The blog has moved, and this post can now be found here:
https://peculiarseamstress.blog/2018/01/05/a-plaid-skirt/
Showing posts with label women's clothing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label women's clothing. Show all posts
Friday, 5 January 2018
Wednesday, 28 June 2017
Making an 1840's Straw Bonnet
About eleven years ago, when I lived in my
first flat, I picked up a straw hat in a charity shop, stitched with cotton thread. I’m afraid I don’t
have a picture of how it looked, but imagine something closely akin to a “dixie
cup” sailors cap. I realised that when unfolded it would form a good base for a
19th century bonnet, but I didn’t yet know if I wanted an
Empire/Regency one or an 1840’s one. So, like many other “someday I’m going to
make something really nice from this” items, it ended up in my stash. I took it
out from time to time, but never felt brave enough to get started.
And then I had an event coming up, the opening of an exhibition of women’s fashion from the 18th century to today. I was, with some others, invited to the opening and asked to come in clothing from any of the periods represented in the exhibition. I decided on the 1840’s maternity dress I made three years ago. The dress is nice, but I felt I needed a bonnet to look properly attired, so I finally got to work on transforming the straw hat into a bonnet.
First I unpicked the stitches holding the straw
braid for a few feet, so I could use that to edge the finished bonnet with. You can see the crease where the brim was originally folded upwards.
Then I dunked the bonnet in water to make it less brittle and cut out a piece for the neck. I had a plan for the cut-off pieces of braid, but later I thought I should have curved the brim down towards the chin instead of cutting it straight. You live and learn.
The pieces of braid just mentioned I used to
make a sort of bavolet at the neck.
When the shape of the bonnet was what I wanted
it to I started stitching the braid I removed previously to the edge. It turned
out I didn’t have quite enough, so I took another braid I had in my stash for
the inside. I stitched them both on simultaneously, making sure the straw was wet
the whole time.
This is how the bonnet looked when I’d
finished the sewing, but before blocking. I shaped it while wet and set it to
dry, with a pot of honey at the bottom of the crown to make it flatter.
Then it was time for trimming. This was an
all-stash project, so I picked out a scrap of green silk dupioni. Taffeta would
have been better, and taffeta ribbons best of all, but I didn’t have any. I hemmed strips of the silk for ties and
trim. I wasn’t quite happy with the straw bavolet, so decided to cover it with
a silk one that I gathered to the proper length using whipped gathers.
I wrapped a long strip of silk round the bonnet,
arranging artful creases here and there. Silk ties were also attached.
The silk was attached with very untidy
stitches on the inside, as seen in period bonnets. Makes it easy to change the
trim if wanted.
Then I was a bit unsure if I should leave it
as was – after all, it looked very pretty that way – or add ostrich plumes. As
I was dressing as a close to middle aged, married bourgeoise woman, I decided
more was more in this case. I had some ostrich feathers that had fallen out of
my feather duster and been saved for a moment like this. I picked out four, and
stitched them together two-and-two with silk thread to make them fuller.
Then I attached them to the bonnet, again using
long stitches on the inside. They turned out looking pleasantly fluffy, adding
just the right oomph to the bonnet.
But the bonnet snagged my hair, so after
consulting knowledgeable people I made a half lining using a thin cotton
fabric. Not the most historically accurate fabric for this, but it had to do.
And that was that, all finished. I hadn’t added cheek ruffles to the inside, so I wore a cap under the bonnet instead to give a similar effect. It might
be an old-fashioned thing to do for the 1840’s, but it looked nice enough. I
felt very Cranford.
But woe! I wasn’t quite happy with the size!
1840’s bonnets usually hide the profile completely from view when seen from
the side, and mine doesn’t. It annoys me no end, even though I love how the bonnet turned out over all. So disappointing…
Maybe I’ll just sell it - without the plumes it would look lovely on a girl - and try again.
Sources:
My Pinterest board of extant 1840's bonnets.
Sources:
My Pinterest board of extant 1840's bonnets.
