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Tuesday, June 5, 2012

Peacock Feathers


I often skip over the non-designer selections of the Vogue catalogue only to find numerous finished examples appearing all over the internet that are absolutely fabulous.  I am trying to train myself to look past the unfortunate styling choices that get printed on the pattern envelopes, and head straight for the line drawings.


This was how I happened upon Vogue 8814.  And believe it or not, this pattern is rated “Easy” by Vogue.

Vogue 8814

When I first looked at the pattern, and saw all of those wonderful v-shapes, I supposed that a lot of lapped seams and top-stitching was in my future.  Somehow I managed to miss those center seams.  Whoops!  Although, the dress could certainly be put together with lapped seams to give it a more vintage look, or with some contrasting thread colors for a fun contemporary look.


This fabulous rayon challis was purchased with an entirely different dress in mind, for last week’s Vegas challenge over at The Sew Weekly.  Instead of wearing a feathered headdress, I decided that the peacock feathers would work just as well on a dress. 


I pictured an easy-to-wear maxi.  However, the pattern repeat just did not look quite right to me when I laid it out on the sewing table.  It was a risk, but I decided that randomly cutting it up would actually make the feathered motifs look better on a long dress.


I managed to miss the fact that the entire dress is lined.  Now, that is a whole lot of extra fabric.  I did have some matching bemberg in the stash (enough to line the entire dress) but the challis is a mid-weight fabric and lining that entire skirt was going to make for one heavy dress.


At the last minute, I decided that I wanted to add a bit more structure to the bust.  I do not actually remember purchasing the bra cups, but there they were in my notion drawer (I must have purchased them during a 50% off JoAnn sale at some point).  I had to use the seam ripper to get back into the finished lining, but I am glad I took the extra step.


And you may have noticed that the neckline is a bit different than the line drawing.  Against my better judgment, I used the C-cup pattern piece instead of the B, and so I had too much space up top.  Instead of ripping everything apart, I just hand-sewed the center seam up an extra couple of inches.


The hem is hand rolled and stitched.  This is certainly not necessary, but I do enjoy my hand sewing!


It is a bit of a different look for me, but the tea length pulls it all together for me.




Dress:  Made by me, Vogue 8814
Shrug:  Made by me, “Margate” from Rowan Knitting Magazine
Shoes:  BP for Nordstrom
Necklace:  Made by me

6 comments:

  1. Fabulous, I love the print and it goes so well with the lines of the dress, very fun for summer!

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  2. I adore tea length dresses and anything with a peacock vibe to it, so you can imagine what a fan of this marvelous creation I am. Excellent work, dear gal, that rich red looks so gorgeous with your skin and hair tones.

    ♥ Jessica

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  3. Beautiful! You are sewing up a storm over there. And, congrats on this week's Sew Weekly feature!

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  4. It's beautiful. You are inspiring me to try it too.

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  5. Your dress is just beautiful!

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  6. Working with this pattern right now...just kill me! ... can you please give me more detail as to how you altered the pattern?
    Thanks!
    Tammy

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