Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Butterick 6974 - Boy's Bath Robe **(Note correction on Construction details)

I made this bath robe for my son using Butterick 6974, a 1980's pattern. It is so comfy. He loves to snuggle up in it. I used plush fleece sofa throws for the material. It feels very luxurious. You should have seen my floor. This material really sheds when you cut into it. To help prevent further shedding once it was sewn, on the inside, I first sewed two rows of stitching, then zig zagged the edges. For that professional finished look, I top stitched the outside of the robe. And voila, a handsome robe for a handsome boy.

****CORRECTION: I remembered wrong how I did the construction of this robe. It was late when I did this post. So sorry. Actually, what I did on the inside is I finger pressed the seams open. Then on the outside, I topstitched with a double needle right over the seams, checking often that the seams stayed open and flat, so that the inside seams would lie nice and flat and there would be less bulk around all of the seams since the material is so thick. Click on the picture for a close-up view of the double needle top stitching. I love the look.









Wednesday, September 23, 2009

I've Been Awarded the Kreativ Blogger Award



Wow! I am so shocked! I have been awarded the Kreative Blogger Award. I don't know what to say. I feel so honored to have received this. Thank you so much, McVal, for this award. I would also like to thank God, my family for their never-failing support, the "Academy" :), and all of my "fans." For without you, this would not be possible. I will try to live up to the name on this award and prove myself worthy.

The "RULES" of this award are that I am to 1) tell you seven things that you don't already know about me. This is scary. I hope you still like me after I make myself vulnerable to you in this way. 2) And I am to name seven other blogs to receive this award. This will be hard because there are so many wonderful blogs out there. I have so many blogs that I absolutely love as if evidenced by my very long blog list. If you are on there, you know that I love, love, love you. So please don't get your feelings hurt if I don't choose you this time around. It doesn't actually mean that you shouldn't have received the award. If there is a tie in my mind, I guess I could either do "eeny meeny miny mo" or put the names in a hat and draw one out. 3)I am to leave a comment on each of the blogs I have nominated letting them know that I have given them an award. 4) And lastly, I am to thank the blog that you gave me the award.

So without further ado, I am going to get personal and share with you things that I rarely share with anyone. So feel privileged. But please take a vow of secrecy as this is top secret information.

SEVEN THINGS YOU DON'T ALREADY KNOW ABOUT ME:

1) I was in the Marine's ROTC in high school and learned to shoot, take apart, clean and put back together M-16 rifles. I also twirled rifles on the football field during half time at the games.

2) I was a court stenographer for six years before becoming a mom. And I will tell you that being a mom is the most challenging and rewarding job that I have ever done. I have many interesting stories to tell from that profession. I have had to take depositions at gas station pumps, in prison cells, while sitting next to an insane man who threatened to kill us all with guards standing by, on an oil rig after being hoisted up by a crane over the water and walking to the top on those steep, steel, narrow steps in heels and a dress blowing in the wind while men who haven't seen a woman in six months looked on. I have many other stories, but I won't bore you with them.

3) I love to sing and have a four octave range.

4) As a teen I did a little runway modeling.

5) I've been scuba diving once while on vacation in the Virgin Islands. I dived 30 feet under. I almost hyperventilated, but decided to getting myself under control so that I wouldn't miss out on this once-in-a-lifetime experience. It was fun, but I don't plan to do it again. I'm really not too much of a risk taker or adventurous, unless it's very, very safe. For example, don't expect me to sky dive or Bungy Jump.

6) If you have read my profile, you already know that I home school my five children. What you don't know is that I have been home schooling for 17 years now and that my oldest who is now in her junior year at college I home schooled from Kindergarten through 12th grade and she received a full academic scholarship from the college. It pays for her apartment rent, utilities, food, books and tuition. Our portion that we pay is 0.

7) And last but not least, I am 44 years' young with an 18 month old baby/toddler.

NOMINATIONS (In no particular order):

1) The first nomination is of course my lovely and talented 9 year old daughter. Emily of Super Stitches.

2) Marie-Noelle of La Machine A Coudre.

3) Eugenia of Eugenia's (Fabulous) World of Fashion.

4) Shannon of Hungry Zombie Couture.

5) Kellie R of When Ladies Dressed.

6) Cennetta of The Mahogany Stylist.

7) Xue of Xue-Originals from Tokyo.

8) Allison of Allison C Sewing Gallery.

