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Arts & crafts

Sewing, now and then

(85 Posts)
karmalady Mon 20-Oct-25 08:01:11

My whole wardrobe of clothing is now hand made, apart from one good coat which is years old

I am on a sewing shutdown for winter but will sew now and then, when I need something

Just now I want braletttes, I don`t see the need for me to wear a bra under winter clothing layers

I have downloaded a useful pdf from waves and wild (via the foldline) called superstar bra. The A4 pattern pieces will be easy to stick together and I will cut this out sooner rather than later. First one will be a toile and from a stretch jersey cotton ie cotton with a bit of elastane. From my stash or maybe from my scrap box

karmalady Wed 22-Oct-25 21:46:07

I will see what the 3 new lengths are like and if good quality and value then I will post the retailer name on here

karmalady Wed 22-Oct-25 21:44:11

The pima cotton was from minerva, sadly this has happened a few times, when they can only provide pieces. I don`t think I will get another craft club membership

karmalady Wed 22-Oct-25 21:41:22

The pima cotton I ordered for the bralettes was only available in 4 pieces, needless to say I cancelled that order but I found elsewhere some lovely organic cotton with 5% elastane, gsm is 200. Price ranged from £5/m to £7.50/m. I got 3 x2m lengths to add to my stash, reduced from £15/m. Each length would make a long sleeved top as standby ie if the fabric is not suitably soft for bralettes. I am hoping to get 3+ matching sets of bralette plus knickers from each length, cost would average around £4 per set

ClicketyClick Wed 22-Oct-25 20:31:30

again oh no! ...bit should read as not.

ClicketyClick Wed 22-Oct-25 20:29:55

... sales rack ...bit stair rack 😅

ClicketyClick Wed 22-Oct-25 20:29:10

22Quizzer

I always designed and sewed my own clothes in the past. However these days the cost of fabric makes it uneconomic, so I hardly ever do so now

Agree about the cost of fabric against a bought garment but if I really like the fabric I buy it. On the other hand, I also look on the stairs rack at the material rather than the garment and have bought some bargains such as 2 size 20 dresses from Asda dropped down to £6 each. I'm a size 12/14 so will be able to make a few garments from these.

Duvetdiva Wed 22-Oct-25 10:41:23

I’m using this platform to confess that I put three almost finished meticulously sewn dresses in the charity bag yesterday.
They had been loitering in my WIP for over two years.
I’m also a Bernina devotee

Milest0ne Wed 22-Oct-25 09:31:15

My wardrobe is too full of things which rarely get worn so I am making dozens of cushion covers and using up lace etc made by my MIL I just wish I was more artistic to make more imaginative designs.

Lizzie44 Tue 21-Oct-25 18:54:10

How I admire all you gifted needlewomen. I am completely useless with a needle and thread and can barely sew a button on. My mother-in-law was a wonderful dress maker and taylor. She used to make all the clothes for my daughters when they were growing up. She also taught my daughters to sew which has stood them in good stead.

vegansrock Tue 21-Oct-25 18:05:18

I’ve just finished a bridesmaids dress for my youngest DGD which was made of dupion silk with a tulle overlay , lined in silk/ cotton mix. Made a matching waistcoat and bow tie for youngest DGS. Finished thank goodness.

madeleine45 Tue 21-Oct-25 17:45:10

My mother was an excellent seamstress and made not only dresses etc but our coats too. Of course she could whistle up a quick dress or skirt in no time and well matched seams etc. I started quite well but then had to do sewing at school, when the way you had to do things was each individual next thing, such as tacking or hemming or whatever, and then line up for endless time to show the teacher before being allowed to carry on. It was so slow and boring, I was already fed up with a dress I was making before I had even finished it off. I used to do a lot of knitting, but preferred someone else with the skill to sew it up to match the quality of the knitting, as I felt my sewing up was not good enough. But actually I have always felt it is a shame to do things you dislike rather than use your own skills. So yes go to the sewing class and learn how to make whatever you want, but my way was a "swap skills" that I used to set up in womens groups and with friends. So an example was that my son grew very quickly and any trousers he had the hems were never long enough to last him long. A friend with another little boy, hated cooking or rather baking, so I suggested that I would buy the material cotton etc for the trousers and she could pay for the ingredients. So she made a great pair of trousers with extra long hems , which fitted and lasted well. I in turn made what her son wanted for his birthday, which was a football field. So made a rectangular sponge, put home made raspberry jam in it, covered it with very light green icing to be the field, put cocktail sticks and the nets used round oranges to be the goals, piped white lines for all the usual things, and added his subbuto people to play with a washed white aniseed ball for the football. He was delighted with it and result we were both pleased with our exchange of skills and enjoyed doing the things that we were good at! Incidentally another popular thing on the menu was my easy offering of mice to eat! That was a green jelly on a shallow metal tray to be the grass, halves of pears from a tin for the bodies, cherries for the noses, pine nuts for ears , currants for eyes and a licquorice tail. The children were keen to tell their mums that they had eaten mice at the party!!

Deepat Tue 21-Oct-25 17:43:23

Grandma70s

I haven’t sewn anything (except the odd button) since needlework at school stopped being compulsory when I was about 12. To me it is the ultimate boring occupation.

My mother was marvellous at it, and made all my pretty dresses and ballet costumes when I was a child. Perhaps I don’t sew because I know I could never compete.

