Saturday, March 29, 2025

Black Interlock Cotton Twisted Dress

This black cotton interlock comes from Guthrie & Ghani shop in Birmingham. They have a great fabric selection, and although they are quite expensive, it is kid of OK if one saves the shipping costs. We had a gig in the very same street, so I could not go! And I spent too much money there, of course.

 
Well, among other fabrics, I bought this interlock. I love interlock, I think it is the coolest fabric, specially black. I can always imagine new interlock designs, like this twisted dress. I saw it online, somewhere. The first place to look for a pattern is BurdaStyle website. If I find it there, and it is a relatively recent number, I can order it from my library for free, as was the case with this dress. It is in the July 2024 number. 


The engineering is quite clever. The fronts are cut in the bust dart area and one runs into the other, producing this twisted effect. I simply made it a bit longer, since midi dresses are popular nowadays. Also, I sewed the neck cut higher, which is a pity, because it was gorgeous with the deep cut, but I intended to wear it to school, so...



Well, all in all, it is really nice, comfortable, and becoming, but the skirt gets a little stuck around my legs if I wear it with cotton tights. It would be better with nylon ones, probably, but I do not wear them so often these days... 




Sunday, March 23, 2025

Black Sill Blouse and Golden Pants


This was a planned outfit since the beginning, and the inspiration was the fabric for the pants. It is a polyester remnant given to me by a retiring seamstress (and thus, I feel not guilty for the polyester) and it is a gorgeous golden, patterned jersey with a great glow not captured by the camera.


 

I found the perfect pattern in a BurdaStyle magazine, and I made it straight away with no modifications, in size 40. It is perfect. As I've commented before, my local library (bibliobus) has BurdaStyle magazine, so it was a free pattern for me. 

I imagined the perfect match for the pants would be a silk blouse, so I bought 1,5 m of saten silk online at 45€/m. Not a bad price. 


For the blouse, I used an old pattern of mine that I love. At first fit I saw that it was somehow tight in my big boobs area, but I wanted to make French seams, so I made it 1 cm bigger in each side and no turning back. At 2nd fit, I saw it was still tight, so I made the (wrong) decision of making it 3 cm bigger in the centre button placket. I was very naïve of me not to consider the neck opening would result too big as a consequence, and I almost ruined it with this amateur mistake. In the end, I will always wear it with the neck unbuttoned and no one will notice it is too big, but it is a pity, because I know, and this is the last time I use this pattern. I do not understand how could it be small in the bust area, when I've made it 3 previous times, and it was great (and I have not put on weight), but I will not risk it any more. And I have a couple of blouse patterns I want to try. 


All in all, a great outfit, and I love it. 


Sunday, March 16, 2025

Sports Outfit



 I always choose (organic) cotton to make sporty outfits, like leggings, shorts, tank tops and t-shirts, but cotton, let us be honest, is fragile. It breaks, gives, gets out of form. I love it anyway, but sometimes one has to be fancy, for example, when exercising with other people.

For those social sporty outings, I made an exception and bought some recycled polyester in Guthrie & Ghani shop in Birmingham, when we travelled last November. 

For the pattern, I used the rub-off method to copy some old leggings and a tank top. 

The result is great.

Saturday, March 8, 2025

Black Cotton Dress Pants

 I wanted some pants to go with my black wool blazer and when I found this beautiful cotton in Portugal I thought it was perfect. Because I wanted them to be in the tight side, to make them in wool would not have been a good idea. This cotton has a similar shine and hang than wool, but it is softer to the skin, and it does not itch. 


I used again the pattern from the book Sewing Your Perfect Wardrobe, which has proven perfect again. I think that to find the perfect fit for a trousers pattern is difficult to find, at least for my body. It took me many many years and a lot of trial and error to find a good trouser patterns, I've been using commercial patterns, making them myself. Finally, it has been this book, which I discovered in a library in Birmingham, that has delivered it, the perfect pants pattern. 


The only modification I have mad, is to close the pockets, because I thought they were too open. In this rendition, I closed the 1 cm all along, but not they are slightly too closed, so in the next trousers, I will try other variations. 


An advantage about this pattern is that we can have three (or more) different widths in legs. These are the medium ones, but we can make them wide-legged or skinnier. 


I will surely use this pattern often, and it has made the book very valuable.