Tutorials, links, and ideas for making clothes and accessories for babies and small children - and a few other bits!
Welcome to my Blog
I am a grandmother to 4 little girls. I blog about the things I make for them, review patterns, provide tutorials on how I've dealt with techniques or problems, which I hope may help others, and give links to the (mostly) free patterns I use. Every so often, I do a 'Best of..' post listing the best free patterns I've found under specific headings - babies, girls, boys etc. Enjoy the Blog!
Sunday, 23 August 2020
Another Sweet Rose Dress
I'm a fan of Life Sew Savory's Sweet Rose dress, it's easy to make up, and versatile, too - you can make it an every day dress, or a real party dress. I wrote a fuller review of it here. The earlier dresses were in sizes 3 and 6. But it works for an older girl too.
Saturday, 8 August 2020
Another A line variation
Regular readers will know that I love a simple A-line dress. I think it is the most versatile pattern there is, as well as being comfortable and practical for play. My latest version for Ada, 3, featured a double frill at the hem.
Ada was quite taken with this new dress, and didn't want to take it off.
(Oh dear, look at the little scar on her knee! These girls do like to run around, fall off their bikes, trip over a log and so on.)
This time, I'm not going to give you a detailed tutorial. I've covered many aspects of making dresses like this in other posts. (See the end of this one for links.) I'll just point out a couple of features. One is the back neck closure, seen above and below. I made a little tab to enclose between the dress and lining, and put a small piece of interfacing between dress and lining on the other side. Then I applied a little Kam Snaps set. It's quite hard to see on the pictures, because I used a black Kam snap. I've found the girls like quite a deep back neck opening on a woven A line dress. Although it's not hard to get over their heads with a smaller opening, they all have broad shoulders and don't like having to wrangle their elbows through a too small gap. Even little Ada likes to dress herself without too much help now.
The other feature on this dress was the double frill. The lower one is a straight gathered frill attached to the bottom of the skirt. I had cut the skirt a few inches shorter than full length, to allow for the frill. There was a lot of frill, about double the bottom of the skirt. My preffered aproach to gathering is to split the gathering thread at least in two - occasionally on a very long frill, into 4. The approived method seems to be to run two gathering threads all the way round - two, in case one breaks, (And theoretically to help you get the gathers more even.) I long ago abandoned that idea. I find it easier to run one gathering thread around half the skirt, and another round the other half, overlapping the ends.
I think you can see the overlapping gathering threads here.
The advantage of this is that you can pull from both ends (Being careful not to pull them right through.) On a long frill, you have to drag an awful lot of fabric along the gathering thread, so the shorter that is, the easier to do.
Before I started to pull up the gathering threads, I pinned in 8 places before pulling up the threads. Then I could easily see how much more gathering was needed.
And then put in more pins in between as I gathered. Here it is all gathered up ready to sew. (You may notice I had overlocked all the edges before I started. I don't have an overlocker, but I use an overlock foot on my sewing machine to finish edges.)
I sewed the gathered frill to the skirt, pressed the seam upwards, and then sewed a line of over-stitching to hold the frill neatly.
The second frill is fundamentally the same, except that you are attaching not to an edge. but to a line with fabric above and below. To do this, I measured up from the top of the lower frill and marked a row of dots with a washable marker pen, at the level I wanted the top of the second frill. I gathered the frill to fit that line, and attached it upside down, right sides together. Then I flipped it down, and again overstitched, but this time with the seam pressed down, and I sewed over the frill rather than above it.
Another A line dress down! I'm afraid that by the time it was finished, she'd already grown, and it's a little shorter than I intended. But there are two possibilities as she continues to grow. One is that it becomes a top to wear with leggings. The othr is that I attach yet another frill to the bottom!
For more ideas about A line dresses, how to find patterns, etc, do a search on A line in the search box. But here are a couple of links you may find useful if any of the techniques here have you a bit floored.
Here's one about neck closures.
How to make paper bag skirts / shorts/ trousers
In my previous post, I talked about my inspiration for making paper bag tops to a pair of trousers (or pants) for a toddler. In this post, I'll talk about the other kids' clothes that followed this idea, skirts and shorts, and give you general tips for making them. You can read about the trousers here.
Paper bag skirt
Paper bag skirt
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