ILX Sewing!

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NB, I lack skills. Do you think I could make this:

http://www.simplicity.com/assets/3751/3751.jpg

molly mummenschanz, Thursday, 31 January 2008 21:49 (eighteen years ago)

Yes, almost certainly. There are some tricks to gathering which I can share if you want (altho the pattern probably tells you, just sometimes I know the dirrex are confusing). My mom laid out the rules for me at some point when I was having a break-down in mid-project. Also gathered sleeves are A LOT easier to set in than straight sleeves so kudos to that.

Laurel, Thursday, 31 January 2008 21:51 (eighteen years ago)

I'm just so tired of being poor and buying shitty cheapo clothes that fall apart or fade. Well, I'm sure some of my first attempts will fall apart, but that's all part of the learning experience.

Anyway, yay! Would a cotton be good for a shirt like that?

molly mummenschanz, Thursday, 31 January 2008 21:58 (eighteen years ago)

Yeah, nothing too heavy cos of the amount of fabric going into that gathered yoke. Something crisp and light is prob recommended.

Laurel, Thursday, 31 January 2008 22:00 (eighteen years ago)

This might be a silly question, but are there special washing instructions for hand sewn garments? Delicate?

molly mummenschanz, Thursday, 31 January 2008 22:05 (eighteen years ago)

three years pass...

I was going to name the new thread "I'd like to know where you got the notions: ilx running (stitch) sewing thread" but it's just as well this one already existed.

it's not that print journalists don't have a sense of humour, it's just (Laurel), Monday, 22 August 2011 14:23 (fourteen years ago)

eight months pass...

Request for advice: is the Readers' Digest book still a good recommendation for a beginner? And what about a new sewing machine? (Please don't suggest buying used, there are no repair shops that I can get to without a car). I am planning on an excursion to JoAnn Fabric this week, but will have to order one online.
My experience is minimal, but I don't plan on making anything fancy.

Thanks for any info, sewing folks of ILX!

on the road to the twilight zone (doo dah), Tuesday, 8 May 2012 13:56 (fourteen years ago)

Well, I got this one, was delivered yesterday evening. So I have only just taken it out of the box.
Also, went on an excursion to Jo-Ann Fabric and bought some flannel and a pattern to make pajamas.
Stuff is expensive since I was a little girl going to fabric shops with my mother!

on the road to the twilight zone (doo dah), Tuesday, 15 May 2012 16:05 (fourteen years ago)

Honestly I can't remember what books are good and/or bad, sorry not to have responded! I haven't done any sewing in years because life got in the way, but maybe this summer it will happen? I don't love my chances but I can make it happen.

how did I get here? why am I in the whiskey aisle? this is all so (Laurel), Tuesday, 15 May 2012 16:10 (fourteen years ago)

Oh, I picked up that Readers Digest book from the library, too, looks like it might be useful. I'll wait to see if I want to buy it.
Nice that there is so much info online!

on the road to the twilight zone (doo dah), Tuesday, 15 May 2012 16:12 (fourteen years ago)

I've been jonesing for a sewing machine for months now. it's just simmering away, making me put 1940s dress patterns into my Etsy favorites (I don't wear dresses as a rule wtf). I know when I get one I will start buying fabric and notions like the mad hoarder I am (hello all my yarn i love u my pretty pretty skeins). The only question is when.

Jaq, Tuesday, 15 May 2012 16:36 (fourteen years ago)

one year passes...

http://i.imgur.com/wF1wkKd.jpg

my mom did this too

wth??

乒乓, Monday, 1 July 2013 00:51 (twelve years ago)

mine too, & the memory of it is weirdly tactile & fresh (maybe just cause it's still there, & used, kept in a cupboard full of videotapes), but: this doesn't seem so strange to me?, a solid biscuit-tin presumably seeming like some kind of natural endowment or double-edged gift to the frugal & resourceful. I think I would need a fuller awareness & context of receptacles of the time period in general before feeling too alarmed

szarkasm (schlump), Monday, 1 July 2013 02:56 (twelve years ago)

nine months pass...

I grew up with tins full of notions-instead-of-cookies, too! Especially buttons. But as a wee one I really liked going through all of the buttons and sorting them into different piles and choosing my favorites.

Anyhow, I'm reviving this thread because next week I'm taking an intro sewing class! My short-term goal is to be able to make some wrap skirts. Any ilxsewing gurus out there with a pattern recommendation?

mom tossed in kimchee (quincie), Wednesday, 30 April 2014 15:14 (twelve years ago)

I loved sorting through the button box!

I'm not an sewing guru, just more of a self-taught competent home sewer of things that are not too complicated. Like I can do my own simple alterations and sew home textiles. I've made garments a'plenty but I am out of practice and doubt I would have the patience for it right now.

I would really like to take a sewing class. There's one that looks fantastic in Chicago that focuses on getting you to the point of being able to do more complex alternations but it's far away from me.

carl agatha, Wednesday, 30 April 2014 15:16 (twelve years ago)

Normally, I'm pretty happy to live several states away from my parents. They are awesome, but we get along better when I have some distance. I am, however, bummed that my mom will not be readily available to help me through my early sewing projects. She is a super amazing sewer and has been all her life.