Labels:
1840's,
19th century,
living history,
period clothing,
sewing,
straw,
women's clothing
Friday, 16 June 2017
Early 19th century Swedish Farmwife’s Everyday Dress
Back in April I attended an event held at the
open air museum of Fredriksdal. It focused on Swedish civilians and soldiers ca
1800-10. We got to live in the houses, cook in the fireplaces, even sleep in
the beds. I didn’t do the latter, as the weather was cold and windy, I’m having a bit of a tough pregnancy, and
to top it off, had just had pneumonia. I thought it safer to sleep in my own
warm bed, and just stayed the one day, but still had a good time. The event,
which was rather small and intimate, still attracted participants from the
whole country, and even a few from Norway. Fredriksdal is located in the county of Skåne
(Scania) and most of the houses are from there, so those women in attendance who, like me, are from this part of the
country, chose to dress according to the local fashion, which in this case
meant folk costumes, still in daily use at the time. Our feast day clothes
wouldn’t do, so we tried to tone it down for an everyday look. Trickier than
you might think, as very little evidence remains as to what was worn then. When
it comes to the fancy clothes, much is known, but as usual, no one really cared to
document what people wore when working in the kitchen garden.
I made a brown wool skirt for the occasion,
which I intend to also use as a petticoat for my fancy folk costume. Brown wool
skirts from my parish are mentioned in estate inventories, but are far from as common as the usual
blue and green, or the reasonably common black. I had a suitable fulled, twill woven
wool at home though, so it had to do, even if it was brown.
It is constructed from straight panels. My fabric
was 150 cm wide, but as the extant skirts I know of are usually made from
narrower widths I cut my panels in half, and stitched them back up again,
making four narrow ones in total, and a width of close to 3 metres. The hem was
faced with a strip of unbleached linen.
The skirt is smooth in front, as seen in extant skirts, and has the fullness taken in by stroked gathers at the sides and back, that are secured with rows of stitches, seen only from the inside.
It closes by a sturdy brass hook and eye half way to the left side.
I don’t know how they did about pockets – in some
mid-19th century folk costume skirts there are stitched in pockets, like in modern
skirts of the time, but for earlier decades I’m unsure if they wore loose pockets
or not. I left a slit open in the right side seam anyway, so if need be I can
tie a pocket round my waist.
In the end the brown skirt ended up used as a
petticoat at the event, as I decided I wanted two skirts for warmth, and wore
my usual blue skirt on top. In the period manner I flipped the blue skirt up over my shoulders to keep out the wind every now and then, so I didn't make the brown one in vain.
I also made a new bodice. I intend for
it to be trimmed with blue silk ribbons, and replace my old fancy silk bodice as
that one has become rather too small. For the event I used it untrimmed though.
It’s made from fine brushed wool, lined with unbleached linen, and closes in front with three pairs of brass
hooks and eyes, but most of the closure is hidden beneath the skirt. The wide opening would
be held by buckles and a chain for best, but for everyday was likely left as
was.
At the bottom of the bodice a rather thick, padded linen roll is stitched, on
which the skirts rest. Having a full figure was considered attractive by the
country folk at this time and place, and you do feel rather important in an "I break for nobody" kind of way when you
come walking along the road in all your matronly fullness, especially when you wear several wool skirts on top of each other. It's far from what is considered an attractive figure today, which make rather few people recreate it as close to the originals as I try to, but go the more 'inspired' route. I'll post more detailed pictures of the bodice when it's trimmed and have the buckles attached.
As for the apron, I didn’t want to use my
fancy one, as I expected to cook and do greasy dishes – a good decision it
turned out. Instead I whipped one up from a piece of cotton fabric that I had
intended to purge from stash. It’s not perfectly period, the fabric isn't quite right and it's much too narrow, but woven stripes were
popular, and the fabric had a sort of washed out, sun bleached, worn look to it that
I thought would do for everyday.
