at the more narrow end. Open out the two sleeve pieces. Line up the center with the sleeve seams, and sew to the main body.
Step 3: If you cut the front facing piece in two pieces, sew them together at the short ends now. With right sides together, sew the long side all along the inner edge of the front and around the back of the neck (where the dark purple is.) Turn in the seam allowance on the opposite side of the front facing, fold the remaining front facing in half with wrong sides together, and sew it down.
Fold a tie piece in half longways with right sides together, then sew it into a long tube. Turn the tube right side out, sew one end closed. Repeat with the other tie piece. Baste these two pieces (stacked on top of each other) to one side, at about the level of your waist or wherever it'll be most comfortable for you. 
Step 4 (optional): If you're going to use trim, sew it down along the seam between the front facing and the body, and to the edges of the sleeves about 2 1/2" in. (See pink lines.)
Step 5: fold front to back with right sides together, then sew seams along sides and edges of sleeves. (Make sure the ties are folded towards the inside when you do this!) Turn right side out, hem sleeves and bottom, and you're done!
You'd put this on just like a wrap shirt--overlap the front the desired amount, then wrap one tie around the front and one tie around the back and tie together as tight or loose as you wish.
March 7, 2007
Thoughts on creativity and blogging
I've been spending some time lately pondering why I do certain things. It seems to me that creativity, for me, is either a way of life, an addiction, or perhaps a little bit of both. And I guess sometimes it gets me in over my head. I'm especially pondering in regards to my sewing. I've realized that, when it comes down to it, there's not really much I actually need in the way of clothes. Which is a bit unfortunate, since not only is that my favorite thing to sew, it's not like I can just channel my apparent need to constantly have something going on into other things. Someday I'll have my own place to decorate and will have plenty to occupy myself, but I'm not there yet. So it's making me wonder if sewing is something I should cut back on, or at least try to focus on ways to stretch these projects out so I don't overfill my closet again-- more complicated techniques, trying to come up with my own patterns instead of rely on commercial, take the time to make the finished seams look more like storebought clothes, etc. The other thing is, I have a lot of things already to make. Refashion pile aside, I have at least an entire bin full of fabric bought with specific projects in mind. So I need to figure out how to balance getting the things I already have done and my apparent over-accumulation of stuff.
Why I scrapbook is easy enough to figure out. I'm a born journaler, and I love taking pictures, and one of my favorite art forms growing up was collaging things. It's only natural I'd end up uniting the three. I have to admit that part of my ponderings on cutting back my sewing for awhile is motivated by the fact that I still have a rather significant portion of stuff that still needs to get into an album dating back to grad school. I could easily stay on one or the other of these things full-time, and I often question what I'm doing having two such time-consuming and supply-heavy crafty hobbies. (While they're not the only things I do craftwise, they seem to get the heaviest focus.) And yet somehow, I'm not willing to give either up. And they're beginning to cross over a bit for me-- I find myself using my machine to sew paper or photos down on my scrapbook pages, or making minialbums to chronicle my sewing projects (it's nice to see that I've improved a lot since high school!)
I wonder about keeping this blog too, since other than the occasional Wardrobe Refashionista, it's pretty obvious that I'm the only one reading this. But it's an interesting exercise for me, chronicling these projects as they go and how my ideas change as things happen (or don't). So I suppose that as long as I enjoy it, no harm in taking up the internet space, right?
March 6, 2007
This is my brain on phlegm.
March 4, 2007
Oops...
I actually had time to go to Joann's today, so I got a new one. I didn't realize until I got home that I'd actually gotten white glitter, not silver glitter. In my defense, the caps looked very similar and my head's all stuffed up. Of course, the actual color was written on the back on the UPC. Oops.
I did, however, also manage to procure fabric for my two baby gifts, as well as a pattern that will work perfectly for both. Now I just have to figure out how to alter the overalls so I can do the diaper-access snaps in the crotch...
Not much craft progress otherwise, lately, though I did get the remainder of my photos sorted and started the journaling for my Chile album tonight.
