Affichage des articles dont le libellé est silk. Afficher tous les articles
Affichage des articles dont le libellé est silk. Afficher tous les articles

lundi 17 juin 2013

Finished Project: Summer Shirt


 

As I mentionned before, I started this shirt a while back but got bored of it halfway through, because a) I'd just sewn two other shirts (my ugly shirt and Judy's shirt), and b) This was going to be a spring item and I felt no rush to finish it just before winter started.
I'm usually pretty good at working on one project at once and finishing what I started, but this time around I made an exception (and it seems as I'm repeating this  with my fur vest, bound to wait until fall for final touches).


This pattern is the same as my perfected Ugly Shirt (Burda 114 from April 2010), with some new alterations:
  • I transfered some volume from the bust dart to the front yoke to create gathers.
  • I added 2 inches of width to the back, also to create gathers at the yoke.
  • The sleeve vents and hidden button plaquette are from BOWF 106A from August 2008
  • I omitted the collar and only used the collar stand.
  • I added self-drafted pockets with flaps.
When I first bought the fabric, it was on the remnant rack at Gala Fabric and right away I knew I wanted to make a loose shirt with it. The fabric is a very light silk/cotton blend, lighter than voile almost but with still a bit of body. I had so little of it, i only have one little scrap left that I did my buttonhole testing on. No room to mess up!



I had bought buttons at Dressew but then I debated putting no-sew snap-ons instead, to save me the trouble of sewing buttonholes. Unfortunately the snap-ons I bought were pretty low quality and ended up not working at all and I eventually reversed back to buttonholes. In the end I think it was the better decision, as the snap-ons would have added thickness under the plaquette and made them sot so invisible anymore.


This shirt is exactly what I wanted it to be: loose, comfortable, easy to wear, an Equipment shirt for a faction of the price.

I'm really happy with the fit of this pattern and I can see doing a lot more alterations of it in the future, when the right fabric comes along.

and now for a little summer look, with my cut-out jeans and some pretty ballerina flats.

vendredi 22 février 2013

This is how they do it at Hermes

I found this video on a french blog today, and wanted to share: this is how they hand-sew the hem of their scarves at Hermes'



She makes it look easy, doesn't it? I'm impressed...