You guys are ahhhh-mazing! Thank you for all the kind words on my last video! I'm really glad that so many people have found it helpful. And thanks for the support - I reached 100 youtube subscribers only one day after creating my first video, which has blown me away. So, to thank you all, I made another one:
I also wanted to do a sewing tutorial on something a little simpler - while making a dress is fantastic, it's also pretty hard to do, especially if you're not too experienced with a sewing machine. And I know that not everyone out there is an experienced sewer - so hopefully this video leaves less people out (though you still will need to have access to a sewing machine, unfortunately!)
Lace cuffs take about 10 minutes to make, can be made subtler (using thinner lace) or more over-the-top (by using larger, more extravagant or even colourful pieces of lace), and are a great way to subtly add some cuteness to your outfit.
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Tuesday, 14 January 2014
DIY Lace Sock Cuffs
Labels:
DIY
Monday, 13 January 2014
DIY Circle Skirt Dress (Video Tutorial)
I actually did it! I sat myself down for an entire day and forced myself to make this video - but I actually enjoyed making it in the end, and I am also very happy with how it turned out. If you want to learn how to make a dress like my teacup skater dress and candy cupcake dress, then watch this video. You should give making a circle skirt/simple top a go before you tackle this project, if you're not at all experienced at sewing, but once you're able to do those you'll be more than ready to give making your own dress a go. Enjoy! And please do let me know if you liked the video or found it useful, or a least subscribe to my new youtube channel - I am planning on making many more if it seems like the interest is there.
p.s. If you're not a fan of the 8-bit soundtrack I've used then feel free to mute the video - all the instructions are in text, so you won't miss anything except the bleep-bloopy adventure time-style toons ;)
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Friday, 10 January 2014
From Bedsheets to a Dress (DIY) | 52 Factorial
Dress is DIY | socks, shoes and bolero are thrifted | necklace c/o Merrin & Gussy
Other parts that I love about this outfit are the velvet bolero/shrug, which I got from the same op-shop as these bedsheets and is also handmade, as it didn't have a tag and none of the seams have been serged with an overlocker. I'm so happy to give it a welcome home. If my handmade stuff ever ends up in an op-shop, I hope it'll go to someone who really appreciates it! Also, you probably can't see it in the photos, but my socks are sparkly! Yesterday, while QI was playing in the background, I kinda had my mind blown. I did have to fact-check this first, of course (as I recommend everyone do when watching this show - though most of the stuff is accurate they do like to exaggerate...). But it's true! Basically, whenever playing cards have been shuffled they are, in all (near) mathematical-certainty, put into an order which has never existed before since the beginning of time. The order of cards is defined as 52 factorial (8.07^67), which, as Stephen Fry says, is a number so large that if each star in the Milky Way had a trillion planets, each with a trillion people who had been shuffling a trillion packs of cards non-stop 1,000 times per second since the Big Bang, they would only be repeating shuffles right about now.
And that's why maths is cool.
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Tuesday, 7 January 2014
DIY Candy Cupcake Dress
Dress is DIY | shoes are no longer for sale | socks are from markets | bag is old and no longer for sale
I know I say this a lot. But this dress is now my most favourite dress, firstly because I made it and I'm bloody proud of it (it even has top-stitching!), and secondly, because of the fabric! Not only does it feature pretzels, cupcakes and ice-cream (food clothes are probably my favourite kind of clothes at the moment), but I also got the fabric when I was in Japan so it's very, very special! I'm relieved that I didn't stuff it up and waste the fabric, because it was rather irreplaceable.
Buying fabric in Japan was such a... process. I very nearly got too confused and gave up, but Luci and I struggled on with our Japanese and just hoped that we hadn't accidentally ordered 20 metres of the most expensive fabric. The "shop" section of Japanese fabric stores just display small swatches of all the available fabrics (and ohhh boy, they are the prettiest fabrics that you ever did see). You choose one, point it out to a shop attendant, and they cut off a small square of it for you. You then give this small square to the counter, tell them how much you want, and they give you a number. You wait around for 5 minutes and... *SHOOMP!* Your fabric arrives via this complex system of tubes from somewhere way way above or below (we couldn't figure it out) the shop, where all the fabric must be stored. So futuristic.
In case you're wondering how I constructed this dress, it's really similar to how I made the smock dress, except that I made the bodice smaller and more fitted, and attached the bodice to a circle skirt instead of a gathered skirt. Then, I simply used a dress zipper which goes all the way through the bodice and the circle skirt. Easy! (I am planning on doing a youtube tutorial on this exact dress very very soon - hopefully - if that was just confusing, and you want to wait for that!)
UPDATE: If you're looking for how to make this exact dress, then go here to my youtube tutorial!
I hope that you're all having a great day. I'm about to meet up with my friends for a very late-Christmas dinner, which means, of course, pavlova! Yuuuum yum!
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Sunday, 5 January 2014
I Woke Up Like This / Shepard Tones
Skirt is DIY | tights from Clear It | shoes c/o Yeswalker | necklace c/o I Love Crafty
This is what my DIY suspender skirt that I made the other day looks like without its suspenders! I'm glad I made them removable, because it also looks great as a simple skater skirt. I'm having such a great time sewing and creating things now that I've decided to make most of my own clothes - I've gotten so much better (and faster!) at making dresses and skirts from all the practice! For example, I managed to whip this dress up in a leisurely 4 hours today. For anyone who is scared of sewing or doesn't think they're any good at it - just know that all it takes is practice, practice, practice, rather than any particular smarts or skills!
Let's learn about another spooky audio illusion today!
In the illusion we talked about on Thursday, a tone which sounded like it was constantly descending was in fact getting higher and higher. Shepard tones are similar, being "constantly descending tones" which actually don't change in pitch at all. The starting tone is the same as the finishing tone - in this way, it can be likened to the "penrose stairs" optical illusion:
In a "shepard tone", multiple tones are actually played together, each of which do descend, but when the lowest tone reaches a particular threshold it ends and a new, higher descending tone begins. However, your brain does not perceive the disappearance and appearance of these tones, so instead perceives the entire set as constantly descending.
You could listen to this forever and the tones would never actually get any lower. Have a listen to a Shepard tone and see if your brain is fooled:
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Friday, 3 January 2014
Reflection
In the end, I decided that I did want to do one of these. I got all reflective about the year that's gone by way too late, probably because I refused to believe that another year had passed by so quickly and was in denial about it truly being 2014. I blame this on the large amount of science fiction I've read with stories set around 2014, where things like mind-control implants, artificial computer intelligence or, at the very least, hovering cars, are just everyday conveniences. And we couldn't really be living in 2014 already, because those things don't exist yet. But apparently a whole year has gone by, as I actually came to realise when organising my 2013 outfits page this morning.
So here is 2013, represented by my favourite outfits of the year.
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Labels:
2013
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