9) Linda at Sewing Diary Danville Girl.

10) Joanne at Miss Muslin.

11) Linda T at Seams Well.

12) Packrat of Swatting at Flies.

13) Julia of Julia's Sew Sweet and Special Occasion Clothing for Children.

14) Audrey of SewTawdry.

15) Gwensews of All My Seams.

16) Summerset of Pins and Needles.

17) Rhonda of Living Water Christian Academy.

18) Mary of Sewfast.

19) Busy91 of Busy With Life.

20) Gertie of Gertie's New Blog for Better Sewing.

21) Cindy of Colour By Number.

22) Ivalyn "Tee" Jones-Actie of Dress to a "Tee"

23) Erica Bunker of Erica B's D.I.Y Style.

24) Carolyn of Diary of a Sewing Fanatic.

25) Bunny of La Sewista.

26) Amanda of Amanda's Adventures in Sewing.

27) Honigbarenbiene (Honey Bee Bear) of Honigbarenbiene - Fashion & Style.

28) Christina of Assorted Notions.

29) Disney of Ruffles & Stuff.

30) Miss Linda of Threads of Loveliness.

31) Shona Cole of An Artful Life.

Oh my gosh! I went over just a "little" bit! Please forgive me. I have a few more, but I better stop now before I get thrown in the Blogger Awards' Jail.

Friday, September 11, 2009

Simplicity 4760



This first picture you will see again down below in the "parting shots." I just had to put it here at the top because I thought it was so cool.

I made Simplicity 4760 for Mr. 6. I used a red plaid flannel material. I didn't have enough material to cut out the collar; so I cut out the collar from some old denim jeans that were too small and also some for the sleeve hem. I found out later that I really did have enough fabric for the collar. Awhile back I had given it to my son to play with thinking I wouldn't need it, and I forgot all about doing that. But I'm glad that it happened this way because I like the addition of the denim. I think it gives it more of a customized look. You would have to pay more money for it in the store with this little extra detail, because it's special.

The denim was a bit thick so therefore difficult for the collar to lie flat. So what I did was, instead of following the guide sheet's instructions for the collar, I followed instructions for a wrapped corner, which you can find on my blog, probably under "sewing tips." underneath the "labels" section on the left-hand side. I also understitched as far as I could, pressed after each step, then ended with topstitching with red contrasting thread for a nice professional-looking finish. I also topstitched around the outside of the sleeve hem on the denim trim.













PARTING SHOTS:

Miss 16 dressed up to be Lola Luftnagle from the Hannah Montana show for a party.









Little mommy with baby in sling.





Crafting day with a friend using fusing beads.




Dance time.



Budding guitarist.





Budding guitarist morphs into Batman.




And resting after a long hard day.

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

Sew and Reap




***Many of my readers are saying how much they love McCall's 4425. Well, I love it, too. I want it. The only place I could find it for sale is The Vintage Peddler for $185. I'm not about to pay that much for a pattern. So I called McCall's and requested that they reprint this pattern. Maybe if several of us call them with the same request, they will. Just be sure and tell them it's the McCall's 4425 from the 1950s or they may reprint the wrong one since they reuse these numbers.***

(First photo is Vogue 7383)

This is an incredible article from Time Magazine, 1958, that I think you will thoroughly enjoy.

"MODERN LIVING: SEW AND REAP

TIME MAGAZINE, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1958

SOURCE: http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,938058-1,00.html

Some soldiers send epistles, say they'd sooner sleep in thistles than the saucy, soft, short shirts for soldiers sister Susie sews.
—World War I ditty

Since World War I, the fingers of Susie —and her sisters—have become as nimble as professionals—and thereby started a new kind of home sewing boom. In the 1920s women who could not afford to buy even cheap store dresses did most of the home sewing. But no longer. Women are still sewing to economize—but on the fanciest dresses that Paris can design. Inundated by fashion news, furiously taking up and letting down to keep in style, some 35 million women are sewing profits for an industry that will reap close to $1 billion this year. Home sewers will spend $400 million for fabrics, $290 million for accessories, $270 million for home sewing machines, $40 million for 90 million patterns. About 20% of all feminine clothes are now made at home by women who sew an average of four to six garments a year.
Trading Up. Every calculated change in Paris means more money spent. So fashion-bent have sewing women become that patternmakers have all but junked the simple housedress designs that used to be their bread and butter. What more and more women want is the kind of high-fashion Vogue patterns long sold by Conde Nast. The originals would cost perhaps $600, but-almost any woman can copy them for the cost of a $3 pattern and $50 worth of fine fabric (Vogue patterns even supply a Paris label).

