Showing posts with label 1910s. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1910s. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 8, 2012

Costume College: Friday

Phew! I made it home in one piece with all my luggage (but that's a story for another day). From your comments, it looks like you enjoyed your selection of period costume drama goodness. Hopefully, you still have enough in you for more costumes!

Alas, I didn't get any pictures on Thursday so we're starting on Friday. I'll scour the interweb for Thursday pics or take some outfit shots later, but for now on to Friday!

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Friday was my Edwardian/Downton Abbey day! I wore my Edith's black floral blouse with a new skirt.

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The skirt is Butterick 9682 from 1915 which is available from Past Patterns. It came with a hand drawn copy of the pattern and a photo copy of the original directions (which were pretty sketchy). I had some issues with the waist band-first off, my grading was off and it came out too big, and second, the closures were really complicated-6 hooks and eyes and two snaps in 3 separate closures.

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But Edwardian closures are supposed to be complicated and it works so I'm cool with that. It's super fun to wear and has POCKETS!!

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Plus the whole thing has almost 70 buttons on it but, thankfully, they are all decorative. I purchased them from Yummy Treasures on etsy.

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And I wore my Astorias from American Duchess. I wore them all day and they were super comfy. I also got to meet Lauren R., American Duchess while I was wearing these!

Friday evening was the ice cream social so we all headed back to our rooms for a quick costume change.

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I wore my Lady Mary's Garden Party dress with faux pearls, vintage crochet gloves and my Astorias again.

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The lovely Ginger of Scene in the Past in a fabulous regency dress.

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Beth of V is for Vintage in a darling Edwardian nautical ensemble.

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The Edwardian gals together.

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Lauren M. of Wearing History in an amazing plaid bustle dress. Check out her plaid matching skills!

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Isn't she a vision?


And it wouldn't be Costume College without some silliness.

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If you've ever wondered how to get your train to look great for a picture, this is how you do it.

I was bad and didn't actually take any pictures at the Ice Cream Social or the market place grand opening which was right afterwords but here's one of me I found on Flickr.

Costume College 2012 - Friday

Monday, April 9, 2012

Edwardian Millinery Adventures

I couldn't pass up the opportunity for some lovely millinery adventures when I made Mary's Garden Party dress.

Mary wears two hats with this dress. One at the flower show and this one at the garden party. It has an asymmetrical brim, some decorative ribbon and felt flowers.


I picked up this hat for $15 at Charming Charlie. I really liked the asymmetric brim and it was perfect for retrimming.


The original decorations were lightly hot glued on and came off easily.


Next, I hot glued on my own ribbon.


Then I made my own felt flowers using Gertie's tutorial. I made one from 2" wide, one from 1 1/2" wide, two from 1" wide, and four from 1/2" wide (two from shorter length and two from longer).


There wasn't any particular pattern to my arrangement. I just kept moving them around till I liked them.


The roses were super easy to make. I'm usually terrible at this kind of thing but I was really happy with them.

Sunday, April 8, 2012

Lady Mary's Garden Party Dress

Happy Easter! Today I premiered my version of Lady Mary's garden party dress!

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I used Vogue 8648 as a starting point and then drafted away. I really wanted to capture all of the different directions of the stripes so I changed a lot! Here's what I did:

  • Raised the neckline of the front
  • Drafted the waist band on to the skirt
  • Lengthened the skirt
  • Changed the shape of the skirt from pencil to more aline
  • Drafted the back bodice from 4 pieces to 2
  • Moved the zipper from the center back to the side
  • Made the sleeves less poofy
  • Raised the back neckline
  • FBA
  • Added some extra space by the hips
  • Adjusted the cutting layout so that my stripes lined up with Mary's dress
    • back-all cut on the bias
    • center front bodice-horizontal
    • sleeves-horizontal
    • rest of front- vertical
Flower Show

The only pieces that I ended up cutting straight from the original were the bodice side front and the sleeves. But I really wanted mine just like Mary's so I put in the extra effort.

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I also bought a cloche type hat and retrimmed it to be like hers! It will be getting it's own post later this week.

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I was able to use a piece of my great-grandma's lace, which was really cool!  It's not in perfect condition but it was perfect for this dress.

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A better shot of the hat.

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It was very pretty out today and just lovely weather for this dress.

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Hey look! Matching chevrons! :)

The dress came out a bit big in the waist has more ease at the waist to give a more period shape and is therefore very comfortable and good for days when I pig out get served lunch at 12 pm and then again at 2 pm. I just wish my Astorias were here! And I need a pair of crochet gloves. It would have been perfect then.

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Dressing Downton: Modern Mary

We all want a bit of Downton Abbey in our wardrobes so after posting some inspiration for adding some Downton flavor to your wardrobe, I took up the challenge of working my latest Dressing Downton piece into a modern look.


Tada! I made a rather more reproduction type piece but opted to style it modern.


You can find this costume's Dressing Downton post here.


I paired this skirt with a modern white t-shirt.


It has an almost lace like print (I guess you could call it) that is translucent and a black lace pattern printed on the front. I really wanted to capture the romantic feel of the original outfit.


I ended up making this skirt using a self drafted half circle skirt pattern. There's only one seam which I placed in the back. It closes with snaps and hooks and eyes. I made self fabric covered buttons that are purely decorative.


The back doesn't hang quite as nicely as I'd like but I'm sure Mary has on a slip and petticoat under hers.


Oh and this is so fun to wear! I do need more of these long half circle skirts!


I also envision this with a period blouse or styled as a 40s evening look! They too had long swooshy skirts. And the color is just so yummy!

Thursday, March 15, 2012

Dressing Downton Modern

Downton Abbey is full to the brim with lovely costume inspiration! I've been focusing on more reproduction type projects but what if you're looking more for everyday type looks? Let's look at some ways you can bring that inspiration into a more modern wardrobe.

Downton Skirts

Long skirts were very in during this period, though the length came up towards the end of season 2. Love a great skirt from the show? Shorten the hem to more modern length for an instantly wearable look. Keep the interesting details like the buttons on the back of Mary's skirt or the matching belt on Isobel's. For a more flowy skirt, try a half circle skirt. For a slimmer look, go with an a-line.

Flower Show

Sometimes you'll get lucky and find a modern pattern with similar lines.


Vogue 8648 would be a great starting point for Mary's garden party dress! I'd start with the yellow version and add details. Cut the pieces so the stripes line up with Mary's (or somehow interesting), cut the waist pieces in a darker solid for a belt look and add cuffs to the sleeves. Lace trim around the neck for that finishing touch.

Snap Shot

Fallen in love with a great jacket? There are a couple of options here. A lot of jackets from the show would look great with jeans! For a more modern look focus in one one detail-pockets, a unique closure, or a great color and apply it to a modern cut jacket.


Vogue 8333 is a great place to start. It has classic lines but the little side detail makes it special. Change the collar, closures or color.


Vouge 8621 is a much more modern pattern but still captures that spirit of specialness all of the Edwardian jackets from this show have. This is a great option to capture a color that's been calling your name.


Don't forget to think outside of the box. Wouldn't Mary's riding jacket make a great coat dress?
McCall's 6279 would fit the bill.

I feel like a lot of the blouses would be very wearable with jeans or a modern skirt.



I've got many more ideas, but this is getting long so I'm thinking of doing a series of posts on this topic. So please post questions, requests and ideas!