I'm definitely concerned that I have poor spacial awareness and a lot of trouble thinking in 3-D. I'm hoping that just plowing through pattern instructions and not questioning them will work out OK.

mom tossed in kimchee (quincie), Wednesday, 30 April 2014 15:20 (twelve years ago)

I have a similar issue. My best advice is to double check everything. Twice. (So quadruple check?)

carl agatha, Wednesday, 30 April 2014 15:23 (twelve years ago)

Carl whip out that sewing machine and make something for Ivy!!!

mom tossed in kimchee (quincie), Wednesday, 30 April 2014 15:24 (twelve years ago)

I have a wrap skirt pattern that I liked OK but I also made some alterations to it along the way. There's probably something better out there. (Also it calls for double row top-stitching which is really hard to do completely straight unless you have a double needle, which isn't beginner stuff imo).

Orson Wellies (in orbit), Wednesday, 30 April 2014 15:37 (twelve years ago)

Congrats, though, quincie!! Sewing is a great way to take back some control over fashun and to understand your body and how flat fabric ends up as 3-dimensional clothing items (if it's any good).

Orson Wellies (in orbit), Wednesday, 30 April 2014 15:38 (twelve years ago)

Sewing is a great way to take back some control over fashun and to understand your body

this is really true ime

sarahell, Wednesday, 30 April 2014 18:29 (twelve years ago)

five years pass...

i was almost done making this https://blog.spoonflower.com/2014/12/stitch-up-a-lined-and-reversible-tote-bag/
when i went to turn it inside out i realized i put the lining in backwards. womp womp.

forensic plumber (harbl), Tuesday, 4 February 2020 03:02 (six years ago)

I made a tote bag once and I totally put the lining in backwards as well!

Looking back at this thread... I did eventually get a dress form on cl that I never ever ended up using but I did make a large crafting table (one of those ikea hack things with cubbies and on wheels) that I like. Although it gets too heavy to be able to roll properly on rugs.

Yerac, Tuesday, 4 February 2020 03:12 (six years ago)

i ripped it out and put the lining in right. i need to add some stitches tacking the lining down in the bottom, perhaps by just laying it flat and stitching over the short side of the boxed corners. i still have trouble sewing straight. i stop and start again a lot and you can see jogs when i do that.

forensic plumber (harbl), Tuesday, 4 February 2020 23:38 (six years ago)

oh, here's how else i'm a dumb idiot: i flipped the dimensions so it's longer than it is wide. it's ok. it'll be a good library book bag.

forensic plumber (harbl), Wednesday, 5 February 2020 00:21 (six years ago)

I really hate pinning stuff which is why quilting is so much easier and pleasing to me (I very rarely pin). You can kind of get away with being a little sloppy. But it also taught me how to sew very straight and very fast.

Yerac, Wednesday, 5 February 2020 00:44 (six years ago)

pinning suuuuucks. and i stick myself all the time. and my cat is obsessed with pins and tries to steal them. i'd like to quilt, may try to make a lap quilt soon.

forensic plumber (harbl), Wednesday, 5 February 2020 00:48 (six years ago)

i'm making 100 bags and my sewing is actually improving. i made another one of those i linked above and put a nice pocket with multiple sub-pockets (one i-phone sized!) inside, and increased the depth of the corner-boxing. a great grocery bag. the next couple i make i will interface the lining. they will be indestructible. i am making this https://www.purlsoho.com/create/2015/11/27/favorite-totes-in-denim-with-colored-motes/ (the first one; i found the same fabric on fabric.com) and it's not perfect but not imperfect in a way anyone other than me will see it. yes i did rip one side of a handle out twice, but only because the second time i sewed it i twisted the handle. the first time it just looked a little wonky. also one of the small pieces of thread i produced when ripping the stitches out went in my wine glass and i accidentally drank it. amusing.

forensic plumber (harbl), Tuesday, 11 February 2020 02:24 (six years ago)

I love making bags as well. There's nothing like making the same kind of project over and over to increase your confidence and your general skills. You can tweak it each time, add something of your own, and all the time you're laying down experience. When I started sewing as an adult, I joined a group with a bunch of fairly experienced sewers, and I was amazed at how they could eyeball measurements, keep stuff together without pinning, guess at placement, all that stuff. Now I can do that stuff too, for certain projects. Next stop.... zips.

I've also taken up very simple embroidery, because I like to have something small to work on in my hand that doesn't interfere with a cat on my lap.

trishyb, Monday, 24 February 2020 10:28 (six years ago)

three weeks pass...

i'm about to be at home a lot more and can't gym due to MARSHALL LAW so i will sew. i cut fabric to make another denim tote bag. i also bought a pattern for another one with zippers and a magnetic snap.

forensic plumber (harbl), Monday, 16 March 2020 23:12 (six years ago)

I want a pattern for an easy short sleeve shift dress that I can make in a thousand fabrics.

