April Vintage Pattern Giveaway

Vouge Very Easy 8827

 

Up for grabs this month is this vintage late 60s/early 70s spring dress featuring long bell sleeves (or short variation). It’s suitable for knits, it’s a very easy, very vogue pattern in four pieces so won’t take long to make up at all, perfect for the spring days ahead. It’s a 38 Bust.

If you’d like to enter comment on this blogbelow

or

Visit my facebook page like and comment on the post related to this blog:

comp pattern april FB

or visit my twitter and retweet the giveaway tweet:

comp pattern april twitter

 

If you do all three you’ll get three entries.

I’ll pick a winner on 30th April.

Good luck!

February Vintage Sewing Pattern Giveaway

It’s that time of months again, and this is the lovely pattern I’m giving away:

McCalls 5366

This 36 bust dress and Jumpsuit pattern, McCalls 5366.

How to Enter

Well, it’s very easy this month. All you have to do is like my page on facebook (link below) and comment on the post on my facebook page about this competition. If you share the post you’ll get an additional entry into the prize draw.

Stacey Stitch on facebook

The giveaway closes on Friday 7th March and I’ll announce the winner on Saturday 8th.

Good luck!

Pattern Collection Update

A few weeks ago my friend Alison contacted me on facebook to say she had some old 60s patterns, mostly 34 bust and would  like them? Of course I jumped at the chance thinking I’d be getting about five or six but I was bowled over to receive over 50 vintage patterns form different decades.

There are some amazing patterns in there, vintage Vogue Paris patterns designed by Christian Dior and Nina Ricci for a start. I was so thrilled and would like to say a massive thanks to Alison for her generosity, I can only say that I will be sewing away and have some results for you soon (even if that means going to Tesco in full evening dress)

I’ve added them to My Vintage Patterns set on flickr and below are some of the ones I can’t wait to get sewing, I should say though, there are so many you should go and have a nosey…I couldn’t list them all on here, you’d be scrolling forever!
McCalls 6569

McCalls 7052

Vouge 5316

Vouge Paris 1313 Nina Ricci
Vouge Paris 1041 Christian Dior

Pattern Giveaway: And The Winners Are….

Thanks to those who commented on my last blog and were interested in giving those patterns a good home. Although there weren’t many replies I still sued a random number generator for fairness.

The new owners will be……*drumroll*

Vogue: Christi

and

Simplicity: Sharon 

number gen

Can you please email my your postal address? mrsbcrafty@gmail.com

I’ll get them posted out to you as soon as possible.

And in other news: I have been sewing BUT it’s been raining non stop here so I haven;t managed to get any photos of my new dress yet…but here’s a sneak peek of part of it (full post to follow as soon as the weather cheers up!):

burgndy dress

New Pattern Purchases (& Pattern Giveaway)

I appear to have somewhat of a pattern buying problem at the moment.

I’ve recent added these beauties to my collection:

Simplicity 3363Simplicity 3862Simplicity 3877

And I have also added these two. Tim thinks they’re horrible but I’ll be the one laughing when I’m all snuggled up in winter in a lovely flannel gown!

Simplicity 5726McCalls 3902

Giveaway

Can you give the below 2 patterns a good home?

The first is this Simplicity 6197 Bust 44. It was advertised on wrongly on ebay as B34 so I don’t think I’ll use as it’s it’s quite far off my measurements. More details can be found here.

I haven’t checked the pieces but in the original listing it said they were all there.

Simplicity 6197

The second is this repro Vintage Vouge V1072 40s suit pattern. It’s in size DD (12-14-16-18)

Vintage Vogue V1072

It’s brand new and uncut. More details on the pattern and sizing can be found here. As far as I am aware this pattern is now out of print.

When I first started to get into vintage clothes I was very much in love with 40s designs but I’m more partial to late 50s -60s rather than earlier now so I don’t see myself making this up at any point.

If you’d like either of these patterns please comment below (with Simplicity and/or Vogue in the body of the text)  by 28th July,  follow my blog and I’ll announce the new owners on here on  31st.

I’ll be using a random number generator to pick the winner/s.

McCalls 2440: All Sewn Up

This weekend just gone I cracked on with making the lovely (and not very different from a Swirl) apron dress from McCalls vintage pattern number 2440.

Pattern Pieces Teal and Atom

As I couldn’t find any teal fabric in my local shop I ordered online, along with some rather expensive, but very pretty, Michael Miller atomic fabric. It was all medium weight cotton and I matched it with my Gutermann Sew All swatch booklet I’d recently purchased online (something rather handy to have if you’re ordering fabric online because it saved me lugging it to the haberdashery, or cutting a swatch off and taking it with me) and popped into Leon’s to pick up some thread.

 Teal and Atom Gutermann Sew All Swatch Book

It didn’t take me too long to cut the material which was a good job really, as I pretty much took over the dining room, it being the only space in the house that has room enough to cut what turned out to be a rather large skirt piece.

I marked up all of the pattern pieces using a tracing wheel and carbon, which is the first time I’ve used that method. I have used tacks in the past but boy oh boy; was this so much easier, even if it did take an extra bit of time to ensure all pieces were marked up correctly, the time it saved me in the long run was priceless.

