sweetheart dress pattern and giveaway

have i got some sweet stuff for you today!

sweetheart dress

i was recently lucky enough to pattern test the newest pattern by the lovely and talented shannon of luvinthemommyhood, which was just released yesterday!  it’s called the sweetheart dress, and it’s the perfect dress for a girly little gal like mine.  it’s a quick, fun sew, featuring a fully lined bodice with the cutest heart cutout in the back, and a gathered skirt for twirling.  it’s a dress that’s great for comfy day-to-day wear, but has tons of style!

sweetheart dress

i sewed it in sarah jane’s find the narwhal fabric from her out to sea line,  and i’ve decided it’s pretty much the cutest fabric ever.  Em calls the narwhals “unicorn whales,” and i’m not correcting her.  they ARE unicorn whales!  the fabric itself is quilting cotton, but with a really nice drape and feel.

sweetheart dress

shannon’s pattern is great, and i even learned how to line a bodice in a way that i had never tried before.  it’s always fun to learn something new when i sew!  it came together nicely and i was excited to make a dress that i knew Em would love.

sweetheart dress

the pattern includes sizes 2-6.  though it’s a PDF pattern and i know some people aren’t so fond of those, it actually requires no taping!  NONE!  just print the three page pattern, cut it out, and get sewing.

sweetheart dress

i just think between the heart cutout and the pink narwhal fabric, this dress pure confection.  you probably need this sweet little pattern for KCWC next week, right?  well…i can help with that!

sweetheart dress

luvinthemommyhood is generously offering a fantastic pattern giveaway to skirt as top readers!  here’s how you can win:

leave me a comment on this post – any comment will do.  if you need an idea, i’d love to hear what part of the changing season you’re most excited about.

bonus entries:

that’s a possible FOUR separate entries!
i’ll pick THREE winners on sunday, october 7.  one grand prize winner will win the sweetheart dress pattern, plus every pattern in shannon’s shop!  yes, EVERY SINGLE PATTERN!!  additionally, two runners up will win the sweetheart dress PDF sewing pattern!  pretty great, eh?
deets:
  • if it’s not already linked in your profile, please leave your email address so we can contact you.  the format of skirtastop(at)gmail(dot)com works well to help avoid spam.
  • open to US and international residents.
  • void where prohibited.
  • if you don’t want to wait to find out if you’ve won, you can buy the sweetheart dress right here right now!

have a great day, and good luck!

washi testing!

washi dress pattern testing

i’m not a very selfish seamstress. frankly, it’s because i’m intimidated. i don’t like how much yardage adult lady patterns require, the patterns seem too complicated, and you just never know how the fit will work. i seem to have just as many failures at sewing clothes for myself as i do successes. i actually own a good number of adult patterns that i’ve never even opened. they just freak me out!

washi dress pattern testing

but not the washi dress. i LOVE the washi dress. i loved it when Rae posted about it the first time, and the second time, and every time thereafter. i knew i wanted to get my hands on the pattern as soon as possible. lucky for me, a well-timed email to Rae (where i just happened to offer my services as a pattern tester once again) turned into me sending her a couple very personal measurements and it just so happened i filled the size gap she needed. i got to be a washi tester!

washi dress pattern testing

it lived up to the hype. if you have always wanted to sew yourself a dress and you’ve been scared, this is definitely the pattern to try. Rae’s patterns are always clear and logical to follow, and she just keeps getting better! she has enlisted her sister to help with the technical pattern design parts and the washi pattern is so professional with great little diagrams instead of photos. Rae was definitely up to the challenge of making an adult lady pattern in a wide range of sizes, which i consider just incredible. she includes a fit guide that makes a lot of sense, when usually pattern alterations would scare me off. i made a medium, and the fit is pretty much perfect.

you can make the washi as a dress or a tunic, with sleeves (shown) or without, and once you have the fit down, it seems so easy to tweak a bit for different looks!  and hey, it even has pockets!

washi dress pattern testing

i really enjoyed the process of sewing the pattern, too. you know how some have “that one step” that you dread or hate, maybe it’s the zipper, or 20 buttons, or a ton of bias binding? the washi has a little of many different techniques, so you never get bored or tired of what you’re doing. it’s a really fun sew! the ONLY thing i was worried about was the shirring. i have a basic brother machine and those are notorious for not shirring easily; i’d tried a few times and it had never worked.

but i figured it out – and to do it, you’ve gotta break a rule (see my evil smile?).

washi dress pattern testing

okay first, go buy gutermann brand elastic thread like Rae suggests. they sell it at joann’s, and when i went they had it on sale. the stuff just FEELS higher quality than other brands, and it seems to makes a huge difference. second, you need to wind it onto the bobbin with some tension – this is the rule you break, because everyone tells you to wind it without pulling. if i did that, it wouldn’t work – it just left me a mess of elastic underneath. but if i wound it with a little tightness, it seemed to work every time. don’t stretch it to the point of almost breaking, just pull a bit and wind it tighter than you should, like you’re rewinding a yo-yo. thirdly, if you have a drop in bobbin with the auto feed, don’t let the bobbin thread cut and retreat back into the “gully.” leave it so you can still see some tail out the side. if i cut the bobbin thread like normal, it snapped back in and wouldn’t catch when i started sewing.

shirring tips with a brother

finally, PRACTICE. i found i didn’t need to change my tension and i just increased my stitch length to 3.0. it worked! use scraps and try different things. what worked for me might not work for you, but i really didn’t want to mess with tightening bobbin cases and then loosening them the perfect amount again, so i was happy to figure this out without that.

and by the way – a dress with shirring in the back? SUPER comfy to wear. i’ve worn it to work, on a date night, playing with the kids, etc. i wished the bodice was just a tad longer and the skirt too, but Rae heard that from many testers and the final pattern will remedy both of those concerns.

washi dress pattern testing

this wraps up my washi post! keep your eye on Made by Rae for the official pattern release (any day now! i’ll update this post when it happens) and while you’re waiting, go check out Emily’s THREE washis, Cherie’s blue eyelet version, and Holly’s classy gray washi too! there’s also a washi flickr pool.

