Tuesday, June 22, 2010


I actually have accomplished some things. Not as much as I should've, but some. Sadly, I still cannot find my camera. So instead of proving that I actually can get work done on new projects, I bring you some pictures of the Yowie!



These are screen shoots taken from the actual film, so they are quite dark. I'm hoping to get a well lit photo, but no luck yet.

Can you find the Yowie in picture #3?

It took me a minute. The figure on the left is the actor walking through the forest, and on the right, the Yowie is following him!

This last photo is a picture of the mask once it was enhanced with some paint. I am pleased with the face, although I feel that in the screen shots there is too much contrast between the hands/face and the fur. I'm told this is a good thing, otherwise we would not've been able to see the Yowie at all. The fur suit served its purpose, I don't like the obvious wrinkles, but there's nothing I can do about it now.

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

Procrastination makes it happen...

Sooooo...I bought my zip ties. And then I got to thinking that wouldn't it be fun if my mock-up was wearable. That maybe I'd take out the zip ties after I fit it and do cord boning to see what that was like. So then I decided I should dye the factory cotton before I cut it so that its pretty. And I haven't gotten around to that yet, so I haven't gotten around to mocking up.

I think too much. I am also thinking about doing a front lacing set of stays IN ADDITION to the stays without front laces. I found a cute calico-ish print in my stash that I want to use as the outer layer.

Also, I want to make a corded petticoat for a Halloween costume that I made last year for a friend. She doesn't like hoops, but the skirt needs something more to support it.

Also I found the fabric I want to line my now-reversible stays in. Sadly, it is currently on back-order, and probably won't be available until July 1st, so I'm waiting on my entire fabric.com order until then so I can have it all shipped in one package, because I live close to the border, so I can get it shipped to this shipping/recieving place in the U.S., thereby taking advantage of the website's free shipping offer. *Deep breath* Isn't it gorgeous? I can't wait. However, the fabric.com order includes the fabric for the corded petticoat.

So. I have plans to search out dye tomorrow (I *had* some, but I don't know if its in storage here in my parent's garage, or if I left it with a friend in Vancouver) and dye a chunk of factory cotton for stay-mocking.

And I'm making a purse. A non-costumey hobo bag with a free pattern from Hot Patterns. Its cow print, which is perfect for me because cows are sort of my totem animal. I cut everything out on Sunday, and I purchased a zipper and thread yesterday. I am always out of black thread. Hopefully I will get it sewn together tomorrow. Assuming I can find my camera (which has been MIA since my last post) I will post a picture of it when it is done. And my dying. (dyeing?)

Sunday, June 6, 2010

Stays!

So, I have discovered that my Butterick pattern 4484 is the same set of stays as Butterick 4254. Thanks to American Duchess! So I am going to move forward with this project.

On the right is the silk noil that I purchased for the outer layer, and left is a linen for the foundation layers. I was going to line the stays with the linen as well, but I've seen a few examples of reversible stays in my internetting, so I'm going to rummage through my stash to see if I have something cute to use as lining, even though it will probably be poly-cotton.

I am still undecided on whether or not to have visible boning channels. On one hand, all the existant examples that I have looked at (thanks to 18th Century Stays and their list of images online). On the other hand, I could do up the foundation layers and fit them without even cutting the silk, and then cover the foundation. But maybe that would make it a 'boned bodice' rather then 'stays'.

I originally had these grand ideas of hand stitching the whole thing. After my adventures in Yowie-land, I've given up on this plan. I'm sure I will find more then enough hand stitching in the construction process to statisfy my urges for period accuracy. I'm not sure about using linen thread. That was part of the grand original plan as well, but I'm not sure if I can run linen thread through my machine, or how it will hold up compared to good old polyester thread. I will do thread-bound lacing holes! To make up for giving up on hand sewing.

I was also going to order plastic whale bone from Farthingales, but American Duchess got me thinking about zip-ties instead. Cost effectiveness is key.

Basically, I have no idea what I'm doing. Except that I do. I'm going to make a factory cotton mock up, with zip-tie boning, and fit that. And go from there.

Saturday, June 5, 2010

Crazy slowly going am I...

I'm hallucinating a pattern. I swear there was a main stream (Butterick/Simplicity etc) pattern for a late Victorian bustle dress, that pictured a woman in a pink dress on the envelope. I think she may've had her foot up, possibly on the running board of an old timey car, but I also might be confusing it with the pattern that is out there for 'driving jackets'. The dress in the picture looked fairly poorly made, and the pattern over-simplified, which is why I never bought it, but now I am wishing for it because I want a pattern to manipulate into something I want. Can't find hide nor hair of it on the internet, in or out of print, so I guess I must be crazy.


I want to make the 'jacket' of this dress, and I want a pattern to start me off for the bodice. I'm fairly confident that I can drape the skirt, but not confident in my ability to drape/draft the bodice. Much more sure of my ability to manipulate an existing pattern. I will find another pattern to work off of, but its bugging me that I can 'see' the pattern I want so clearly in my mind's eye, and not find it anywhere.

Thursday, June 3, 2010

Stays...

I was going through my box of patterns, and came across a discontinued Butterick pattern that I must've grabbed from the discard box in my Fabricland days. The pattern envelope does not date the stays, but the inclusion of panniers and some googling confirm that its probably late 18th century. I don't want front lacings, but I imagine that that would be a fairly straight forward alteration.


What concerns me is I can't find many reviews about it online. And I'm not sure enough to start cutting up my silk noil for something that's less then accurate.

P.S. Is it more accurate to stitch your boning casings through all 4 layers, having visible casings, or to only stitch the casings through the two foundation layers, or foundation layers and lining?