MACY by Children's Corner Patterns

by delicateadmin 29. January 2012 09:06

My current design board was wanting to improve upon the design of the Children's Corner pattern #266 "MACY". This pattern is either a dress or blouse featuring a wrap-style front closure, neckline ruffle on both views and a hemline ruffle for the dress. The sleeves are very cute, a smooth cap sleeve with a narrow casing on the sleeve edge with which 1/4" elastic is inserted for a pulled up effect. Of course, fabric selection will make a difference in how your project turns out, but I wanted to go a step further. I love the details. So I decided to incorporate turquoise gingham check spaghetti bias as my ties and make piping from a matching turquoise gingham check.  

I chose FF-1086 for the base fabric. The entire dress & sleeve is lined, so I used Imperial Batiste in white for the lining. This will make for such a comfortable dress for a little girl. I choosing to make my own piping to match the spaghetti bias, I used a new tool, the Darr Piping Magic. This is a great way to make your piping and not have to precisely cut the bias stripes. With the Darr Piping Magic, cut your bias width, I used 1" since my seam allowance was 1/4", I would not have a lot of waste to trim off. Whe I make my piping I 1) cut my bias stripes, 2) seam together bias stripes, if needed, 3) press the entire piece of bias lengthwise to give me a channel to place the piping in, 4) lay the piping along the pressed channel and stitch in place. Then with the Darr Piping Magic you choose the seam allowance width your pattern calls for and place the cording of the piping in the corresponding seam allowance grove. The excess fabric is past the edge of the Darr Piping Magic. With your rotary cutter, just trim off the excess fabric and "WaLa" your piping is finished with the seam allowance width needed!  Very handy!

I have chosen to pipe the neckline and the hemline seam with the handmade piping. The piping is stitched inplace before adding the neckine ruffle.

Be sure and remember that when using piping, the first time you stitch the piping in place you DO NOT stitch right up next to the cording. Wait and do this when you are stitching in that area for the last time. Each time you have to stitch move your needle position one click closer to the cording. That way you will insure that it works at compacting that cording close to the fold of the bias. When pinning the neckline ruffle, the dress lining is then pinned on top so that the lining is secured now at the neckline & then the lining will later be secured at the hemline after the hemline ruffle is attached.  The completed neckline ruffle really stands out by having the definition on the contrast piping.
Another lesser used tool that was "brought out of storage" on this project was my machine hemming foot. The hemline ruffle was the place I used it. It makes such a nice uniform, narrow hem, that it is a shame to waste the time of pressing, turning and stitching a narrow hem. You may need to give a bit of practice on a scrap, but it is well worth the time and effort to have a lovely result for your garment.
The completed hem on the ruffle
As mentioned earlier, turquoise gingham piping was inserted between the hemline ruffle and the bottom of the dress. The hemline ruffle is completed and then the dress lining is stitched to the hemline seam. If you are familiar with completing the hem as with the Children's Corner "Lucy" jumper, it is stitched in the very same way. If you are confused with this step, Children's Corner has a very nice video on their website to help you visualize this process. Here is a link for that video from YouTube. The video has 2 parts--part 2 link.
Well, we are finally ready to complete MACY. The main componets of this garment have been: 1) making handmade contrast piping, 2) piping the neckline prior to adding the neckline ruffle, adding the neckline ruffle & attaching the lining, 3) using a narrow hemming foot for stitching the ruffle's hem, 5) stitching contrast piping to the hemline before adding the hemline ruffle, 6) lining & adding a casing for the sleeves, inserting elastic then inserting the sleeves in each armhole, 7) stitching the dress lining to the hemline through an opening left in the lining, 8) and lastly 2 buttonholes are stitched in the right front panel and spaghetti bias is stitched to corresponding spots on the left front panel. The dress front has been crossed over wrap, the spaghetti bias is brought through each buttonhole and tied in a bow to secure. Give MACY a try, it was quick & easy. I stitched most of the dress in an evening. I'm very pleased with the results.

Stitching up a center-smocked bubble

by delicateadmin 23. January 2012 16:20

The patterns that have just a bit of smocking at the center front of the garment are such quick and easy projects to stitch up. The one for this post is the Collar's Etc. Pattern "Layette". There are so many garments included in this pattern it's hard to decide what to make first! There are suitable versions for boys or girls. The pattern is sized 0-3 months and 6-9 months. So perfect selections for baby showers! I have made the boy version of the smocked bubble for a new baby in my church. I have used Pima Classics, the blue herringbone patterned fabric. I have used the smocked bunny design included in the pattern, but have also put some bunches of carrots on the Peter Pan collar.

