Queen of Birds
Seamstress, Costume Designer, and Costume Historian
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On my work table

9/30/2016

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In this case, on my floor, but who'd notice a thing like that?

Several of my very best friends fall more on the menswear side of things, so if I want to take them reenacting with me (muahahahahahaha) I need to branch out into historical men's styles. On the table right now, 1860s. First up, a sack coat!
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outer fabric: respectable
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lining fabric: scary
Yeah, those pictures are so convincing! definitely not a low-key disaster or anything.
The coat is blue corduroy, because I had it lying around, lined with ... whatever that is. I think there's some cotton in it, and I think it was a curtain once. And the wrong side, which is what will be face-up in the end, is less "grandma stripes" and more "variegated beige". Plus its inside a coat, no one should be looking at it!
There's piping all around the outside edges, and on the sleeve cuffs, because apparently 1860s sack coats don't have cuffs.
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see? no cuffs. wierd. click for source
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again, no cuffs. Source, Pinterest
Right now, I have the whole outside sewn together and the whole lining, and then i sewed those together all the way around the outside. I put the lining in the sleeves and then i stuck those in through the armholes and sewed them in to the outside armholes.
What's next is, I've unpicked most of the CB seam in the lining so that I can turn the whole thing right side out, and then hand sew the lining armholes over the seam allowances and finish every thing up nice and tidy. Oh, and buttons and buttonholes. hahahahhhhhyikes
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yes this will definitely work
It only remains to be seen whether corduroy will be too stiff to sit properly, and whether I'll be cursing a lot trying to put in buttonholes.
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And then I made a bonnet

9/16/2016

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I'm planning a wee bit of 1810s reenacting at the Old Manse with one of my friends from high school - another case of "Nancy drags her non-reenactor friends into reenacting", which of course means that I'm in charge of all the costumes! Let's be real, I wouldn't have it any other way. But of course, instead of starting right in on a nice transitional stay for her to wear, I was like, this needs new bonnets! And to be fair I haven't got any good 1810s bonnets for summer. I have a wool one but that's only appropriate for December weather. So the first bonnet is all done now (the second one is that black one that was on my worktable, and will stay there till I've finished the transitional stay! We won't even be outside really...)
I took loads of pictures - LOADS of pictures - during construction so here's a kind of tutorial type thing.
I was aiming for something kind of like the center bonnet in this fashion plate (the blue and white one - everything I own is blue and white).
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source: pinterest
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yeahhh that's the one
Because I'm cheapycheap and don't have a lot of "real" hatmaking supplies, I decided to make this one out of an old 18th century bergere which was constructed from cardboard! Like cereal box cardboard. It's better than posterboard, that much can be said for it. I had the bergere brim lying about because I remade it out of buckram with wire.
So I cut that brim in half, and laid the halves ugly sides together.
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The cardboard had been covered with fabric by means of glue, so there were weird scraggly bits on the "back". So those got sandwiched in the middle.
Then I "pinned" the halves together around the outside brim edge with binder clips. I started with one in the middle and then bent the whole thing against my work surface to clip the rest.
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That way the outside layer is a teeeny bit bigger than the inside layer, which makes the bonnet brim more inclined to hold it's curved shape. It can't really lay flat because then it does this:
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A bit hard to explain, but it's good magic, I promise.
So then I got out some thread (in a random teal color b/c who cares not me) and stitched the brim(s) together around the outside edge. I mostly went through the fabric parts and also a little the edge of the cardboard. I mostly avoided the cardboard because cardboard isn't really a party to sew through.
Then it was time for the crown. I needed to shape the back of the brim so the crown attachment would sit in the right place on my head. I forget exactly how I did this; I think I basically just set it on my head and guessed. I drew on a new crown line and cut it with tin snips - I was hiding from the heat in the basement, where the hardcore tools are, and anyway it would have been a nightmare to cut even with sharp paper scissors (of which we have 0).
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Now, the plan was to make the crown out of the back of this old cap I had, which was the same fabric as the brim covering (and anyway, what was this cap supposed to be? Certainly doesn't match any fashions I know of from the 1700-1900 periods). So I liberated the cap crown from its brim and binder clipped it to the brim, right sides together...
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... and put the hat on for a moments test, and ascertained that, oh yeah, part of the reason I never use this cap is that its TOO SMALL.
Not a lot too small, either, just an infuriating couple inches. So I went upstairs into the gross oven world and retrieved a bit of more fabric.
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Not the same color, really, but I figured, there'll be trim on the borders between the fabrics and anyway there's a tradition of costumers/reenactors having brims and crowns that don't match so I can't be breaking tooo many rules.
So I cut a new crown like 3 inches bigger than the other one and clipped it to the brim, and sewed it down. Because, as mentioned, cardboard is not a party to sew through, it required some convincing with my awl. But I got the crown sewn from one side to the other and then I went back the other way again (which is sort of cheater's saddle stitch) to squish down the freehand gathering that was necessary to get the pieces attached.
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So then I gathered the backside of the crown down, and bound it with some of the fabric from the brim of the Unfortunate Too-Small Cap. I measured it against my head a number of times while doing this, and wound up with a very snug fit - perhaps a bit more snug than is really ideal, given the presence of hair and possibly day caps meant to fit under it and then emerge unscathed. For the most part given the sort of reenacting I do the bonnet will probably be on all the time or hanging out as decor all the time, so maybe it isn't an issue that'll come up, but I'm still a little annoyed about it (especially since I ALWAYS DO THIS. I never remember to account for the underthings...). But, voila, bonnet!
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Then there was the matter of trimmings. I didn't actually take any pictures of this. It was a bit trial and error and a lot sewing bits of trim to other bits of trim. I though there would be flowers on it, but in the end there weren't any. And I managed to avoid having to sew through the cardboard at all when applying the trim!
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I'm sooooooo pleased with it! I think it really looks very like my inspiration, but not too much. So pretty~!
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Black dress makeover begins

