My post-Christmas break in NZ is nearly over, so it must be time to show off all the things I made! Like my
previous craft holiday, I took full advantage of having access to Mum's sewing machine. This time I made tops using downloadable indie patterns. I haven't had much experience sewing from patterns (as opposed to following photo tutorials on blogs or just figuring things out myself) - so I learned a lot along the way. :)
I started off making a
Wiksten top out of some lightweight cotton fabric with a diagonal tie-dye stripe. I enlarged the pattern one extra size, which worked well - hooray for drawing skills! The fit is pretty good, certainly good enough for a casual top.
I dove into making a second one, this time using a crystal-print cotton sateen fabric from
Spoonflower and plain white bias binding. Mum thought the fabric was far too heavy for a Wiksten top, and (surprise, surprise) she was totally right - it didn't drape well, so the not-quite-right fit around the armholes was very obvious. She fixed the problem by demonstrating how to put in some small darts above the bust line - thanks Mum!
I moved on to another pattern for my next sewing adventure, a
Fen top in a black linen-cotton blend. Instead of following the pattern's instructions I kind of did my own thing while sewing it up. This worked out very well with the bias binding around the neckline (which is super tidy if I do say so myself):
However, I messed up with the seams - I decided to do French seams again,
but didn't realise it would cause problems with the curved underarm
seams. Luckily the fabric looks the same on both sides, so I just decided to turn the top inside-out and continue. It's not a mistake, I declare, it's a design decision to have my French seams on the outside. ;)
Again, my fabric was a bit too heavy for
the pattern, but I think it looks ok this time. It's certainly a very
comfortable, roomy top. I'll be looking out for lighter, drapier fabrics to make more Fen tops the next time I do some sewing.
Learnings:
- using proper patterns isn't hard or scary
- I can enlarge a pattern if necessary by looking at the outlines of the other sizes and just drawing one size further
- bias binding isn't hard to get nice and tidy (if you use the iron a lot)
- fabric choice is IMPORTANT - pay attention to the pattern's fabric suggestions, and Mum's warnings
- French seams are awesome, but not for curved underarm seams
- linen / linen blends are easy to work with
- bust darts are my friends
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I've also been knitting away on a new scarf design which I plan to release in the next week or two, once it's all photographed and polished up. Here's a peek at the scarf-in-progress...