Friday, 20 July 2012

DIY: Circle Skirted Dress

Update: I have uploaded much better instructions for making these dresses here.


I'm going to show you today how I make my circle-skirted dresses. These are pretty easy to make, which I suppose is why I've made so many of them! For example, here's four of my circle-skirted dresses below (and they're clearly fun to swish around in too):
I'm not going to go through all the steps of the actual construction of the dress, because it would be a monstrously long post (and I'm pretty sure no one would bother reading it all the way through). I am, however, going to show you the main steps I go through in order to construct a circle-skirted dress, in hope of inspiring budding sewers (you will need basic sewing knowledge to do this, i.e. it's probably better if you've made a shirt/skirt before) to give dress-making a go, because this method takes the two easiest parts of making a dress and mashes them together.
Basically, making this style dress consists of using any kind of cheap vintage store dress pattern to get a bodice and joining it up to a circle skirt! If you want to know what goes on in the making of these dresses, then read on...

what you need
1. a pattern whose pattern pieces for the bodice are separate from the skirt
2. two fabrics which go together and/or clash (depending on what you want)
3. sewing equipment
4. a zipper of about 35cm length

Making your bodice
  • Take out your pattern pieces and find the front, back and interfacing (and collar if it has it) pieces. Put the skirt and the sleeve pieces back into the packet - you won't need them for this.
  • Shorten the bodice pattern front and back if doesn't already stop at the waistline. The bodice only need be short!
  • Place the pattern pieces onto your fabric and cut them out! Make sure to place the front bodice piece on the fold so that you get one piece instead of two (unless you want a zip/buttons up the front).
  • Once you have your shapes, sew on the interfacing for the neck/collar.
  • Place the front and back bodice pieces together (right sides together) and sew at the shoulders, and down the sides of the bodice.
  • I get lazy with the armholes, and just fold them inside the bodice about half an inch, notching as I go, and sew them down (though if you can be bothered with armhole interfacing then do this instead - it'll look nicer inside the dress):

  • If the back section is intact, slice it right up the middle. If it's already in two pieces, then that's good - this is where you need to insert your zipper.
  • I am no good at explaining how to do a zipper. Just make sure that the zipper is a little bit longer than the bodice. Follow these steps, and, if you're lazy like me, don't bother with basting - just fold the material over at the edge, glue or pin to the zipper in the right place, and use a zipper stitch or foot (just moves the needle slightly to the left or right of the foot) to sew in the zip.
  • You should have a little bit of zipper hanging out the end of the bodice. This will be hidden by the skirt later on. (Okay, so in the polka dot dress in the photos I continued the zipper into the skirt, but that is not what we are doing here today. We are only having the zipper go down the bodice and not the skirt, like on this dress:)

Now you have a bodice. Iron flat the seams and the interfacing. Then put it aside and begin on your skirt.


Making your skirt

So I don't have to put all the steps here again, follow this tutorial I wrote for making a circle skirt, but stop just before the waistband-adding part. (The material need not be velvet, either. Use any fabric you want.) Then come back here.


Attaching the skirt to the bodice

This part seems a little bizarre at first but it works!
Turn your bodice inside-out.
Slide it over your skirt upside-down (skirt needs to be facing up and not inside-out).
Pin together. If the bodice is too wide for the skirt, take it in at the sides until the two are just about matching in circumference. (Your skirt should be perfect for your waist measurement if you measured it right.)
 
Sew together with a normal straight stitch. Don't sew over the top of the zipper - but go right up to the edges of it.
Turn the right way around and BAM! You now have a dress (if all went well!)

Summary: Make bodice from a pattern. Make circle skirt. Attach the two.

Oh man. That was actually probably completely confusing. If these instructions make sense to anyone, you're probably a genius, because I'm pretty sure they're really too stupidly convoluted. Well... enjoy anyway! If all else fails you can skim through the pictures and pretend you're reading a comic book about a sewing superhero.

Update: I have uploaded much better instructions for making these dresses here.