9/2/2016

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I got this commission from my boss at the Old Manse, after I made her that brown silk dress. She had an old black silk dress and an inkling that it wasn't quite right, and asked me to make it over into an 1820s dress, perhaps one that could be used for teaching purposes. Which of course I decided must mean "let's make it all by hand!" because I'm a nerd. But before I took the old dress to pieces to make it over, I took loads of pictures because I thought it might be interesting to see what changed and such.
The original dress looked more or less like this.
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My mannequin does it no favors, being entirely too small in pretty much every possible way, but even on a larger figure, its clear that the weight of the fabric would still result in a limp-wrinkle kind of look.
The sleeves are this sort of medium gigot shape. They're held up on the inside with little sort of fans of pleated fabric stuck into the armsceye.
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The period this dress supposedly aims for is mid-1820s, but although the gigot sleeve did come in around 1825 I still think it winds up looking a bit too fashion-forward. (Context: The dress was supposed to be worn by a minister's wife who was quite old.) The depth of the waist and the distribution of the gathers also felt very 1830ish to me.
The center front had this large decorative buckle, which was really much too heavy for the bit of fabric holding it up. The actual design of the buckle seems passable to me, although the one missing rhinestone is a bit sad. It's worth noting that this dress saw maybe 5 or so years of occasional wear before I got at it.
The center back buttoned up with large buttons. Like very large. Very plastic, with enormous machine button holes, and this sort of awkward placket situation. I'm not really sure how this closure came about, especially since there are so many way easier period closures.
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Apropos well-worn dress, there were a few signs of wear in the garment, kind of amusing ones?
The neck facing was just a little narrow bit of cloth, cut on the straight if I'm not mistaken, which liked to stick up at all angles.
And under the arms were these weird stains... In the picture it looks white, but it was actually sort of glittery. I don't know if that was well-ripened deodorant stains, failed dry cleaning, or some kind of like febreze. They didn't show when the dress was worn but they were a bit unsettling.
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 So anyway, I took the whole dress to pieces, mostly by cutting along the stitch lines. The original stitcher had faithfully zigged along all the raw edges, which was good thinking on their part but of course made unpicking things a bit more difficult than I'd hoped for. Then I started making up my new pattern. I did it by the pillowcase method, where I make a fabric pillowcase to approximately the measure of a torso, cut little arm and neck holes, and then put it on a person or form and shape it from there. Since there is no planned wearer for this garment, I just sort of picked a size at random. I figured 5'6"-ish and proportionally a bit wider than me should cover a fair portion of the volunteer pool most likely to wind up in this dress. Plus it's going to have a drawstring back so there'll be room for variation.
For the design of the dress I'm taking my inspiration mostly from this dress from a Norwegian museum. There are great pictures, from front AND back! It's the exact right year, and it's relatively simple so the style lines are easy to read. The look I'm going for is basically, simple silk day dress for a conservative New England lady who is also trying to be a bit up on the fashion. I'm going to do roleaux trim on the hem instead of ruffles, and probably a simple puff on the sleeve, and I'm putting in a waistband which will be magically adjustable at the back
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Right now my progress consists mostly of a page of nearly unreadable notes and the lining pieces cut out for the bodice. To fix the whole limp-wrinkle thing I'm flatlining the whole dress with this beige quilting poly-cotton. It's a "historical color", so Members of the Public turning it over won't be confused and startled, and I figure the poly content will only be obvious to other textile folks, who represent a fairly small percentage of MoPs.
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Next: baste the bodice lining pieces to the black silk outerlayer, figure out what's happening with the sleeve and the skirt, and sew the thing together. Also, make 1000000 piping, and that roleaux.
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Making a pair of shoes

8/26/2016

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So like 2-3 years ago I made myself these shoes. They're basically my favorite shoes ever, though they're starting to get worn at the toes. When I was putting them together I took a bunch of pictures, so here's a sort of tutorial type-thing about how I put my own uppers onto factory-made soles.

