Baby shoes

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October 16, 2007

Moving again...

But this time it'll just be my blog! Bramblestitches has always been my pet project, but now I'll be over on the Backwoods Home Magazine site with my dad and all of the other incredible authors featured in each issue of BHM. It'll be a great adventure, and best of all it means I'll be posting more often--at least twice a week! I'm going to export all of these posts to the new site, so you won't miss a thing. Hope to see you there!

Please point your bookmarks to my new home: http://www.backwoodshome.com/blogs/Bramblestitches

October 11, 2007

Altering the Blues

The Marine Corps Ball is coming up fairly soon, so it's that time of year when the Man hems and haws about which uniform he'll wear, how poorly his blues fit, and how smarmy he'll look if he's the only jarhead who shows up to the birthday bash in Service As (the green uniform a few posts back). Last week he asked very nicely if maybe I could fix them for him, so he could look just as dapper as all the other lads (okay, he didn't say that part. that's what he meant, though.).

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See the wrinkle across the shoulders? That means it's too narrow. And see how tight the waist seams are? They need to be let out a bit. The tight waist was the easy fix, because there were several seams to work with, each with about 1/2 inch of seam allowance to let out. I only needed to let out two seams, so I did the two that had been taken in when The Man first bought this coat--the seams directly adjacent to the center back seam.

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I basted along my projected new seamline with contrasting thread. I never use matching thread for this, especially on dark fabrics, because it is impossible to find and later remove the stitches. A long running stitch is perfectly fine for this. After I sewed my basting line, I ripped out the old seam, then had The Man check the new fit. So far so good. I waited until I finished my other alteration before sewing these seams. Sometimes making one alteration can change the other one. In this case, it allowed the coat to hang a little lower, and took up a little bit of the fullness under the cross-shoulder wrinkle. But the neck was still obviously way too narrow. Unfortunately there was very little seam allowance to work with at the neck. I first tried to widen the top back only, leaving the collar intact so I wouldn't have to mess with it. That made the wrinkle even worse.

So I took off the collar, basted a new, much narrower seam allowance at the top of the center back and let The Man try the fit. It eliminated every wrinkle! (Below, the pressed seam at the center back neck has only about 1/8 inch left to give.)

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Of course now the trick is to get the same collar, which hasn't grown any, back onto an altered jacket that now has a neckline 1/2 inch longer than before. A normal, well-rested professional might tell you it can't be done, and that you'll need to order a longer collar. Since by this time it was 2:30 am, I was willing to try anything. [Note: I'm writing the rest of this post a couple days later. I will infact need a longer collar, but the assembly instructions would be the same as the rest of the photos below.] I basted each collar edge to its respective front, then basted the collar on by machine (with contrasting thread).

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Now at this point, had the Man been awake, I should have had him try this on. Since it was the middle of the night I didn't. I'll go ahead and show you the rest of the process, but you should know that I'll have to go ahead and buy a larger collar for this after all. All of my alterations did work, but since I let out the back neck so much, I wasn't able to fudge the collar back on as I had hoped.

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After stitching in black over my basting line, I picked the white thread out, then whipstitched the collar lining back in place.

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In the end I did manage to get the too-small collar back on evenly, but I'll have to replace it with a properly fitting one. (I'll post again about that whenever the new collar gets here.)

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October 02, 2007

Herringbone-stitch hem

Now that my sewing table is set up, I'm getting around to a bunch of sewing and mending that I've been putting off since we moved in. I just finished replacing a hem that had fallen out of my silk jacket.

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The original hem was probably a machine sewn blind hem stitch, but I used a hand-sewn herringbone stitch this time. Either one is appropriate.

You might know this better as an embroidery stitch, as seen on crazy quilts. Actually, my big Erica Wilson's Embroidery Book was the only book I had with a diagram of this stitch.

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You see this stitch mostly used in the hems of womens clothing, because the wide spacing of the stitches lends itself well to easing the hem, and the tiny horizontal stitches are truly invisible from the outside of the garment. The blurry background below shows the shadow of the hem (I haven't pressed it yet), but in the clear forground of the picture there are no stitches to be seen from the right side of the jacket.

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October 01, 2007

Form or function

There comes a time during nearly every one of my projects when I have to make a decision: Is it good enough yet? It's not a slack-off moment, or a time for me to shove aside a boring project, but a time for me to realistically consider what I expect to get out of a project, how I expect it to function, and most importantly, to consider what return I'll get on investing additional time. Sometimes an idea or technique just needs to percolate in my brain for a while before I figure out what I really want or how best to accomplish my goal.

In the case of my sewing desk, I'm just not sure what finish I want to put on the table top yet. Rather than let everything lanquish in the dark spider-infested back of the garage, I decided to assemble it as-is in my sewing room, get some use out of it, and let time tell me what to do next.

Before screwing the bookcases onto the top, I added big casters to the bottom of the cases, so I'll be able to roll the whole thing away from the wall. Look, it only took me a couple hours to start adding clutter:

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September 19, 2007

Painting

Here's a quick update picture on the two bookcases that will form the base of my new sewing desk. They're a little dark, because it's threatening to rain today. I just rushed out to put a second coat of paint on the outside, so hopefully the rain will hold off for an hour so I can bring them in. The outside and trim work on the case is pale green, and the inside is pale yellow. The colors are exactly what I was hoping for. My sewing room is going to be so cheerful! If the cases look a little odd to you, it's because they're missing something--the top. The tops you see here are the "sub-tops" and the design calls for an additional top that is a bit larger. Since these will be under a big desk top, the desk will be the "top-top." Clear as mud?

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