 

 

When you are ready to pleat the area for the smocking, though it isn't stated in the pattern, you need to cut the pattern piece of the bubble front with straight sides. You should never try and have bias edges go through the pleater. So I cut out the buttom according to the  pattern lines, but when I cut the side seams, I just cut straight up--not cutting out the armholes, shoulder seam and neck edge. I then mark with washout marker the armholes, shoulder seams and neck edge. These will be cut out later after the smocking is completed. See above where I have mark, my smocking is completed, so I am ready to cut on those blue marked lines for the construction steps. I also needed to have some reference for placing my bunches of bullion carrots. So I marked the seam allowance on both collar pieces to get my carrots placed evenly.

 

When I can, I will use the Ready to Sew Piping, but many times, there is not the color that will coordinate with my garment. So the Ready to Cover Cording is the solution. See the Peter Pan collar pieces pinned with the covered cording. ( I'm a pinner!) I have stitched the cording a couple of needle positions away for the cording when I am covering the cording with my cut bias. Then when I do a final stitching I will move the needle closer to pack that cording next to the bias fold of the fabric.

 

One of my sewing machines, a Bernina, has a clear foot with a small "bump out" that the mini cording fits perfectly in! As stated above, I have not stitched in the bias right up next to the cording when covering the cord. Then here in this step, I have moved the needle position one more click toward the cording, but it still is NOT right next to the cording. That will occur in the final step of collar construction.

 

This sweet bubble has inverted release pleats on either side of the center back. You will want to press the stitched pleat so that the center of the pleat lays down next to the stitching. This way when it is turned on the right side the fabric will be evenly distributed and make a lovely pleat.

 

Here's the finished results with a close up of the smocking and carrot embroidery. You can also find this garment in the Inspiration Gallery of the website. I referenced A to Z of Bullions for my carrots. The bubble has an easy back placket with a 4 buttons closure. Elastic in each leg and a small piece of "Snap Tape" to close the crotch. Though the pattern calls for buttons in the crotch, I think today's mothers will appreciate the snap tape for quicker diaper changes!

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HAPPY 2012!

by delicateadmin 17. January 2012 13:05

As the first couple of weeks of 2012 are history, I find myself being very behind in keeping my Blog current! Six months behind as a matter of fact! Ugh! So my new goal is to resolve to get over my hump of not thinking I can do well with this and just put forth entries on a more regular basis! Thank you for your patience.

I completed several projects last Fall. During that time one of my customers with her daughters was visiting the shop. She had made this darling corduroy cape for one of the girls. She said, "It's from the Oliver+s book that I got from you". Soon after she had left, I went to my copy and worked at tracing off some of the sizes and deciding on what to make mine out of. I chose to use one of my printed featherweight corduroys and line it with a pima gingham check. The pattern is called "Little Red Riding Hood Cape", but we can have lots more imagination than just using red! The cape is perfect for our Oklahoma Fall weather and early spring when a heavy coat is too much. So hence, I stitched up "Little Red Riding Hood Cape" in brown corduroy and it turned out so cute. There are hand/arm slits in the front, I used a brown square button with the loop closure.

Eyelet Lucy

by delicateadmin 29. June 2011 16:50

The Children's Corner Lucy Jumper is one of the most popular patterns I seen for awhile. Yes, it's just a simple A-line jumper. But I love the fact that they make it lined. It gives it such a nice finished look to the total garment. You do have to make sure that the overall length of the jumper is suitable for the child you are making it for, but it stitches together like a dream! Shown below are my components for making the Eyelet Lucy Jumper. I have the cotton "Lotus Flower" Eyelet & Seafoam Imperial Batiste, Lucy Pattern, seafoam (aqua) silk satin ribbon.

What's so great about this jumper is only 2 pattern pieces! After cutting out the front & back of the eyelet and aqua lining, stitch together a front eyelet & front lining right sides together. Begin at one armhole, then across the shoulder, around the neckline, the other shoulder and second armhole. Children's Corner patterns use a 1/4" seam, so there isn't much in the way of trimming, but cut across your corners at the shoulder seams, clip all curves then turn right side out. Do the same procedure for the back eyelet & back lining pieces. Press your seams nicely.  Now you are ready to stitch the side seams.

When you stitch the side seams, you put the back & front eyelet sides, right sides together. On one side seam you stitch from the hem of the eyelet all the way to the hem of the lining for one complete seam. The other side seam, you stitch the eyelet to the armhole, then start stitching into the lining, but leave an opening along the middle of the lining seam. The opening is what you will use to complete the hem. Then the opening will be handstitched closed.

