Monday, September 29, 2008

Halloween Flirty Skirts

Being new to this whole sewing scene, I need easy projects to learn from. Therefore this project was perfect! They are called Flirty Skirts, and it is beyond easy. It's a pattern from Tanya Whelan of Grand Revival Designs. Though I was momentarily stumped as to how to make the ruffles work, I was just overthinking it. Assembling it all also took some concentration, especially for someone whose abstract thought process is pretty much non-existant. But after I finished the first one, the rest I was able to whip up in literally no time. My favorite is the one with the witch hats and polka dots. Too cute, and I am inordinately proud of it, and my ric-rac embellishing. I think it is the polka dot fabric. I saw it at the fabric store, and I LOVED it. I'm kind of a Halloween nut anyway.

(I don't know why my pictures are sideways. Blogger turned them?!)

I also found some cute Hello Kitty fabric, with her all dressed up in costumes. And the last one is Alexander Henry, of course. I love the retro look of the fabric, and ended up not embellishing this skirt. I don't know why. I just wasn't feeling it.

What I love about these skirts are that they are super easy, and really lend themselves to different interpretations. Tanya Whelan did hers in beautiful floral fabric from her own line, Barefoot Roses. I chose the Halloween theme and think they turned out great. For cooler weather, I bet you could make these in corduroy, and pair them with some tights and cute boots. Hmmm...I may have to try that...

I really need to photograph them while being worn, because clothing just laying or hanging around just doesn't do it any kind of justice.

Sunday, September 21, 2008

Servant Frock-Take One!


Here is my first attempt at a Sugar City Journal pattern. The Servant Frock. I was doing fine until I put in the ruffle. Try as I might, I couldn't sew straight over that gathered ruffle, and the resulting crooked stitching made my heart break. What's a girl to do? Especially when it would take FOREVER to rip those stitches out? I took the path of least resistance, and broke into my trim stash, and used it to cover my crazy stitching. I'll need to take a picture of Emi in it. It definitely improves the look!!
The fabric is Amy Butler from her Midwestern Mod line.