McCall Corp. (1958 pattern sales: $11 million) is matching other patternmakers in their new efforts to stay only a few months behind Paris. Last spring McCall produced the Dior trapeze line at the same time it appeared on U.S. ready-to-wear racks. Last month it brought Paris Couturier Pierre Cardin to the U.S. for a nationwide tour to publicize the six designs that he has made specifically for McCall's fall catalogue. McCall, says Pattern Boss Herbert Bijur, "is frankly trading up into the Vogue class."
Well below the high-fashion class is Simplicity Pattern Co., No. 1 in the field and the only maker that sells nothing else (expected 1958 sales: $20 million). "We work for the girl next door," says President James J. Shapiro. "We want to sell Fords with lots of chrome, not Cadillacs."
Art Form. The biggest pattern buyers are now women in families with incomes above $7,500. Millions of women now rank sewing as their No. 1—and often only—hobby. "There's a whole new climate," says Simplicity's Shapiro. "They do it as an art form."

All elements of the sewing industry have combined to launch a huge sew-more campaign. Manhattan's R. H. Macy, boasting probably the biggest piece-goods department in the world, runs home-sewn fashion shows every day for about 14 weeks a year. Singer Manufacturing Co. spends $3,000,000 a year on national advertising, gives free machine lessons at 1,700 Singer Centers to 363,000 women a year, sponsors annual sewing contests with contestants winning $210,000 in prizes. One return prize for the industry is more and more younger sewers: the average home sewer's age has dropped from 45 in 1928 to 27 now, and by 1960 millions of teen-agers will be sewing. A common but fashionable wedding present for suburban brides: a sewing machine.

No Dry Cleaning. What makes sewing more interesting than ever is that it is vastly easier. Even the clumsiest bachelor girl can sew professional-looking draperies with the aid of pre-pleating devices. Such accessories abound. John Dritz & Sons carries 100 items, introduced 18 new ones this year alone, including a "foolproof" buttonhole maker, electric scissors, upholstery-repair kit.

Sales of home sewing machines have more than doubled since 1948, to about 1,500,000 a year, because the new machines embroider, darn, quilt, overcast, link two edges without overlapping, sew on buttons, make buttonholes—do virtually everything except dry cleaning. These wonders are mainly attributable to the invasion of foreign machines (about 1,000,000 a year), such as Italy's Necchi, which ten years ago caught staid old Singer with its slip showing. The new gadgets on Necchi and other machines shrank Singer's sales in the U.S. from its two-thirds grip of the U.S. market to one-third. Now Singer is bouncing back. It says that its Slant-O-Matic, $399.50 in Early American cabinet, can match-sew any foreign make. Soon sister Susie should sew a shirt in seconds."

Sunday, September 6, 2009

Names for My Machines & Dress Form



I have decided to give my machines and dress form names. My mother has always named her cars. I only remember a few of the cars' names. There was Old Red, Po Po; and the one she is driving now is Betty Jo, after her mother.

So, without further ado, I will share with you their names. They are being named after my grandmothers; so now every time I sew, I will think of them. My Kenmore sewing machine's name is Betty Jo, my mom's mom. My White Serger is Opal Ruth, Betty Jo's mom. And my dress form is Mittie May, my mom's dad's mom. I wish I had one more thing that needed a name. If I did, I would name it Ada May after one of my great, great grandmothers, my mom's mom's dad's mother.

I just love those old names. I have three girls. I wish I had thought about naming them after their grandmothers. That's would have been so neat. My 16 year old daughter said she is going to name one of her girls Ada. I wish I knew more about these women in my family than I do.

I think it would be neat to make some dolls, maybe crocheted dolls, one to represent each of my grandmothers and name each one after each grandmother. Then I could use the name Ada May. Now that I'm thinking along these lines, I think I would even make another doll and name it after my mom, Jonel. She doesn't have a middle name. I could even name some after some of my aunts. Then I could sew some really pretty dresses for them to wear and put them on a shelf to look at. Do you think I'm carrying this name thing too far, or do you like the idea?

What about you? Have you named your machines or dress form?
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