 

I am not accomplished when it comes to making "hair bows". Even though I had 2 girls, I had to resort to watching some YouTube videos to get a grasp for making a nice bow to use as my shoulder tie. I put a 5/8" white button on the back of each bow. I still put 2 - 3/8" white buttons on each shoulder with a larger buttonhole for the bow's button. This just made for a nicer look to the shoulder closure and it's didn't look "floppy" from the weight of the bow.  Give it a try!

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"Sailing into Summer Sewing"

by delicateadmin 14. June 2011 04:27

Well, summer is offically a week away, but the temperatures here in Oklahoma are already in the 90's each afternoon! Ugh! But stay in the air conditioning and get some great stitching completed!  I recently worked on a sweet baby shirt and diaper cover for a baby shower of a friend of mine. Since the new mom wasn't going to find out ahead of time the sex of the baby, I had to do some thinking about what I could stitch and be "gender friendly". So I chose the Creations by Michie' pattern #109 Infant Shirt & Diaper Cover. I wanted to make it in cotton pique, so I chose white. Then how to embellish? My friend and her husband travel to Florida a lot, so I looked in my stash of embroidery designs and found a fun sailboat, some dolphins, a couple of starfish and an anchor. I also wanted a bit more color, so I chose turquoise check spaghetti bias and wondered if I could add it to the collar without faggotting. Since the spaghetti bias stretches, it worked around the small Peter Pan collar very nicely. I just used a tiny hand blindstitch to secure around the colllar. I did shadow work embroidery, putting the starfish on each collar front, the sailboat on one side of the lower front and the dolphins & anchor on the front of the diaper cover. I used the small turquoise square buttons down the front. I thought it turned out quite nice, cool and comfortable for summer. Give this pattern a try the next time you need a quick, easy project for a summer baby!

Spring has Sprung! Finally!

by delicateadmin 16. March 2011 08:08

Spring is FINALLY here! Love seeing the Bradford Pear trees that have just exploded in the last week. In Oklahoma, we also have the ability to grow the azela shrub. Can't wait to see the azelas in bloom at one of the large local parks in the weeks to come. A favorite place for pics!

Speaking of pictures. Hope you are taking pictures of some of the projects you are working on. Not to just send them via social media, but as a reference for future projects. There is a number of ways to document what you make. If you are a scrapbooker, you'll have a darling album, all the right "stickers" and lots of fun decorations around a special picture of the outfit and hopefully a child wearing it! But for all of us who are not that well equipped to do that, you might think of some of these suggestions. 1) Have a special notebook/album to put your information in. 2) Take a picture of the garment w/without someone wearing it. Take a picture of the back as well as the front. 3) Have a sample of the fabric, trim, piping etc. you used in the construction. 4) Make a small copy of the pattern front of the pattern used and include it on the "page". 5) Document any hand or machine work you did on the garment. i.e. smocking plate design, shadow work pattern, etc. 6) Then make any comments of things you would change if you made the garment again. Even things you liked about the pattern. You never know when you may decide to make up that same pattern and it would be nice to know if a certain part of the construction process gave you a snag!

Let me know what you are working on for Easter. Email pics to sylvia@delicatestitches.com and we can include some of your master pieces on another Blog entry. Happy Stitching, Sylvia

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Garment Scrapbook

March is here, Spring just around the Corner!

by delicateadmin 3. March 2011 16:29

Oh, we had a gorgeous day today! One of those days when you know Spring is just around the corner, you can't wait to walk in the park barefooted! I can really tell you are stitching again, or at least getting things ready to stitch. Orders are flying out of here on a regular basis. I can't believe how many of the AS&E #93 I sent out! And still have folks that want it and we can't get any more! Ugh! Inspirations #69 just arrived today. Wonderful article and project about Schwalm embroidery. Schwalm embroidery is a monochromatic embroidery and intricate drawn thread work. This issue has a very informative article about this type of embroidery and a lovely photograph of an antique example. Included is a beautiful project to try some of the drawn thread work. As usual, Inspirations has great photo illustrations to exactly understand how to pull the threads, stitch the bundles to achieve the look. This issue also includes a couple of lovely silk ribbon embroidery projects. Silk ribbon has taken a bit of a "back burner" but I am noticing it making a comeback. So dig in and give it a try, if you haven't stitch with this medium in a while.