I never got any decent pictures of myself from
the actual event (though I can be seen in a couple of these), so I took proper pictures the other day. The weather is a lot warmer now
than in April, so I could ditch the knitted spedetröja I had to wear to the event, despite it feeling too fancy. For the pictures I wore the bodice and skirt over
just an unbleached linen shift (for an everyday shift I’m not sure if it should have a collar
or not...), and accessorised it with the ever present apron and head kerchief. As the temperature is pleasant I went without stockings or any form of shoes. I want a pair of
wooden clogs, but all in good time.
The outfit might have been a little later than
the event called for, as most of the sources I base it off are from Ca 1825-50,
and I generally aim for the 1830’s-40’s in my fancy version of the folk costume,
but ah well. I’m still not quite sure how historically accurate this outfit is,
but at the very least I think it's plausible and believable. I may have to revise it in
future, but then we always do, don’t we?
Sources:
My Pinterest board of extant clothing and period images from the area. Mostly fancy versions.
Allmogedräkten i Oxie härad, (1978) by Helge Andersson.
Sources:
My Pinterest board of extant clothing and period images from the area. Mostly fancy versions.
Allmogedräkten i Oxie härad, (1978) by Helge Andersson.
Labels:
1840's,
19th century,
folk costume,
living history,
women's clothing
Wednesday, 14 June 2017
Petticoat Makeover, Part Two
When preparing for an outing in 1840’s attire,
I realised I didn’t have the number of petticoats I wanted. That is, I could
have had an acceptable number, if one wasn’t way too short, the result of a
previous makeover. Ooops. Thinking about extant mid-19th century Swedish
petticoats, I decided to give it a second makeover. You can see the before(s) here.
I looked through my stash and found a sturdy
cotton bobbin lace that was long enough to go around the hem. I whip stitched
this in place. I then took a piece of cotton fabric of the same quality as the
petticoat, cut a wide strip that I folded in half, seam allowances inside, and whip
stitched this to the lace, as seen in the picture below.
And just like that I had a petticoat of a
proper length that I really like the look of. Pretty white petticoats
are one of the main things that attracted me to the mid-19th century
when I was a girl, and I confess I still like them a lot.
Like most Swedish mid-19th century petticoats,
mine closes with tapes in the back. That may not seem as secure as buttons, but
I’ll tell you one great advantage: if you’re pregnant and feel like you don’t
really need any additional girth over your bump, you can put the petticoats on
back to front and the plackets can open over said bump, putting a lot less
fabric there, letting the fullness go in the back instead, where it's much more wanted. The tapes will make sure you’re able to wear the petticoats no
matter what your current size. Of course, this only work for about 1830-1865, when petticoats were pretty similar all the way round. And speaking of pregnancy adjustments to your
skirt supports; you might want to use a slightly fuller bum pad to somewhat balance your
rear to your currently prominent front.
The three petticoats I wore to the event (one corded, one plain and this tucked one with lace insertion, the first two
starched) did a decent job of supporting my skirts, but I still think I need
more to get proper oomph... One can never have too many petticoats.
Labels:
1840's,
19th century,
living history,
women's clothing
Tuesday, 13 June 2017
1840's Knitted Garters
I felt the need to make myself a pair of
suitable garters for my 1840’s outfit. I had raided my closet and cut down a
pair of too small white cotton tights to make a pair of over knee stockings (a
budget variety, if you like me can’t afford reproductions – just make sure to
stitch the tops, so they don’t unravel), but like their 19th century
counterparts, they wouldn’t stay up on their own. I felt like knitting and knowing I had come across knitted garters in the mid-19th century before, I went
to the internet to see what I could dig up.
After a short search, I found that a
description of how to make knitted garters were present in The Workwoman’s
Guide from 1838, which suited my period just fine, though I have yet to
find an example of knitted garters from this period in Sweden. I looked through
my stash of yarn, and picked out a soft blue wool, not too thick. I used
knitting needles 2 mm (US 0, UK 14), and with 14 stitches I got a width of 4
cm, not too far from the “nail, more or less, wide” mentioned in the
description. To really have them a nail wide (a nail being equal to 5,7 cm or 2
1/4”) seemed too wide for comfort. I also made mine shorter than the 2/3 of a
yard (about 60 cm) stated in the Guide, as 46 cm worked just fine for
me.
