Many,
many years ago, a friend gifted me a new-with-tags dress among a
large collection of other old clothes she was getting rid of.
The
fit was everything that I avoid in a dress (strapless, blousey, ruffly,
ankle-length, you name it!), but it had two things going for it: 1) a
lovely lavender color, and 2) butterflies! I'm a sucker for anything
with pretty insects on it!
My goal was to find a way to make this dress actually look good on me, and it only took 5 years and some change for me to figure it out.
The
first year, I got as far as deciding I didn't like the dress in its
current form, but by the end of the summer, I still didn't have any
ideas as to how to fix it, and I lost interest in refashioning a summer
dress when it was winter.
The
second year, I tried it on at a few different lengths, and experimented
with making the bodice tighter. I still couldn't decide what to do with
it.
The third
year, I finally settled on a cut: I would convert the dress to an
empire-waist style with sort of Ancient Grecian vibes.
I even went so
far as to decide on where I'd cut the bottom portion from the top (the
fold line at right in the photo).
The fourth year, I figured out how I would form the bodice: I modeled the neckline on a halter top I have.
I
stuck in a few pins to mark key points, and got so far as cutting out
armholes before I ran out of steam and let the project sit for another
winter.
The
fifth year, I really charged forward with the project! Over the course
of a month and a half, I laboriously completed the basic shape of the
bodice and attached it to the skirt.
But
the sixth year (that's this year), I decided all the previous work had
to go! The empire-waist dress was a stupid idea, completely impractical
for my lifestyle and too complicated to sew!
In retrospect, I have no
idea why I came to this conclusion when I was in the home stretch,
because what I ended up doing was certainly just as complicated, but I
guess the years of frustration were finally getting to me.
I decided
instead to make the dress into a skirt!
I marked the top of a waistband with pins and cut it out.
When the waistband was folded over to the inside and not-so-artfully sewn down, here's how it looked!
All that remained was to put in a side zipper, which I accomplished more or less gracefully (at least from the outside view).
The
skirt is not finished on the inside by any means, but it looks passable
on the outside, so at that point, I decided my creation was good enough
to wear in public.
And... here it is!
Now that I've had a chance to look at my photos, I think I should have worn it with less highly contrasting
shoes and shirt, but after 5+ years of work, it's kind of miraculous I wore it at
all!
its lovely - I have had a similar experience with a coat where my initial refashion of it was to try and do in as little sewing as possible, whereas I really would have been better off to have taken it fully apart and resewing a fit (which I did a few years later and have an infinitely better coat)
ReplyDeleteLovely skirt and much better than the original dress on you. I do like the first refashion, in 2015, though.
ReplyDeleteI understand why you chose the top and shoes to go with the skirt as well as why you are rethinking that choice. I would still go with a high contrast but closer to one of the pinks in the flowers.
So it took years; fabric waits. I'm not even going to mention how many decades one of my first quilts has been waiting to be finished ;)
I think the contrasting colors of the the top and shoes accentuate the loveliness of the final garment.
ReplyDelete