Lots of lovely spring/summer fabrics for fun, easy to wear garments. New books are being added as well as new patterns. Check the site often to see the new items. Happy Stitching!  Sylvia

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Pleating Silk Dupioni for Smocking

by delicateadmin 7. February 2011 18:02

One of the hardest fabrics to pleat, at least in my humble opinion, is silk dupioni. Silk, by its nature, is a strong fiber, closely woven thus making the process of feeding through the smocking pleater rather a chore. For awhile now, I have been pleating using the following process. Roll the silk onto your dowel for pleating. Align the edge to slowly start it through the rollers of the pleater. Allow the pleated fabric to "pile up" on the needles, then with your steam iron, give the pleats a blast of hot steam. Then with a small hair dryer, blow the steamed area dry. Now you can gently pull the pleats off the needles and begin the process again. This process does give you nice crisp pleats without the slubs of the silk giving you a problem, which by their nature makes the pleating look "bunchy".

But I had a customer, today inquire about using the German Interfacing with the pleating of the silk dupioni. She had read in the book or article that she was planning to use for her garment design, that putting a fusible interfacing on the fabric before pleating would help with the process. When she emailed me to ask if the German Interfacing would work, I took her up on the challenge. I told her I had only used the fusible interfacing at the END of the smocking process. I would steam a piece of fusible interfacing the size of the completed smocked area on the wrong side of the fabric. Steaming carefully as to not crush the pleats. Then because I had been doing a full smocked bodice, I would stay stitch the outline of the bodice. The fusible interfacing in this case would help to stablize everything before you cut out the smocked bodice area in preparation of completing the construction of the garment.

The German Interfacing is a wonderful, lightweight interfacing that is very nicely used on baby items where some stablization is needed for buttonholes, plackets and such. But it worked VERY well to give the silk dupioni a lovely rounded pleat, much like you get when pleating cottons. I have taken a picture of the wrong side with the interfacing fused to the silk, then pleated a few rows of the silk and included a picture of the resulting pleats. I can see that this is going to be EXTREMELY helpful when you are pleating over 16 rows!

GIVE IT A TRY!

Finished Ready-to-smock

by delicateadmin 18. January 2011 04:03
Well, getting ready to ship off a couple of "ready-to-smock" dresses to Florida. As in the last blog, I mentioned I was using the Collar's Etc pattern "Toddler Apron". This is a very versital dress for girls size 4 and under. Lots of options for making it casual to dressy. This time the dress is stitched up in cotton pique with a white pique collar trimmed with paler pink machine embroidery scallops. The bias band puffed sleeve was used. The semi-full A-line dress gives good "twirling" for little girl and a very comfortable fit. Looks good on "skinny minis" or a more chubby figure. Give it a try! 

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ready to smock dress

Winter White

by delicateadmin 11. January 2011 17:39

It's been "white" earlier this week. Had our first bit of snow here in Oklahoma. Not much, my kind of snow--The yards and trees look nice and wintery, but the streets are still easy to manuver. Got to get out the boots for walking the dog, scarf and mittens! But by tomorrow it will all be gone!

I'm doing some sewing for one of my customers. She has 2 granddaughters that she likes to smock for. I do some "ready to smock" garments. This project is the Collar Etc. "Original Toddler Smocked Apron" by Trudy Horne. It is a delightful pattern, A-line dress, buttons down the back, has a bit of smocking area in the center front below the Peter Pan collar. This project is in the medium pink pique, so it's going to be for Valentines! I think she is also going to do "double duty" with this one because she is stitching a birthday cupcake in the pleated area! Should be cute, hope she sends some pictures of the girls in their dresses!

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Collar's Etc

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About the author

     Sewing has always been a part of my life. From the age of 10 I was sewing for my Barbie doll! In high school and college I enjoyed making clothes for myself. It wasn't until I had my first daughter that I was introduced to English Smocking. Then about 4 years later to Heirloom Sewing. It has been a love of classic children's clothing ever since.

     I am a former Home Economics teacher, so teaching sewing was part of my job. I enjoy helping others learn to smock, take ahold of mastering heirloom sewing by machine and working on the intricacies of fine hand embroidery. Whether it is a private lesson or with a small group, I am comfortable with teaching many aspects of the needle arts.

     My home based business began in the mid-1990s in my laundry/sewing room. Today I have a comfortable, well lit sewing studio and shop area as well as a competitve website business.  I continue to strive to have quality merchandise for the home sewer interested in English Smocking and Heirloom Sewing.

     Best Wishes & Happy Stitching!    Sylvia

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