I got to sewing and finished the bodice on the Saturday. I have to admit using the new sewing machine is brilliant. I braced myself for the thickness of the fabric about to go through (seam plus binding on the sleeves) and for the needles to refuse the task ahead but it just did what it was meant to do, no fuss no bother. It does make me wonder at how much I used to struggle.

 Teal and Atom Bodice Front Teal and Atom Bodice Back

I confused myself quite a lot when it came to bias binding. I couldn’t for the life of me figure out how it worked when you stitched close to the line BUT I did eventually understand. I should say at this point I am mildly dyspraxic and I am dyslexic so sometime instructions don’t work the best for me. I made one mistake of sewing the bias binding to the inside of the sleeve first and had to break out the seam ripper but it was a lesson learnt.

I found these bias binding tutorials to be pricelss though: thank you Colette Patterns and Fashion Sewing Blog!

At that point though I decided to stop sewing for the evening, as mistakes are usually a sign that I’m tried and should start fresh the next day, which I did.

On Sunday I gathered the skirt, pinned the pleats (again brain did not function too well and I only had that eureka moment when I was munching through a sunday roast) then I made and attached the waist stay and attached the skirt to the bodice. I then made a huge amount of bias binding to finish the dress off with and put the machine away until the next day.

Teal and Atom Dress Bias Binding

Monday night after a return from work, I added the binding and a press stud on the back of the dress (it seemed to be gaping somewhat and I may replace with a covered button in the future) then popped it into the washer and waited to see what came out…and guess what did? Only a blummin beauty of a dress!

New to me on this sewing project:

Bias Binding (making and attaching)
Waist Stay
Pleats

All of which I found okay. My bias binding could be better, I did stray from the line a little in certain places and I don’t think anyone would get close enough to tell but it does need improving, mind you by the end of the ridiculous amount of binding I added to this dress I was becoming quite a dab hand!

The finished dress:

McCalls 2440 Finished

The front

McCalls 2440 Finished

The back (the binding does go all the way round by the way but the wind caught the side that was wrapped over!)

So what do you think?

I am, personally, extremely happy with how it’s turned out, I thought it would be a lot trickier than it turned out to be.

McCalls 2440: Sewing Project

I recently purchased this amazing vintage pattern from ebay. It was on buy it no for £8.99, it’s rather more than I’d usually spend but I have been in love with this style of dress for a while now but without the cash to purchase one of my own.

McCalls 2240

It is very much like the classic Swirl wrap dress  often available on ebay and etsy but usually costing around £50 – £100 that’s plus postage (and usually tax if it’s coming from America). The lovely ones are always at the higher end of the pricing too, which is why when I saw this pattern I snapped it up immediately.

Then there’s Heyday’s version, which again is quite expensive, usually around the £85 mark,  unless they’re on sale.

I have um-ed and ah-ed a little as it has so much bias binding on it, something I have never attempted before, but I do like to throw myself in at the deep end.

I have found some gorgeous teal cotton for the main material and for the bias binding (and maybe the pockets) a beautiful black atomic print cotton.

teal cotton

Teal cotton from fabric rehab 

atom cotton

Atomic print cotton from Frumble

I’m also guessing I’ll need one of these tape makers?  Something else to add to the stash.

I do like the thought of the two materials together, I am not sure about the pockets being so dark against the teal though, but I’ll just figure that one out when I come to it, I can always change my mind. Any thoughts would be of help though.

If anyone has used this pattern before or can give me any tips on bias binding on a curved edge etc that would be  a great help.

In the meantime I am off to London this weekend, to visit one of my best girls for her 30th. Then it’s fabric purchasing time and getting down to it. Wish me luck!

 

My Vintage Sewing Pattern Collection

I have been collecting patterns for a little while now and I thought I’d share them with you. I’ve also put a handy link in the sidebar so if you click there you’ll automatically be transported (via the medium of net webbage) to my flickr account and you’ll be able to see my updated set which I’ll add more patterns to as and when I purchase them.

vintage sewing patterns

As you can see from the below I generally buy patterns from the late 1950s through to the 1960s. This is mainly due to my obsession with Mad Men. If I could have a wardrobe completely full of carbon copies of the beautiful costumes used in the award winning show I would, and maybe, if this all goes accordingly and I end up some sort of super stitching seamstress, I will.  But chickens and hatching and all that.

McCalls 7292Simplicity 2654Simplicity 2701Simplicity 4520Simplicity 4675Simplicity 5891

If you’d like to take a look at a few more, they can all be found on my flickr here (or click the photo in the sidebar to the right).

I have to say I’m very much looking forward to diving in. Having spent quite a lot of cash in the past on repro vintage I’m looking forward to the satisfaction of making something to wear with an original vintage cut, safe in the knowledge that no one will be wearing the same thing (or relatively safe anyway!).

Does anyone have any of these patterns? If you do give me a shout, as I’m relatively a novice any heads up on how easy these patterns are to use or what difficulties other have had using them would be of great help to me before I put scissors to paper and in turn cloth.