I knitted in a hole at one end, described
as optional, which might be why I didn’t need the full 60 cm: I just wrapped
the garter round my leg, pulled one end through the hole, and tied it off.
This was a quick and simple project, just what
one needs once in a while. The garters are really comfortable to wear, and though no
one will see them, I like the fact that they are blue. When in active use, I fold my stockings down over the garters though, I feel it makes it more secure and comfortable, as the stockings will just roll down to the knee otherwise, which is really annoying.
Labels:
1840's,
19th century,
knitting,
living history,
women's clothing
Saturday, 1 April 2017
Hankasärk II - A Swedish Folk Costume Shift
Some years ago I made a hankasärk, a sleeveless shift from the very South of Sweden, to
wear with my folk costume. Now I’m working on a Ca 1810 everyday version of
that folk costume for an event I hope to attend in a few weeks, and need a new hankasärk.
The old one is a bit too loosely woven for my taste, and a smidge tight. In the
beginning of March I made a new one, but I never got round to blogging about it
until now.
I had the cover of
an old mattress, probably used in the early/mid 20th century in a
military or hospital setting. It was made from a very sturdy, handwoven linen,
and though it was stained here and there and had a few unsightly mends, I
thought I could get a hankasärk from it. The densely woven fabric, with nice selvedges, was
too good to pass up.
I had a 1:10 scale pattern,
taken from an extant hankasärk, that I used as a guide when making my first one, so
I knew what the pattern pieces should look like, and I looked at pictures of
extant hankasärkar to see what similarities and variations there were. I
then decided on the measurements for mine, measured on the fabric, and cut to a
thread. All the pieces are rectangles of various sizes: one for the front and
back (there are no shoulder seams), one in each side, two narrow ones to form
the waistband, and four to make up the skirt. In the originals there are
usually three skirt panels, but my fabric was a bit narrower than the ones
originally used, so I chose to use four to get a similar width in the finished
garment.
The bodice part is
made up with back stitches, with all seams neatly felled to one side. I then
hemmed the sides, that would be arm openings. After doing this I discovered
that I’d sewn one side inside out – oops. Several friends advised me to let it
be; similar mistakes are seen in extant shifts. I pondered what to do while
working on the skirt part, and then unpicked the armhole hem that was inside
out, and stitched it again, to the right side this time. I left the side seams
be though: they were discreet enough not to bug me. All seams and hems were
made as narrow as the fabric would allow.
The skirt panels
had neat selvedges, so to make maximum use of the width, I whip stitched them
together. This made almost completely flat seams when pressed. As I have
upcycled the material, there are holes from the previous seams,
but hopefully they’ll mostly go away in the wash.
The skirt is
attached to the waistband with stroked gathers. They turned out a bit less tight
than I’d wanted (I might be bit wider than the original wearers, or I didn't do the gathers fine enough), but it’s acceptable.
The waistband and bodice (with all edges, including the bottom, hemmed) were then joined by whip stitching.
I managed to avoid
the worst stains when cutting out the hankasärk, but there are still a
few fainter ones. I decided not to let them bother me though. There were also
the few holes that had been mended by machine. Though reasonably well done,
machine mending on a shift I intend to be from well before a proper sewing machine
was invented just wouldn’t do. I unpicked the mending, and redid it by mending
a larger hole with a patch, and two smaller ones by sewing/weaving linen
thread over them. These flaws make the shift look well worn and cared for, something I don’t
mind at all. There’s no fun in looking all sparkling new, like you wore a fancy costume instead of proper clothes, especially not in a lower class living
history setting.