So the stuff that isn't included here is making the pattern and putting together the basic upper. I made the pattern basically by draping some fabric over my feet and drawing on it/cutting it until it basically looked like a shoe upper. There was a fair amount of luck involved...
Then I cut that pattern out of medium thick leather from the local surplus store. The leather is about 3/8" thick and stiff but not unbendable. Which is good for a shoe which should more or less stand up by itself.
I embroidered a motif on the leather uppers (which is Hannunvaakuna/St Johns Arms, fyi). Then I cut from random fabric the shape of the upper + seam allowance, to be a lining (and protect the back of the emboidery. While everything was still flat I sewed the lining to the upper with blanket stitch around the top opening of the shoe. So I had pieces that looked like this:
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from the outside
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from the inside
The green stitching there is to mark the holes I had already punched for attaching the upper to the sole.
So the sole. I took mine off a pair of old Keds. I liked that the high rubber sidewall on that kind of shoe gives me something good to sew into, plus it is a teeny precaution against water. I cut the uppers off the shoes and then, because the Keds were so old, I could basically just rip out the old insole, and wind up with something like this:
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Kind of gross, but not unbelievably so. The sidewalls got sharpied yellow in their previous life.
I pre-poked holes in the sole too, to match the upper, but I didn't really wind up using them because it was actually pretty easy to shove the needle through the rubber (plus after all the futzing around the holes in the uppers and the soles didn't actually match up...)
I cut a new leather insole with some help from the insole I had ripped out. And let me just say, thick leather insoles are THE BEST because they mold to the form of your foot over time. I don't like shoes with "support" because I have high, wierdly placed arches, and the "support" usually digs into some other part of my foot - so I just get my shoes as flat and thin as possible - but wow, the accidentally custom molded soles in these are SO COMFY. A great accident.
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The sole gets set aside till everything else is put together, and then it winds up covering some funny ends on the lining.
So next I pinned the upper to the sole around the toe of the shoe. I used straight pins, and I stabbed them in, trying to match the pre-marked holes on the sole and upper. This was most important and useful around the toe of the shoe. To mold the single piece of leather around the sharp curve and sort of straight line of the toe I had to cut little notches in the toe area, which then got held down by the stitching. Worked really well, actually.
Starting with the toe was pretty much completely mandatory, because, since I was putting the shoe together all rightside out, I had to be sticking my hand inside the shoe to get to the toe.  It was the least horrendously difficult to do it toe first and then work my way around the outside of the shoe.
On the inside of the shoe I arranged the lining so it came down inside the sole-sidewall, and that way the sidewall was enclosed.
And then I started sewing! With two threaded needles, going in and out the same holes in opposite directions. It took probably two seconds before I stabbed myself quite unpleasantly on all the straight pin ends sticking into the shoe's interior.
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Huh, no pins here. guess i must have taken them out after I got through the first row of stitches because stabby
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yup, much stabbing
Yeah, so I sewed along the top row of stitches across the toe, and then I went back and did the second row underneath (with all the notches cut). Because of the sidewall shape on the sole, the seam here is just overlapped and not turned inside or anything. Even the lining inside just sticks out along the bottom of the sole-inside below the stitching.
After finishing the toe, I sewed down one side of the shoe and then the other.
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fairly unhelpful picture
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slightly more helpful - inside view of one side, finished
As you can perhaps imagine, it was really very difficult to take pictures of the sewing process, because it's a two handed task, and also half of it takes place, you know, inside a shoe.
When I came to the back of the shoe, I turned the lining edges under before sewing them down. The edges of the upper were supposed to butt against each other on the outside, but they didn't quite end up meeting. Its fine, it's only visible from very close.
And then I stuffed the leather insole in there on top of all the lining seam allowances and yeah, finished shoes!
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Oooooh!
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Aaaaah!
These are super comfy and convenient and have even proved adept at resisting water (you know, not puddles or snowdrifts, but like, rain and damp). And if I do say so myself, they're damn pretty!
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On my worktable:

8/19/2016

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Right now, this new bonnet is on my worktable:
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Well, it doesn't look like much just now. I started with a commercial straw hat and in picked the straw down to the crown, and now I'm going back in to make a new brim. I'm aiming for something like this:
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source: http://www.nationaltrustcollections.org.uk/object/1349492
At this stage it looks more like an Amish bonnet.
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source: http://www.quakerjane.com/spirit.friends/plain_dress-caps.html
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    Nancy K McCarthy

    I can't stop myself from sewing constantly, and I have a lot of strong opinions about costume design. On the blog I'll post little tutorial things and updates of stuff that I'm working on.

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