For Lisa and my cousin Jen's wedding I had decided I wanted to make a dress, an original plan to find a shirt to go with the trousers from
this pattern was soon abandoned as the trousers remain unfinished in a bag (probably for another year - a way too complicated pattern for my short attention span).
The material I had was a metre and a half of Nottingham lace (I believe untouched since it came out of the factory in the 1970's!) and a metre and a half of stretch jersey in the same bright green. I had thought about making the above pattern as it was, but I felt I wanted to make something that was a little more of the style of the 1920's fashion, simple straight lines.
I also had rather less fabric than is needed for making the dress above, so I had to make the decision to live without sleeves and hope that the weather would be nice enough that I wouldn't need them (it was thankfully)!
I have an idea in my head for a dress that is rather 1920's in style - it's an era I've always admired and then after watching Midnight in Paris I fell in love with it even more, Marion Cotillard's costumes are beautiful - and one day I will make it, Rosie (Grandma who is too young to be called Grandma) very kindly bought me a beautiful piece of deep pink sandblasted silk that I haven't dared cut into until I definitely know what the pattern is like and I've tested it and made sure my own invented pattern works! I had intended to make this dress for Jen's wedding but moving house twice and searching for a job took more of my attention than I would have liked.
The pattern has a rounded neck, which I decided to change slightly to more of a v-neck. When I was sewing the seams I found I had issues because the lace was really thick, so sewing the two together and making it neat and tidy was a little difficult! The v-neck sadly didn't have as much of a point as I wanted it to - that's something I need to work on!
As I mentioned before, I had rather less fabric than I would like, and the waist on the dress is quite high, so to make my skirt longer and give the dress more of a drop waist, I added a lace panel in the middle by cutting one straight strip of lace and inserting it between the bottom of the top and the skirt.
Finally, the other adjustment I made was to change the skirt; rather than turning it into the circle the skirt usually has, I kept the fabric as a square creating the points in the drape of the skirt, an effect I really like and I feel makes a "Circular" skirt much more interesting.
When trying the dress on, I did feel somewhat rather like I was going to a fancy dress party dressed as Tinkerbell, or potentially a leprechaun, but as I only finished it the night before the wedding I had no other choice of outfit! I was pleased with the dress overall, and I really liked the adaptations I made to the pattern.
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| The finished dress! Tinkerbell eat your heart out! |