Showing posts with label media. Show all posts
Showing posts with label media. Show all posts

February 11, 2012

more hoopla


There's a Hoopla giveaway at Feeling Stitchy!


I made the cross stitch cuckoo clock seen in the book and was so happy to see it mentioned, along with other cool embroidery projects, at Feeling Stitchy. Yea! If you'd like to win a copy of the book run over and comment, but do so soon. Entries close tomorrow night!

November 24, 2011

hoopla: the art of unexpected embroidery


Over a year ago I was working on a project that was keeping me form the 1925 corselet. (Oh corselet, will I ever find you?) The project was for the book Hoopla: The Art of Unexpected Embroidery by Leanne Prain.


My copy arrived this week and it is so exciting to see my work in it's pages.


There are some fun pieces in there and I'm so happy to be a part of it. Hoopla!

December 15, 2010

titanic era corset and pattern


This is the corset I made and wrote about for Foundations Revealed this past June, enough time has passed that I can share some of the images here. Yea. I started with an old corset in terrible condition found on ebay, and after drafting a pattern from it this is what I came up with.


Here is a picture from the auction listing.


Not pretty. In addition to the general grubbyness seen here, the garter grips were rusty, bones were poking through casings, and the steels along the center back were bent. I probably would have been disappointed if I paid more than the $20 I bid. There was no information about the corset when I purchased it, so to help date it I made a timeline that illustrates the changing silhouette from 1900-1919.


The shape of the corset is almost exactly like the silhouette from 1911 on the timeline. Based on that, on the cut and construction of the original, and allowing for the fact that the corset's owner may or may not have been on the cutting edge of new trends, I'd say the antique corset I bought was produced between 1910-14. The original was made of plain cotton drill, but I spiffed mine up a bit by using cotton mattress ticking and the prettiest cotton lace ever. Because I like to show my work, here is a view of the interior of the corset.


I was so happy with the way this corset turned out. I'd been wanting to experiment with mattress ticking for awhile and it worked quite well. Here is the pattern if anyone is interested in constructing this corset.


This pattern will fit on an 8 1/2 x 11 piece of paper and is a high enough resolution that it should enlarge well without pixelling up. If you do sew a corset from this pattern I'd love to hear how the pattern worked for you. And to see other interpretations!

November 24, 2010

vogue patterns magazine


A friend was flipping through the October/November 2010 issue of Vogue Patterns Magazine and discovered this.


How cool is that? A big thanks to Vogue Patterns Magazine for the nice review and for bringing my project to a few more people. As it turns out the issue was totally worth buying because Claire Schaeffer, author of Couture Sewing Techniques, has written wonderfully clear and well illustrated instructions on how to sew godets. Information I can put to use when I sew the bust gores of the 1844 corset.

By the way, is there a difference between a godet and a gore? Is a gore just a godet that lays flush against the body instead flaring loosely away from it?

May 29, 2010

more packages


The garments I sent to New York to be a part of the conference Underpinnings: The Evolution of Underwear from the Middle Ages through Early Modernity at Binghamton University were returned to me.


Even though the boxes were filled with things I had made it was still fun to open them up. It felt like Christmas. The people at the Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies at Binghamton took such good care of everything I sent them. As anyone who has participated in events and had their work carelessly handled or lost knows, it is a pleasure to work with people who appreciate your contributions and take the time to properly care for the items you share with them. Thank you to Heather and the rest of the team at Binghamton!

February 15, 2010

foundations revealed


The February issue of Foundations Revealed has published an interview with me! Neat. If you are a subscriber you can learn a bit more about the Bridges on the Body project and see some new images of the corsets I've made. If you are not a subscriber the site is still worth visiting for the free articles, including a couple on how to draft a corset to custom measurements. If you enjoy studying historical undergarments it's worth checking out.