Sunday, 4 March 2012

DIY Velvet Circle Skirt Tutorial

FIND THE UPDATED TUTORIAL HERE.



You want to make yourself a velvet circle skirt??
Well read right on!

Firstly, here's two formula's you need to have down to make a circle skirt (they'll make sense in a second, I promise):

Got it? Good! Here's what you do:

1. Cutout your large circle from your fabric. I get to cheat because I have a table which is perfectly round. If you don't have a round table though, this is how to measure your circle:


What size should my circle be?


2. You also need to cutout your waist circle (smaller circle) from the centre of the larger circle.


For this, it's good to use a pattern:


And then place it onto the centre of your larger circle, pin, and cutout.

To get the radius of this smaller circle, you need to divide your waist measurement by 2 x pi.

For example, here is what my measurements look like for my waist (27 in) and desired skirt length of 16 in.
3. Now you need hem the outside circle! Circle hems are a little tricky. You do end up with a little bit of ruffling, like this:


But it's hardly noticeable, and this is the easiest way to hem your skirt.
To hem, you just need to go along the entire outer edge, folding up about half an inch as you go along, lifting the presser foot and readjusting as you go.


4. Waistband

(I accidentally stopped taking photos of the black velvet skirt here, so I'll continue here with photos from another circle skirt that I made.)

Cut your waistband to about 5 in x your waist measurement + 5 in (ie. my waistband was 5 in by 32 in).

 Fold it in half (the wrong way around) and pin together. Sew entirely up one side. Then turn it inside out.

Attach to the inner circle of your skirt on the FRONT of the skirt (pin first to ensure the correct placement!)
Sew along the entire length of the inner circle, so that that waistband is attached!

5. Zipper/button insertion. If the velvet you used had enough stretch, and you can fit it on without too much difficulty, you can totally skip this step, sew together your waistband, cut off the excess waistband and you're done! If the fabric doesn't have much stretch though, you will need to insert buttons/a zipper following the instructions below.

Now you will have a bit of overlap on the waistband. Where this overlap occurs, draw a line vertically downwards either the length of your zip (if you will be inserting a zipper), or the length you desire if you want to add buttons (you'll know when you've got the right length when you can fit it on over your hips!)


Follow instructions on how to insert a zipper here, or if you're inserting buttons, fold back both sides down the cut, hem, and insert buttons following tutorial here.

Hooray! Now you've made a circle skirt (and I hope I didn't make it seem too complicated, it's really one of the easiest skirts to make!) Check out another circle skirt tutorial here (youtube!) for some inspiration/help!

Have a gorgeous day!

xxx Annika

DIY Swan Sweater Tutorial


Hello beautiful readers!

Here is promised Swan Sweater DIY (velvet circle skirt tutorial later today!)



(He looks a little different than yesterday, that's because I gave him a little bowtie after seeing this swan cardigan from Modcloth!)

Inspiration:


Modcloth's "Swanning Over You" Cardigan


Dorothy Perkins Swan Sweater

What you do:

1. Get your sweater. Woolen knits work fine for this, as well as more synthetic ones. Too thick though, and you may run into problems.
 2. Cut out your swan from white (or any colour!) fabric. Either use a stencil (search swan silhouette in google images perhaps?) or draw by hand!
 3. Place it onto the front of your sweater. Pin to sweater, make sure you're pinning ONLY to the front.

 4. Put your sweater on carefully to check that the placement is correct. If it all looks good, you can start sewing!
 5. Using a small zigzag stitch, go around the edges of your swan, stopping to lift the presser foot occasionally to readjust and make sure it isn't wrinkling!


6. Now you've attached your swan! Add details such as bows, eyes, feathers, little feet... whatever takes your fancy! Get creative!

I decided just a little necktie bow was enough for my swan. I used just a small length of white ribbon, tied it in a bow, and sewed it into place by hand using white thread.


Come back in a few hours for my velvet circle skirt tutorial!

xxx Annika


Saturday, 3 March 2012

DIY Swan Sweater & Velvet Skirt!