That's me...I am not remotely interested in sewing. 🤣🤣🤣

karmalady Tue 21-Oct-25 17:11:21

kits are often good value too, I once bought a maison fauve pilar jacket kit in corduroy from beyond the pink door. The resulting jacket is wonderful

The cord made a horrible fluffy mess in my sewing room but it was worth making

karmalady Tue 21-Oct-25 17:09:03

I like that Twinnytwin, I also keep track of what I have made, a catalogue of stash samples, what I paid etc. I use A5 files and an A5 notebook and give everything a rating. The As are excellent and the patterns are perfect. C is never to be made again

I keep all my patterns in A4 pattern envelopes and my overall pattern stash is described on blank business cards in small files, so I can easily pick out eg a skirt. This is stash that I have accumulated for very many years and including good quality bargains. I did all that catalogue work two years ago, such a good time doing it and then I stapled tags onto every item of fabric

Talking about fabric, I have just bought a large quantity of top quality pima cotton jersey, all in one colourway and destined for several matching bralette and knicker sets and maybe a t shirt and dress. I saved £19 a metre and it cost just about £9 a metre, good brand too. The bargains are out there but it helps to know the good brands and the gsm, which gives the weight of the fabric

My problem will be after pre-washing, I will have to lay it along two airers right across my room, best dried flat and not pegged. Every bit of fabric in my sewing room has been pre-washed, it gets rid of shrinkage

Vintagegirl Tue 21-Oct-25 16:53:59

Fabric shops seems to have disappeared even tho I live in a city. I have always done simple sewing jobs like curtains and self and other half being short, always hems to adjust. I eventually had to abandon an electric Singer after several repairs. Now I have Janome and like to give it a bit of work to keep it ticking over. Some craft items during covid kept it busy.

twinnytwin Tue 21-Oct-25 16:47:03

Karmalady, I'd talk sewing all day, every day if I could! My twin sister and I are manic sewers and rarely buy any of our clothes. I have wardrobes and drawers full of me-made clothes going back years. I keep a spreadsheet showing date, pattern, fabric etc of all my makes and the total each year is dozens, most for me!
I've cut out a skirt and two matching tops today!
Quizzer, unfortunately fabric can be very expensive these days, although by waiting for sales and buying online, you can still get good value. Of course, it's not going to match the prices of Primark or Supermarket clothes, but my me-made clothes last me for years.
I better stop going on about sewing now!!

karmalady Tue 21-Oct-25 16:41:22

Your posts are lovely, nice to have a sewing group at long last

I have cut out the XL C cup bralette and there is the extra room below the cups and now I am certain that this size will fit me. There is flexibility in the overlap so I could make the XL underband a little bigger. I think I will buy some more fabric, the thinner jerseys seem to be best as the bra is lined. Cost for my bralette today, not counting the pattern is around £4

KnittyNannie, I just don`t need anything else, I wish I did but now I only have space for the bralettes. My knickers are my pride and joy, proud to hang them out for all to see. I got my trimming from etsy, a big roll from fashion avenue called fancy picot 10mm

I need to knit now or the gansey will not be finished

Quizzer Tue 21-Oct-25 16:22:40

I always designed and sewed my own clothes in the past. However these days the cost of fabric makes it uneconomic, so I hardly ever do so now.

GrannaKaye Tue 21-Oct-25 15:43:00

Karmalady you have inspired me: I do sew regularly but most of my wardrobe is store bought...and very simple: t-shirts and jeans and sweat suits. I need new bras and panties and I think that given your info on patterns, I will be making them!

KnittyNannie Tue 21-Oct-25 15:28:45

I’ve made the Superstar Bra. It’s great. Also, Waves and Wild Wonder Undies are good. Easily made in an hour from scraps of cotton/lycra fabric. Could revive your interest in sewing! (I have a drawer full of Wonder Undies).

karmalady Tue 21-Oct-25 15:13:01

I could not resist and have made the bralette, the underband is too big and cup size a tad too small, however it is very soft and very comfortable and I am wearing it now. It is light as a feather and this is going to develop into a go-to pattern. Nothing at all is cutting into me and I love it.

I did almost all of it on my overlocker including the darts. The hardest bit was inserting and sewing the back and front straps together. For that I basted then used a stepped zig zag

That was my first ever wave and wild pattern, the instructions and clarity are wonderful, top notch

Now to print off XL C cup, I just want to measure lower cup, to see if that gives me 1/2" more space.

I won`t be chucking this toile, it is good enough but I can do better. Next toile will be straight XL c cup and that will include the XL underband

Whitewavemark2 Tue 21-Oct-25 10:57:41

karma that looks as clear as mud to me😀😀

Whitewavemark2 Tue 21-Oct-25 10:56:34

My sewing is more again than now😀. I’ve had a dressing gown cut out since May - just sat there. I need to order a zip and really then there is no excuse.

karmalady Tue 21-Oct-25 10:47:43

I want to show you as I go on

XL over 4XL and I needed to add size in several places. one on the back and 4 on the front. All I have done was tape the 2 sizes together first and then added the size 4 XL. To make it smooth I used a french curve and curved each each added space

Looks fine and soon I will cut the fabric and test run. I won`t be doing the sewing today, I have a gansey to finish knitting

petra Tue 21-Oct-25 10:27:58

AskAlice

*Petra*, Wow, what a claim to fame! And how lovely that her mother's beautiful work is still seen and admired by so many people.

Interestingly, my mum's maternal side of the family were descended from Huguenot silk-weavers who came to East London in the early 1700s, so I think you are right that the genes have something to do with it. I do so wish my mum's dressmaking genes had been passed on to me. She did try to teach me but I wasn't that interested when I was young. I only started sewing again just before the first lockdown, and I'm afraid I'm adequate at best!

AskAlice
My late Mother in Law was a LaRoche by marriage.
My daughter has researched a lot of history Re the name and the links to the Huguenot’s