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Showing posts with label Butterick 6956. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Butterick 6956. Show all posts

Sunday, November 07, 2010

Ms. X's halter bodice: v2 muslin

Butterick 6956 halter bodice view A

I'm making progress with this from the standpoint that altering patterns is becoming ever more familiar to me, but I still have a lot to learn.

I tried on v1 of the bodice and it fit me like a glove. Wouldn't you just know that a garment I'm making for someone else turns out to fit me perfectly. Unfortunately, while Ms. X and I have approximately the same bust size we do not have the same waist size, so I knew I was in trouble. Not trouble, but something went wrong with pattern grading the bottom half of this bodice.

I don't know why I didn't think of this before, but when I told Ms. X what was going on she came up with the brill idea of sending me some front & side photos of herself. This helped immensely. Armed with the photos, I padded my dressform as best I could to match her silhouette and waist measurements. The dress form is a little lumpy underneath the belly because I ran out of Ace bandage to smooth it out, but all the parts I need to use for fitting are pretty close to Ms. X's silhouette:

padded dress form side 1

Next I put the v1 bodice on the newly-padded form. I let out the waist darts and side seams some, pinned it all up & then sat down to think about how to redraft my pattern pieces.

Front bodice (v1 on L, v2 on R): I decreased the front darts and reshaped the side seam a bit to take it in a little bit towards the top edge and flare it out towards the bottom at the waist:

halter bodice front v1 and v2 patterns

Back bodice: I completely changed the darts. I needed the bodice to be wider at the bottom but not at the top. After thinking about this for a long time, I decided the only way to do this would be to widen the whole thing, remove the diamond dart and instead do an inverted dart on the top only. That would remove the excess width on the top:

halter bodice back v1 and v2 patterns

Here is the v2 bodice, ready to go into the mail to Ms. X. It fits the padded form pretty well with no pulling or straining of the fabric:

halter bodice muslin v2 (padded dress form)

halter bodice muslin v2 darts (padded dress form

And here's a shot of the back:

halter bodice muslin v2 back with separating zipper

There's some excess fabric near the waist which would imply I should add something of a dart back in. But my dress form seems to have an exaggerated inward curve at the waist so I'm leaving it like this. If there's excess fabric when Ms. X tries it on, she can pin it out.

That's the second zipper I've put into this bodice. I realized that in order for Ms. X to get the bodice on and off without having to do circus contortions, I should probably put in a separating zipper. So off to Britex I went.

While I was at Britex getting the zipper and some horsehair braid for the skirt muslin, one of their staff asked me what I was working on. I explained the bodice situation, the fitting long distance and how I was going to be constructing a corselette foundation with boning, etc. It so happens this staff person has a corsetry business so we got into a whole discussion about the 50s look, the shelf bust & what I was trying to do & she recommended that Ms. X wear a waist cincher for a more hourglass effect. In fact, Ms. X had suggested this in the beginning, but I really wanted her to be comfortable in this dress so I said let's try to do it without the waist cincher & see how it goes. The problem with not wearing a waist cincher is that there is less definition in the space between the bust and the waist and without a little bit of hourglass in the silhouette, you lose some of the style of a 1950s dress.

I went back to Ms. X and told her what the Britex woman had said & Ms. X decided to go ahead & get a waist cincher. What that means is I'm going to have to redo this bodice again according to Ms. X's new measurements with a waist cincher.

Now usually I would be complaining about something like this, but it's really important I get this bodice to fit as perfectly as I can otherwise I'll run into a whole bunch of problems when I construct the corselette. So in this case practice makes perfect and hopefully the third time's a charm.

The v2 bodice is going into the mail as is, along with a seam ripper and some chalk. Ms. X used to work in an alterations shop so this isn't her first rodeo.

Sunday, October 24, 2010

halter bodice pattern: redrawing the waistline.

Butterick 6956 halter bodice view A

After finishing the cut & spread for the Butterick 6956 halter bodice, the next order of business was to figure out how make the Butterick bodice fit on top of the Vogue Couturier 990 skirt. You can't see it very well on this pattern envelope, but the front waistline slopes down to a point at center front.

Vogue Couturier front

I considered my options for awhile (which really means just making stuff up) before deciding to transpose the Vogue front bodice pattern pieces over the Butterick front bodice pattern.

DSC00585

Using the waistlines as a guide,

aligning the waistlines

I redrew the bottom edge, sloping it to a point at center front.

pattern transpose

Additionally, the Butterick halter bodice has a center front seam. As a halter top, I like the contrast of the center front seam to the multiple bust & waist darts. But I don't think it translates that well to a cocktail dress, so I removed the center front seam & altered my pattern layout to place the CF on a fold for cutting out.

redrawing the bottom edge

Here are a couple of views of the front bodice piece with new waistline & darts sewn.