Hello! This post today has three purposes. The first is to show you this DIY Swan Sweater! The second is to show off this velvet circle skirt I made yesterday! And the third is to show off these gorgeous ballerina tights c/o Oasap!






Wearing: 
Sweater - DIY (& vintage)
Skirt - I made it!
Tights - oasap.com (here)
Shoes - yesstyle.com (here)
Blouse - Vintage
Belt - Vintage
Hat - here
Bag - Vintage

A swan sweater, a velvet circle skirt and ballerina tights. Three things that I've  desperately wanted/had my eye on for ages - and now mine! So I threw them all together in an outfit. Hooray!


Keep an eye out for the full DIY for both the Swan Sweater and the Circle skirt in the next couple of days!

Much love!

xxx Annika

Friday, 2 March 2012

DIY Heart Sweater

I’m basically going through half of my clothes and DIY updating them. This stripey sweater was looking very lonely and unloved, sitting at the back of my closet – so I added this red fabric heart to the front, and now it can be worn many more times – it’s almost a brand new piece! That’s what I love about DIYing your clothes: you can update your whole wardrobe just by adding a few quirky details to pieces here and there.



Wearing: 
Sweater - DIY
Skirt - Vintage
Belt - Vintage
Shoes - Rubi Shoes
Socks - Vintage

How I did it:

1. Choose your sweater and fabric for your heart
2. Draw HALF a love heart on your fabric with a pen.
3. Then pin the fabric together in half and cutout (this will ensure the heart is symmetrical!)


4. Wearing your sweater (but nothing else underneath, or you will attach pins to everything!), pin the heart where you think it should go. Carefully take your sweater off, and then lay flat and properly pin the heart to the sweater.


5. Using a close zigzag stitch, go all the way around your heart in a similar colour thread (or black thread, if you want it to stand out), and you're done! Make sure you're not sewing through both the front and back of the sweater when you do this as well!

I went over my heart a few times to make sure it was well attached. Alternatively if you don't have a sewing machine, hand stitches also look quite effective (and should work just as well, if you have a bit more patience! But be wary: if your heart fabric easily frays, you will need to go around the outside quite a few times!)



LOVE,

Annika xxx

Tuesday, 28 February 2012

A little bit of Do-It-Yourself Inspiration: turning weird things from thrift stores into nice things you can wear!

How many times have you gone into a thrift store and giggled at an over-the-top, overly puffy, brightly-coloured or multi-patterned dress from the 80s, that sure, is completely FANTASTIC, but at the same time, just far too hilarious /impractical to ever be worn out in public? Well if you don't feel guilty about cutting these dresses up, they can actually be the perfect project, and you can turn them into something much more on-trend.

Take this puffy-sleeved, bright blue velvet number here, for instance:


I bought this the other day because it was just TOO fantastic to leave sitting there. It needed a good home! Unfortunately, I would not look normal if I were to wear this in public. (The photo doesn't do it justice, the sleeves are just so ridiculously huge and puffy when wearing it. And, it was also far too large.) But, it is the perfect base to make something prettier out of!

I actually ended up chopping it in half, and making it into both a tight-fitting blue velvet skirt, and a cropped peter-pan collar embellished singlet top. I'm just wearing both here at the same time! (And they work together as well, as a dress!)


So next time you're laughing at that ridiculous dress in a charity store, stop and think for a moment: actually, maybe that could become awesome with a little DIY!

Hope you're all super well & happy!

xxx Annika

Sunday, 26 February 2012

So I got the urge to paint birds on my wall today...





Today I got this random urge to paint the wall in my study. It was pretty easy because I just recycled these stencils:


which I also used to paint my DIY swallow/Miu Miu inspired tights.

My mum liked them so much that she said she'll commission me to paint some in her house! (I was worried at first she'd have a typical parental attack and be annoyed that I'd painted stuff all over my walls. But then I remembered that luckily, my mum is awesome.)
They give the room such a lovely free, airy feeling, and they look quite pretty as well, which doesn't hurt.

I wonder what else I can do with these stencils? I think I'm going to paint some across my kitchen table...
BIRDS ON EVERYTHING!

I'm actually not joking.


Have a beautiful day!

xxx Annika