Yerac, Monday, 16 March 2020 23:46 (six years ago)

since I can't go outside due to LobLaw.

Yerac, Monday, 16 March 2020 23:46 (six years ago)

I do not have such a pattern but if you come across a good one let me know, that sounds like a great project.

I am finally finishing up a quilt that I started making for my cousin's wedding ten years ago. Fortunately she's still married. I'll just have to wash it really well before I send it I guess.

The fillyjonk who believed in pandemics (Lily Dale), Tuesday, 17 March 2020 00:02 (six years ago)

i went to an ilxor's housewarming a couple of years ago and his spouse had such a cool shift dress that she made on. She just whipped up the pattern herself. I should just try to do that.

Yerac, Tuesday, 17 March 2020 00:26 (six years ago)

was looking at clothes patterns here before, they have a shift https://www.fancytigercrafts.com/collections/dresses-jumpsuits/products/wiksten-shift-dress-top-pattern

forensic plumber (harbl), Tuesday, 17 March 2020 00:32 (six years ago)

I want a pattern for an easy short sleeve shift dress that I can make in a thousand fabrics.

https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/I/51qG6H5fLGL._AC_.jpg

McCall's 6102 (out of print but still available from resellers). I made this last year in a pink-and-green gingham.

I've started work on a nightgown...if I feel confident enough in my work I may post pictures.

Life is a banquet and my invitation was lost in the mail (j.lu), Tuesday, 17 March 2020 00:38 (six years ago)

xpost I have now gone down the fancy tiger crafts rabbit hole. It's been so long since I have looked at clothing patterns.

The McCall's one might work too. I am looking at google images of the dress on people.

Yerac, Tuesday, 17 March 2020 00:41 (six years ago)

I am now just remembering I have an old craftsy account which looks like it became bluprint at some point?

Yerac, Tuesday, 17 March 2020 00:47 (six years ago)

yeah, they have a lot of shit on there now too. i did a craftsy knitting class several years ago that improved my knitting so much i still don't really believe it.

forensic plumber (harbl), Tuesday, 17 March 2020 00:55 (six years ago)

It looks like I have "The Couture Dress" and "Fashion Draping" that I never watched. I don't know who I thought I was fooling getting these. (I did at least get a lot of use out of the breadmaking and knife skills free videos).

Yerac, Tuesday, 17 March 2020 01:09 (six years ago)

Slowly cutting out pieces while my table's clear. Got 2 pairs of jeans and 2 cossack shirts mostly cut.
Found out that fabric piece I have is a bit small for cowboy shirt I was going to use it for.
Want to cut a couple of jackets too.
Maybe in the morning since I won't have other things on.

Stevolende, Tuesday, 17 March 2020 03:13 (six years ago)

wow. that is impressive. I want to see pics of any finished product. I wouldn't even dare trying to sew jeans.

Yerac, Tuesday, 17 March 2020 12:53 (six years ago)

I need to decide on my sewing project. I will post when done. I did one quilt last year but put it on the quilting thread i think.

Yerac, Tuesday, 17 March 2020 13:19 (six years ago)

There's a column in the NYtimes today saying that masks do actually help protect against coronavirus, that all the messaging about how they don't work was to keep people from hoarding, and that even homemade masks are a lot better than nothing. So I'm thinking I'll start sewing a lot of fabric masks and see who wants them.

I'll give this pattern a try first, I think:
https://www.craftpassion.com/face-mask-sewing-pattern/

The fillyjonk who believed in pandemics (Lily Dale), Tuesday, 17 March 2020 15:30 (six years ago)

The pattern seems pretty good. I don't have a lot of elastic and don't feel like buying new materials, so instead I think I'll just do fabric tapes that can tie behind the head.

The fillyjonk who believed in pandemics (Lily Dale), Tuesday, 17 March 2020 19:13 (six years ago)

hmmm, i almost was thinking of using batting in the middle but then realized...you have to breathe.

Yerac, Tuesday, 17 March 2020 19:14 (six years ago)

Do you really?

mom tossed in kimchee (quincie), Tuesday, 17 March 2020 19:27 (six years ago)

maybe I will just sew a bunch of condoms together for the extra protection and then quilt them.

Yerac, Tuesday, 17 March 2020 19:33 (six years ago)

I was thinking of trying interfacing in the middle, or just a third layer of cotton. It's tricky though because there's a seam going down the middle of it so that it curves over your face, so batting would be easier because you wouldn't have to sew it and make the seam bulkier. but yeah, breathing is a thing.

The fillyjonk who believed in pandemics (Lily Dale), Tuesday, 17 March 2020 19:40 (six years ago)

So the standard pattern with two layers of fabric is very quick to make but pretty thin. I just tried making it with three layers of fabric - just doubling up the lining, basically - and cutting one of them on the bias. That gives you a lot more of a barrier but does end up a bit bulky and lumpy-looking. Haven't tried wearing either of them out yet.

The fillyjonk who believed in pandemics (Lily Dale), Tuesday, 17 March 2020 22:30 (six years ago)


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