For all sewing I
used linen thread that I strengthened with bees wax. For the monogram – common in
large households in a time were all linens looked more or less the same – I used cotton embroidery floss. Most people in early 19th century Sweden used patronymic
surnames, so the first letter stood for the person’s first name, the second for
their father’s first name, and the third for son/daughter. It’s a practice
still used in folk costumes. You can also see the seam that ended up wrong side out.
This will be my
first entry in this years’ Historical Sew Monthly. It could have fit under
February’s 'Re-Make, Re-Use, Re-Fashion', but obviously it
was too late for that, so instead I’ll put it under April’s
’Circles, Squares and Rectangles’.
The Challenge: #4 Circles, Squares and Rectangles.
Material: Handwoven linen.
Pattern: Based off of period examples.
Year: Ca 1800-1850.
Notions: Linen thread, bee's wax, cotton floss.
How historically accurate is it? Pretty close in both material,construction and sewing.
Hours to complete: No idea.
First worn: Hopefully at an event in a few weeks.
Total cost: About 50 SEK (5,25 Euro, £4,49, $5,6), not counting the work.
The Challenge: #4 Circles, Squares and Rectangles.
Material: Handwoven linen.
Pattern: Based off of period examples.
Year: Ca 1800-1850.
Notions: Linen thread, bee's wax, cotton floss.
How historically accurate is it? Pretty close in both material,construction and sewing.
Hours to complete: No idea.
First worn: Hopefully at an event in a few weeks.
Total cost: About 50 SEK (5,25 Euro, £4,49, $5,6), not counting the work.
Labels:
19th century,
folk costume,
HSF,
HSM,
living history,
mending,
period clothing,
sewing,
upcycling,
women's clothing
Friday, 13 January 2017
The Red Riding Hood Winter Coat
Way back in 2009 I picked up a piece of cheery wine red wool at a good price in a fabric shop that was closing. I wanted to make a winter coat from it, but there wasn’t enough for what I had in mind. Soon afterwards I stumbled on a piece of wool in the same quality, but a shade or two darker, in a charity shop, at an even better price. This could work, and I quickly cut out some of the pieces for it. And then life happened. And happened again, and again. I would pick it up, do some work on it, and then it would creep back into the UFO pile.
When I got it out this summer, seven years and two children later, it didn’t fit very well. I had to do some hard thinking, and then, with the help of piecing and added panels, will it to do as I wanted it to. In the end, the finished result turned out all right, if not perfect. The style had changed a little since I cut out the first pieces, but overall for the better, I think. The coat itself is made from the lighter red wool, which also lines the hood and pelerine collar made from the darker red wool – the winters here are mostly wet and windy, and the cold goes straight through you. Extra layers of wool are a good thing. The coat is also piped here and there in the darker red wool. In the pictures, the contrast between the lighter and darker fabrics show best in the hood.
For the construction of the hood I took my
inspiration from 18th century hoods, with the pleats radiating out
in the back. Since mine was made from double layers of thick wool, the centre of
the pleats wouldn’t quite close, so I covered a button in a scrap of wool and
stitched it over the hole.
When it was time to line the pelerine collar,
I didn’t have any piece of fabric large enough, so I ended up piecing it
together from twelve smaller scraps. The facings in the front is also pieced
together from four pieces each, and both the sleeves and the lining of the hood ended up being pieced from two
pieces each. I wanted a long row of buttons down the front,
and luckily I’d salvaged a dozen buttons from an old, worn-out coat I’d made, which would
do quite well. I put two of them in the back, and the remaining ten down the front. Even the lining was reused from something else. All in all, the coat looks nice, maybe even expensive, but it’s all
clever scrimping and recycling. Elegant economy, as they say in Cranford.
One morning about a week ago it was snowing,
and of course I’d have to take the opportunity to get pictures of the coat. After
all, a backdrop of snow is much prettier than a backdrop of mud and sad looking,
beat down grass.
Ever had to completely remodel a project after
taking it from an extended time in the UFO pile?