**UPDATE: WASHI IS HERE!! WASHI IS HERE!!  GO BUY IT FROM RAE, YOU WON’T REGRET IT!!**

PS – the fabric for this dress is denyse schmidt for joann fabrics. i like that it looks a bit like a vintage feedsack.

PPS – I’m already most of the way through washi #2! i NEVER sew the same pattern so quickly, but i’m really excited about it so i had to!

envelope clutch pattern testing

i was sooooo excited that i got to pattern test the newest pattern by noodlehead. check it out, it’s an envelope clutch!

anna has written a great pattern with lots of options (small/large, pointed/squared flap, wrist strap, zippered pocket, card holder), so you can make it however you like to suit your every desire. the outer fabric is basted to canvas for structure, and the lining is interfaced, so it’s nice and substantial. i also love that anna instructs you to use magnetic snaps to keep it closed – a little scary to install (cutting holes in the almost-finished purse), but the end product feels so…professional! not too floppy and it closes nicely – it’s like a REAL clutch!

i made the large version with pointed flap. the outer fabric is a gray chevron (half moon modern by moda), and i flipped it upside down on the flap for an interesting geometric contrast. on the inside, i used my favorite solid, kona olive.

side note: i really need to buy more “adult” fabrics. this chevron was pretty much the only thing in my stash that would work for date night outfits as well as daytime, but i do love it and love the herringbone effect of the card holder on the inside, too.

i went with the exposed zippered pocket, which i’d never tried before (the pattern calls for a 5″ zipper but i used a 7″ and shortened it by backstitching a few times across the end and pinking off the excess), and the pocket is lined in a cheery gold polka dot.

envelope clutch

please pardon the tarp in the background. we were up at the family vacation spot on the puget sound this weekend and there’s some landscaping to be done! the weather was crazy too – we had snow, rain, wind, and blue skies, all within a matter of hours. as we took these photos, a storm was blowing in and the light on the water was really cool.

anyway, i just love pattern testing. it’s fun to see the background on great new independent patterns coming to market and how they get made (i was lucky enough to test rae’s pierrot tunic pattern last fall). i had a great time testing this pattern, too – i learned some new things and was so happy with how it turned out. look, i even pretty closely matched the chevrons on the sides! don’t ask me how, but this is about as good as it gets for me. 🙂

the pattern is coming very soon, so keep your eye on noodlehead in the next week or so to snatch it up and make your own! it’s so versatile and quick to sew, i’m already dreaming up my next version!  **update: the envelope clutch pattern is now available!  get it here!!**

and be sure to check back here later this week, because a sweet tartan dress tutorial is in the works!

polka dot pierrot pattern preview

way back in march, rae of the fantastic made by rae put out a call for people to test her various in-the-works patterns.  i immediately signed up to be a pattern tester for the pierrot tunic and crossed my fingers hoping she’d pick me.  she first posted it on her baby daughter over a year and a half ago here, and has posted a few versions since.  each time i saw a new pierrot post pop up, i just melted (pink and chambray, for instance).  i don’t know what it is, but i just die over it.  something about the exaggerated shape, neck ruffle, and wide cuffs just makes me smile.  it seems like a something you’d pay a ridiculous amount of money for at a high-end boutique.  i could not wait to make one for Em.

when rae posted her newest plaid version last week, i again commented with lots of caps and exclamation points about how cute it was and how i hoped the pattern would be available before KCWC.  apparently she had forgotten to include me in her call for pattern testers earlier that day!  good thing i commented, because it meant i got to be in on the testing.  wahoo!

i printed and cut out the tester pattern over my lunch break at work, and sewed it that night.  i cut it on the bias because all the versions that rae had made were cut that way, and it adds to the swinginess.  it’s a very roomy garment and everything is cut on the fold.  this meant, for a 3T, even 1 2/3 yards of fabric wasn’t quite enough!  i’ve historically bought just 1 yard of fabric for kids’ clothes, but now that Em is getting bigger, that doesn’t seem to cut it anymore.

luckily, i had this cute swiss dot from joann in my stash (i think i got it as an end-of-bolt, hence the weird 2/3 yard – either that or i got 2 yards and it shrunk like crazy).  part of rae’s pattern testing request was to help her determine yardage for the various sizes, and mine still wasn’t enough (i had to piece the ruffle).  can’t tell, though!

i had a super fun time making this dress, writing a small novel to rae with my thoughts (lots of gushing and suggestions, a few critiques), and getting a behind the scenes peek at what it takes to get a pattern to market.  trust me, it’s a LOT of work and i only saw a brief part of it!  makes me even more happy to support independent pattern-makers.

the pierrot will be available soon!  keep your eyes on made by rae over the next couple weeks so you, too, can make a little french girl top for the little gals in your life!  UPDATE: the pierrot pattern is now available!  get it here.  🙂