Sewing


Men’s Arrow shirt previously sewn into women’s shirt, then cut at the empire waist and sewn to corduroy skirt portion here to make a dress.

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Mens linen cotton short sleeve shirt, used for skirt portion of this empire waist dress, bodice is a purchased knit cotton top.

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I pieced together the side front panels and converted one horizontal seam into a pocket.

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Men’s linen cotton short sleeve shirt, recut to make a women’t short sleeve shirt. Used the front pocket, buttons & button holes and back yoke as is.

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Men’s tunic and pants set used as fabric for this women’t blouse.

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Various men’s white shirts used as fabric for this 3/4 sleeve women’t blouse with pockets.

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I set myself the goal to find a pattern that fit well and looked flattering. I started with the bodice, taking on the problem of getting a sleeve pattern to fit so that I could move my arms comfortably in the garment. I recently purchased 6 Butterick patterns with different style elements in each, including the Butterick Fitting Pattern 5627.

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I used old cotton sheets to test sew each bodice. I learned a little something from each pattern, but still even with extensive alterations all the sleeves fit too tightly.

The solution came when I looked to the purchased clothes in my closet that fit well. One shirt in particular, from the Sarah Jessica Parker clothing line Bitten – now sadly no more – had a bodice and sleeve that, once I copied it and compared it to the Butterick patterns, had the shape that fit me perfectly and worked in all the armholes of all the patterns without having to gather in ease.

The 3 changes I made to create the perfect universal armhole/sleeve pattern are:

1. On the bodice front and back pattern pieces: Shorten the shoulder seam 0.5″ at the shoulder edge, tapering out to the original sewing line before the underarm curve.

2. On the bodice back pattern piece only: Add 0.5″ to the back shoulder at the shoulder only, tapering to nothing at the neck.

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3. On the sleeve pattern piece: Redesign the sleeve cap so that it has less height at the cap and adds a bit in the armhole curve before it dips into the underarm. My sleeve pattern is in yellow underneath the purchased pattern piece.

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With these three changes I can now alter any pattern so that the bodice and sleeve fit properly.  Here are three shirts I made using Butterick 4985.

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McCalls patterns 5252 and 5538 combined, cotton twill outer fabric, synthetic lining fabric.

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Upper front pocket and lower front pockets from 5252.

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Yoke curve and sleeve pocket from pattern 5538.

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Additional inner pocket in lining, with twill fabric backing for support.

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McCalls 4783, altered to have less flare in the skirt, added hidden pocket in front yoke seam.

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Worn with Sleeveless Top and Silk Lace Ponchette.

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McCalls 3341, re-made from a J.Jill tencel skirt, added hidden seam pocket.

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Butterick 5218, dropped sleeve, tab front, center pleat, button sleeve tabs.

I used a men’s Arrow cotton shirt for fabric. The blouse front was cut from the shirt back, the blouse back was cut from the two shirt fronts stitched together (the blouse back is slightly less full as there wasn’t enough fabric to cut it out completely). The blouse collar was cut from the shirt back yokes stitched together. I used white cotton fabric for the underside of the collar and front facing. The blouse sleeve tabs were cut from the shirt cuffs. The sleeves and pocket were used as is.

Almost all of the shirt fabric was used, just scant scraps remain. I made the smallest size on the pattern, an 8 without alterations.

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McCalls 5671 This pattern has detailed information on how to fit the pattern to your shape before sewing, as well as how to alter the pattern – real pattern drafting techniques. I was impressed. I raised the shoulders, made a size smaller than my measurements and added a back dart to remove gapping at the neck. This top fits very well now, and is a base from which I can make alternate styles.

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Pattern: The Art of Kiltmaking by Barbary Tewksbury & Elsie Stuehmeyer
Started: 12.5.08
Finished (mostly): 12.24.08
Notes: 7 yard kilt with 25 pleats, each pleat is 5/8″ wide at waist with 2 1/2″ depth (folded under hidden depth).

This kilt was made with many unkilt-like modifications to the instructions given in the book. I knew I had neither the time or patience to hand sew the entire kilt, so I sewed almost all of it on the machine. My apologies to the authors.

These are preliminary photos, it is the first time it is being tried on. More work is required to finish the kilt, such as; adding the hip buckle and strap, fringe at apron edge and although this is not allowed in real kiltmaking, I will stitch down the edges of the pleats. I used inexpensive cotton fabric for this kilt, since I had no idea if it would turn out well enough to wear. The pleats are getting crushed when sat upon and no longer look tidy, hopefully edge stitching them will help.

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I sewed this skirt out of a baby doll Tunic bought at Target.

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