Friday 1 February 2013

party party....some of my own costumes








dressing up box

Some random costumes.....


my boy Owen wanted a Bubbles costume for a Michael Jackson party. 
Cute.




 These next were for Marcus' Rosemary's Baby Shower. Marcus as Rosemary , and Neil and I as Minnie and Roman Casavets. Not so cute



 and me at halloween a couple of years ago....
I  love my hat





all aboard the Underground Restaurant.....

At last, a chance to write about the latest lot of costumes. It as a hectic week or so down on the Isle of Wight, at Bestival. This was the second year that Kerstin aka MsMarmitelover has brought her Supper Club to Bestival, and she wanted a shipboard/pirate theme.
I wanted the costumes to look quite 18th century, and to use fabrics that i had in my stash. My budget was tiny, so it was imperative to keep costs down, and to make gorgeous costumes with
stuff that I already had.
After lots of digging around in the binbags I managed to sort enough for most of the waistcoats. 




 
 


I bought an hideous black leather 80's bomber jacket from a charity shop. It had interesting striped figuring on some of it's panels and i knew I could do something with it. i made this jerkin with me in mind, but it ended up being perfect for Jim.
Tanya wore this one. I knew she'd love it, and i did make it with her in mind. A bit of old navy blue sheet, a scrap of red linen, and some gold ribbon. I gave
some dome buttons, from a dismantled shirt, a spray of gold paint.
Mine and Izzi's came from the same brocade evening coat ( it wasn't very nice...I'd never cut up something really good). Izzi's had a panel of very pretty rose brocade, of which i only had a few small pieces, and frogs that came off an unpleasant cardi thing. I used the rest of these on the black and white waistcoat. 

I think the rusty velvet for the gypsy pirate came from my mum's stash drawer. The leather straps were cut from the bomber jacket, and the little dangly concha thingys were taken from the skirt that i used as one of my petticoats. Another charity shop find. 

























                                      







Friday 24 August 2012

Merry Wives costumes


 I've got costumes on my mind today, because that's what I've been doing...making costumes for The Underground Restaurant at Bestival next month. I haven't taken any good pics yet so here's some oldies....

These are costumes that I made about 7 years ago for a production of the Merry Wives of Windsor, in Ireland.
I had a tiny budget (what's new) so raided the charity shop, and my own fabric stash/dressing up box, and fiddled and stitched and came up with these...


Dodgy geezers.



Falstaff and Mistress Ford having a good ol' flirt


 
Mistress Quickly trying hard to look innocent. 
That's me. As well as doing the costumes, I was learning her rambley lines.
 Full on work but massive fun, despite the moments of weeping in foetal position at the back of the costume cupboard.



Master Ford and Falstaff



I made most of the men's costumes from suits. 
Pimped



 Amazing what you can do with a couple of old curtains


 












These were taken during dress rehearsal, hence Falstaff's dodgy shorts .....the final trousers were much better, and went with his jacket. I still wear them. Also the ties tying his sleeves on kept snapping. The last costume to be finished at the last minute.






Merry Wives was the 1st production on the open air stage at the College of Further Ed in Kinsale, co.Cork. It was directed by the utterly wonderful Belinda Wild, who runs the Drama and Theatre Arts Course. The theatre was built by the permaculture students, and I found this old article from Permaculture magazine about the building process

Tuesday 21 August 2012

Tansy...the long distance bride


I've known Tansy since she was a very small girl in Wales. She'd moved to New York in 2001 and met a lovely man from Pennsylvania.

When she asked me to make her wedding dress I was delighted....but how was I going to do fittings between here and the States? Luckily, the style of dress she wanted meant that it was all perfectly possible (never say die)......so I asked her to send me her measurements and a perfectly fitting, nude bra.

She wanted lace. At the time I was living in rural Ireland. There was only one shop within 100 miles where I thought I could get some bridal lace, but knew it would be hideously expensive. Nowadays I'd turn to the web, but then, with steam-powered dial-up internet, buying things online was out of the question. 

So I took a trip to the city, and went to that one shop, and there was the perfect piece of lace...a 2.5 metre remnant at a totally bargain price. Can't remember how much it was, but definitely WAY cheaper than I had hoped. With a couple of metres of ivory habutai silk to line the dress, I was ready to start.

I didn't need a pattern or a toile for this one. I just built it onto the bra. 
Simples.



 The bodice half done. I pinned it all carefully onto the bra base, while it was on the dummy, then hand-stitched it all into place. Fiddly but satisfying.
I think the only bit of machine sewing was the long seams in the skirt lining. Otherwise the whole dress was hand sewn.


Finished bodice. I had to cut separate leaves from the scrap pieces of lace to then hand sew back around the edges of the bodice and along the straps.



Finished dress. A bit blurry, hanging in the (messy) workshop. The dangly bits at the side of the bodice are drapey little sleeve things.



Maybe not the best pic of the dress but my favourite of Tansy and Mike



The bridesmaids. Tansy missed the Welsh bluebell woods.
 I found this 2-tone blue-purple fabric....the exact colour of a bluebell.
 My lovely daughter Cass on the left, with Naomi and Lorelei.
 And yes, they are twins.



Tansy, Mike, and the dude that married them. 
Spring in the Pennsylvanian woods.

And the dress was a perfect fit, no fittings.
Result.



Fleur's1950's wedding dress

Fleur was getting married on the beach near her parent's home in Holland. She loved 1950's style, and wanted glamourous but comfortable. No underpinnings for this lady! So this is the dress I came up with for her.




Washed Ivory Dupion silk, with a massive tulle petticoat.  I put the silk through the washing machine before cutting. That gets all the dressing out, and makes it lovely and soft. I wouldn't do this if I was making something that needed the stiffness, like a tailored jacket, but lovely for this type of garment.
   
I made a toile first, and then cut from that. I usually drape my patterns, though I can and do draft flat patterns. Just depends on the project.

   Putting it together was easy, apart from the flippin' straps.....it took me ages to get them right. They were cut in one piece, and even though I used iron on stabilizer, they still managed to change shape, and it took me three goes to perfect them. (Grrr. Wasting fabric!)





 The only part where I used iron-on stabilizer was the underside of the straps. The rest of the bodice is underlined with silk organza, and lined with silk/cotton lawn. It had to be sturdy enough to support and not be see-through, but soft and comfortable at the same time. Who needs restrictive corsetry when they're on the beach?!

 
showing the petticoat  

 The skirt is cut as a full circle (I do love circle skirts) over a layered tulle petticoat. 
Don't forget .... always hang the finished garment up (preferably on a dummy) for 24 hours before hemming. Especially if the skirt is cut on the cross.


I love this picture.......
 And Fleur loved her dress. Twirly skirt!

 Awwww. Another happy bride.

The dress was a pleasure to make and Fleur was a pleasure to work with. We had 3 fittings and she always came on time and brought her heels when I needed her to. (Take note ladies)

I didn't go to the wedding but I did get an extra in the form of a  big bottle of fizz to celebrate with.

Yay!