Tuesday, 18 April 2017

Mistakes - To unpick or not to unpick?

Mistakes, we all make them at some point or other but what do you do when you find out you have made a mistake. Do you reach for the unpick or do you just live with it?

I guess there is no one answer as it can depend on what you are making, who you are making it for and what material you might be using. I have recently finished knitting a long line cardigan to wear at work in teal coloured Stylecraft wool that I was given for Christmas. I love using this brand of wool as it knits up really well, is soft and has good washing care. I was really pleased with the finished results once I had finished the knitting part. Always the most enjoyable part, but now had to sew it up which is something I don't particularly enjoy but is a necessity. The cardigan has a shawl collar which is great for the colder days and was the last part I had to attach to the main cardigan as it is part of the button band. I had just finished stitching it down when I realised that I had not used the ladder stitch I normally do on this part (this is the second version of this cardigan I have made) as it does not show as a seam when worn.

The dilemma. Do I unpick it and do it all over again, this time correctly? Or do I live with it as after all the cardigan is for me and realistically would anyone bar me notice?

In the end I decided not to do either but instead make it look like a deliberate feature. I also crochet and to join blocks together when making blankets I crochet them rather than sew. This gives a nice raised finish with a chain stitch. This I thought would give the obvious seam a decorative feature should anyone notice and looks as though it had always been done on purpose. I guess sometimes a mistake can be a blessing. Its how we deal with it that makes the difference.

Thursday, 6 April 2017

Pushing the boundaries - part 2


My two dressmaking challenges are now finally complete. I finished my skirt a couple of weeks ago and then set about making the sorbetto top. As I said before I found doing the bias binding edging the most tricky part. I have only done it once before and it went well that time. So typical! When I did it on my previous top I stitched it on the outside and then turned it onto the inside and stitched down. This gave a really neat crisp edge on the outside. This time I did it the other way. The crisp edge was on the inside and I ended up doing my top stitching twice as I really wasn't happy with it the first time. Still, its these things that we learn best from and give us the chance to keep on improving. My final touch was to add some diamante style gems. The dancing Mexican skeletons now have sparkly eyes. These were easy and straight forward to do as the gems have glue on the back then when heated up with the heat tool melts and sticks them to the fabric. I am really pleased with this effect.




I really like the apple buttons on my skirt. I think they finish it off with a splash of colour against the black and white.

https://blog.colettehq.com/news/free-pattern-to-download-the-sorbetto-tophttp://www.tillyandthebuttons.com/p/picnic-blanket-skirt.html
Links to the patterns that I was given as part of the challenge

Sunday, 2 April 2017

Pushing the boundaries

I have been doing lots of knitting lately. It is something that I find very relaxing and helps me deal with the stresses that we can face in daily life. Recently I have completed a black long length cardigan, a purple ombre with black stripes cardigan, a teal aran cable jacket and lots of mini hats for the Age UK innocent smoothie bottles (for when I wanted something quick and easy to do without thinking). I am also mostly through making a teal version of the long black cardigan.

As much as I like knitting and how it helps me unwind, I do also love my sewing. This can be relaxing but I need to think more in comparison. I have always loved to sew but like to do a range of different things, depending on what the mood takes me and how much time I have. Back in February I decided to join a dress making group where we met up to have a chat. It was a fairly new group having only been set up the previous month. As a teenager I liked to get clothes and change them to make them unique and more my style. Recently I have decided I would like to make clothes from patterns and try to alter them as I go to make them more me.

At the dressmaking meeting that I went to we were set a challenge of making either a sorbetto top (from a downloaded pattern) or a picnic skirt that was made from our measurements. I decided that I would have a go at the skirt as I had no way of printing out the pattern at the time. Having never made anything from scratch and with no paper pattern to pin and cut out the pieces from I found this quite a challenge. Was it going to fit me? Would I get the measurements right? I chose a really nice black cotton drill fabric with white spots. I decided that it needed a splash of colour so I found out some red bias binding from my stash to place along the seam line between the waistband and the skirt body. Having an idea and trying it out really pushed me. Luckily it worked out well. The final touch was to add some apple shape buttons down the front. It came out really well for a first attempt so will definitely be making another one. I also decided to give the top a go having been given a printed out copy of the pattern. This one was quicker to make and I do like the fabric that it has been made in. Mexican dancing skeletons! The binding around the neck and armholes is something I have only done once and is something that does push me as I want to get it perfect every time. I also want to work on the fit. As although it does fit me ok, I would like to alter it slightly so that it is perfect.

Having only used paper patterns recently, I thought that it would be the made to measure piece that I would find the most challenging and push the boundaries. However, I have found that using paper patterns the size does not always fit perfectly and its how you have to change and adapt rather than just going on the original measurements that you have taken. I am pleased with both but am surprised at how they my perceptions of how I would find making them to be the complete opposite!

I just need to photograph them now and upload.