Butterick 6956 + Vogue Couturier 990

darts.  lots & lots of darts...

I started adding the boning to the front seams but 2 things happened. #1- Miss Burton pitched a fit over the boning, effectively halting all forward progress. She'd take a few stitches & then get stuck. I feel like this calls for a feed dog adjustment, but I'll probably just use my other machine to sew the bones in because I don't have a whole lot of time in my schedule for coaxing Miss Burton along.

#2- Something good came out Miss Burton's fit though. I was sewing the bones into the front piece, but I think I need to sew them into the underlining instead. That way, I can sew front piece to the underlining with wrong sides facing in, thereby encasing the raw edges & all the structural pieces like the bones & the bra cups on the inside.

Glass half full.

Tuesday, October 05, 2010

halter bodice: pattern grading, uneven grade.

Butterick 6956 halter bodice view A

more of the cut & spread. I need a 1" grade up on the top & a 2" grade up on the bottom. After transferring the vintage pattern to paper, I split the bodice in half at the waist.

uneven grade

here's the finished cut & spread

finished cut & spread

& the final pattern piece, redrawn, alongside my spiffy new aluminum Fairgate T-square which is my new BFF.

graded halter bodice back

Thursday, September 30, 2010

Butterick 6956 - halter bodice pattern.

The 1950s style halter top pattern I wanted, wasn't easy to find. There are several different styles, but I wanted one with the straps out towards the sides. It would be great if I had the skill set to draft my own, but I'm just not there yet.

If you do happen to find one of these patterns, you'll probably end up losing an aggressive bidding war unless money is no option. Or you could totally luck out & find your halter pattern hidden amongst several other vintage patterns in a low quality ebay photo that everyone else passed by like this one:


That would be my story. The pattern arrived today & I'm so excited to begin working on it:

Butterick 6956 halter bodice view A

Butterick 6956 instructions

& although I didn't really care about the rest of the patterns in the set, there are 3 that are pretty cool.

These 2 Simplicity suit patterns, #4550 (c. 1953)

Simplicity 4550 c. 1953

& #3084 (c. early 1960s?)

Simplicity 3084

& this Vogue Couturier #196 (c. 1959) sheath dress & the purple faux fur jacket:

Vogue Couturier 196

I don't know why pattern companies didn't date their patterns. Every now & then you'll find a date at the bottom of an instruction sheet, but it's totally random. I'm getting better at recognizing the general period, if not by style or hemline than by the price on the pattern envelope.

Sunday, September 26, 2010

10 yards shirting fabric + 3 yards rigilene boning.

10 yards shirting + 3 yards rigilene boning

i suppose i should clue you in on my sewing project el grande. a friend of mine in Richmond, VA has asked me to sew a dress for her vow renewal ceremony next year in Las Vegas. her wedding dress was a bit of a disaster & not at all what she wanted, so she's asked me to create her "dream dress" - a 1950s cocktail dress.

while i'm very excited about the challenge of creating something pretty & delicate for someone else, my goal is to manage this project always with an eye towards the more sobering aspects of it. for example, i'll be making the dress out of silk & so it's important to sit up straight & take notice of posts by other sewers like this one which describes the 6 hours it took to hem a silk wedding dress.

i've been researching & pattern hunting & have come up with the basic pieces of the dress. of course all of these pieces are subject to change, depending on fit issues or my own skill level.

1) halter bodice (on the left) with shelf bust. i'm going to underline the bodice with added bra cups & boning for support:

Butterick 6956

2) the shorter of these skirts with released pleats on the sides. i went back & forth over box pleated skirt from another pattern or these softer pleats, but in the end i decided on this one with the softer pleats.

Vogue Couturier front

3) here's the pattern for the petticoat to wear under the skirt for volume:

Simplicity 3813 2

when i was telling my mom about the dress, she told me that my granny sewed her a shelf bust dress & she would try to find the photos for me. imagine my delight when a photocopy of the photos arrived in the mail from mom this weekend. i can't stop smiling. my mom looks fabulous!

i know that photographing a photocopy doesn't produce the best quality image, but i think you can see the pearls she's wearing in the first photo & she's got gloves on in the second one.

my mom in a shelf bust dress sewn by my granny

mom in a dress sewn by my granny

the 10 yards of shirting fabric & 3 yards of boning are for the muslin version of this dress, but first i've got to grade the patterns to her measurements. it's a good thing i have a year to get this done.