Hope you all have a marvellous weekend!
xxx Annika

Mint & Honey

 

How's it going, guys? So I mentioned yesterday that I'd gone on a fabric-shopping spree to stock up on some pretty materials. This is what became of two of the fabrics I bought.
I also said I'd take pictures and attempt to throw it all together in a DIY. Well that post is coming in a couple of hours, so come back in a little bit if you're keen!

wearing
dress - I made it
necklace - Stolen off boyfriend
tights - c/o Oasap
belt - Vintage
hat - c/o Wholesale
shoes - Rubi shoes
bag - Vintage

Thank you as always for your lovely words on both the things that I make and the outfits I throw together. It means a lot, and inspires me to keep doing what I'm doing here! Just thought I'd let you all know, I really appreciate it.

xxx Annika

Thursday, 19 July 2012

All Is Love / Lilac

 wearing
blouse - Paper Scissors
sweater clips - DIY
shorts - DIY
tights - c/o Oasap
bag - c/o Wholesale
hat - c/o Wholesale
shoes - Raben footwear

I just went on a mad fabric-shopping expedition in Marrickville (the best place for cheap, awesome fabric, if anyone from Sydney is reading this and is interested) and bought some really pretty minty polka dot material plus this gorgeous honey-coloured material. The two are going together to make the prettiest dress ever. And I will actually try to document the process photographically this time!


It's almost the weekend! I hope you're all having a beautiful Thursday.
xxx Annika

Monday, 16 July 2012

Do you love me? Are you playing those love games with me?

 
 
wearing
dress - Paddy's Markets
bag - c/o Wholesale
hat - c/o Wholeasle
socks - Tutuanna
shoes - Wholesale

p.s. I found out the other day that this talented lady had done a pretty portrait of me using this photo. I love it so much. Mega, who created the portrait, is only 15 - ahh and how good is it?? And she (if google translate is to be believed) listed me as her role model, which made me all smiley inside (and outside too).

Source: http://megagumelar.blogspot.com.au/

p.p.s. I got my exam results back! They have validated that I can blog everyday and somehow still do really well at uni at the same time. Ha! (If I had not done well then I would have had to lay off the blogging, so it's lucky for you guys!)

p.p.p.s. The Mighty Boosh - Love Games: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sRWVJ3AeFAk
(if you don't already know the Mighty Boosh, please don't watch that. You'll only think I've lost my mind.)


I hope you're all having a brilliant day! Don't forget to enter my giveaway if you live in AUS or NZ! (Apparently I don't have too many local followers, so you'd be in with a good chance.)

xxx Annika

CLOSED // Giveaway: a Pretty Pastel Colour-block Skirt!


If you live in Australia or New Zealand, then lucky you! You can enter my giveaway! (I'm sorry, international followers! The darn postage here is too costly!)

To one follower I am giving away this skirt (never worn, Sugarlips sent me two) from Sugarlips Apparel in a size M (10-12 to a small 14 Australian sizing, 26-28 inch (66-72cm) waist).


How you can enter:
Mandatory: Be following me on GFC or Bloglovin'. Go to Sugarlips Apparel and tell me what your favourite item is. Also leave your email address in the comments below so I can contact you should you win!

Extra entries (please leave a separate comment for each and your facebook/twitter name so I can check):
Follow me on facebook
Follow me on twitter
Follow Sugarlips Apparel on facebook

Open to all Australian and New Zealand residents until August 10, 2012.

Good luck!

Sunday, 15 July 2012

The girl anachronism

wearing:
dress - Club Couture via Chictopia rewards
bag - c/o Oasap
sweater clips - DIY
hat - c/o Wholesale
socks - c/o Shop with Romi
boots - Rubi Shoes

Alright, chictopia is awesome. I was able to "buy" this dress because I'd gotten enough points on the website just for posting my outfits! (Also I may have watched the item obsessively to make sure no one else got it before me, haha).  However, I still don't know how you're supposed to pronounce the site, which seems a bit ridiculous. Is it "chick"topia or "sheek"topia?? Anyone want to enlighten me?

Also, if anyone out there understood the title and is also a huge fan of the dresden dolls... please comment :)

Ahh, one more thing, I just need to note that Girl Anachronism would be such an awesome title for a vintage style blog! (An anachronism is something which is incongruous with the time period in which is exists. Like if a character in Mad Men called someone up on a mobile phone.) Ahh I wish I'd come up with that instead of "Pineneedle Collective"! I don't even know what Pineneedle Collective means. Would you all mind if I suddenly changed the name of my blog...? (Haha, just kidding. Maybe.)

xxx Annika