Wednesday, 14 September 2016
A Plain Empire Petticoat
I’ve been meaning to make an early 19th
century petticoat for some time, and now I finally have! It’s a plain, unadorned
petticoat held up with shoulder straps, simple but serviceable. I mean to
primarily wear it with my heavily pieced lower class dress.
The petticoat is made from bleached linen, a bit on the coarse side, and a bit too loosely woven to be perfectly period, but it’s what I had in my stash. I didn’t have very much of it, so the petticoat ended up slightly shorter than I’d have wished, but still within what’s acceptable for the period, and it does the job. I made it with the measure and cut method, as it’s so simple it doesn’t require an actual pattern. The front is cut as a shaped panel to fit the raised waist from side to side and widens towards the hem.
Now, it took some courage for me to post this picture,
as my heavy upper arms are a sore spot with me. Be kind.
The petticoat is made from bleached linen, a bit on the coarse side, and a bit too loosely woven to be perfectly period, but it’s what I had in my stash. I didn’t have very much of it, so the petticoat ended up slightly shorter than I’d have wished, but still within what’s acceptable for the period, and it does the job. I made it with the measure and cut method, as it’s so simple it doesn’t require an actual pattern. The front is cut as a shaped panel to fit the raised waist from side to side and widens towards the hem.
The back is cut in two straight panels with a
seam down the back. It would have been more period to have the back cut in one,
with a slit cut in the fabric for the back opening, but I had to piece the back
to make it wide enough.
I used the books Kvinnligt Mode Under Två
Sekel by Britta Hammar and Pernilla Rasmussen and Skräddaren, Sömmerskan
och Modet by Pernilla Rasmussen to decide what stitches to use, as they
describe several Swedish extant garments and seam methods in great detail. The
skirt is stitched together with running stitches and a back stitch every inch
or so. The seam allowances are folded over and stitched to the joining seam, as
seen in several extant dresses in these books. As I didn’t want to lose any more skirt length
than necessary, I decided to use the selvedge of the fabric for this. The
selvedge sticks out a little bit, compensating for the narrow hem I had to fold
back, and hemstitched to it. The selvedge is then folded down on the inside and
hemstitched in place. It gives a very neat look, almost like a woven tape being
used. There are examples of cut off selvedges being used to hem skirts among
the lower sorts on the Swedish countryside though, so it’s not completely taken
from my own head.
I folded the upper part of the skirt down
about a centimetre, and made two rows of gathering stitches in the back. I then
pinned the skirt to a waistband (a straight piece of linen folded in half),
putting a pleat in each side to give room for the hips, and drawing up the
gathering threads to make shallow cartridge pleats. Skirt and waistband where
then whip stitched together. I finished the waistband with running stitches
along the upper edge. The waistband is almost on the wide side, but that was a conscious
choice to add that extra little bit of length.
For shoulder straps I cut two straight pieces
of linen, folded them in half and sewed a row of running stitches along each
side. I pinned them in place, tried the petticoat over the proper underpinnings,
and adjusted them until I was happy with the fit. After taking it off, I made
sure both sides matched, and stitched the shoulder straps to the inside of the
waistband.
For closure I decided on ties. I had cotton
tape at home, so that is what I used. Silly enough, the waistband turned out too
large (the result of me being lazy and not putting on the stays before
measuring for it), and I didn’t feel like unpicking it, so I made an eyelet for
one of the ties to go through, and I can let the ties wrap around to tie in
front instead, making the petticoat adjustable in size. A dress in Costume
in Detail by Nancy Bradfield has that feature, so I decided it was
acceptable.
In the pictures I have tied the tapes under the petticoat, but if I put
the tape through the eyelet from the inside and out I could tie the tapes on
the outside instead.
I'm wearing the petticoat over a linen shift and 1810's style stays.
I'm wearing the petticoat over a linen shift and 1810's style stays.
So, while it’s no fancy sewing, at least it’s
historical. I’m back, people!
Labels:
19th century,
empire,
living history,
period clothing,
regency,
sewing,
women's clothing
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