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31
Jul
2015

The End – 365 days of 100% handmade clothing – The Self-Made Wardrobe Week 52

The Self-Made Wardrobe is a project where I only wear garments I’ve made.
It’s a year long experiment in getting dressed without clothing labels –
it’s a year about noticing patterns, trying things, and observing what happens.


Day-358

Day 358 – Friday, July 24th
2nd Archer button up // black tank top // black maxi skirt
robot clock necklace // bracelets // rings // flip flops

Day-359

Day 359 – Saturday, July 25th
black tank top // grey maxi skirt
princess necklace // bracelets // rings // flip flops

Day-360

Day 360 – Sunday, July 26th
black tank top // vine flowers skirt
princess necklace // rings // wedges

Day-361

Day 361 – Monday, July 27th
black tank top // jeans
princess necklace // bracelets // rings // black flats

Day-362

Day 362 – Tuesday, July 28th
black tank top // black maxi skirt
princess necklace // bracelets // rings // flip flops

Day-363

Day 363 – Wednesday, July 29th
black tank top // grey maxi skirt
princess necklace // bracelets // rings // flip flops

Day-364

Day 364 – Thursday, July 30th
black tank top // black maxi skirt
princess necklace // bracelets // rings // flip flops

Day-365

Day 365 – Friday, July 31st
black tank top // pirate skirt
princess necklace // bracelets // rings // wedges

Holy shit! You guys!! It’s done!!!

365 days of handmade clothing is a lot of days…

But we made it, and there’s no way in hell I would have finished this project without you guys, so big huge THANK YOUs all around!

I have some wrap up type information that I think might be interesting – specifically how many times I wore each piece of clothing, & the cost to make divided by how often the piece got worn. I’ll blog about that stuffs next week.

If there’s any other information you’d like to see, or any questions you have about the project, just leave them in comments and I’ll try to answer as best as I can.

In the meantime, I’m going to have a super low key birthday celebration, and unpack the rest of my wardrobe.

Thanks again for all the support for this project!! Hugs all around.

21
Jul
2015

Finished: Cascading Flowers Maxi Skirt

Self Made Wardrobe Day 20

Day-257

flower-skirt-drape-1

This is one of the earliest pieces of my self-made wardrobe, right up there with my blue kimono.

If you were going to embark on any sort of me-made/self-made/hand-made wardrobe adventure – I would suggest either working your way up to it, or giving yourself lots and lots of preparation time, which is a perfect case of “do what I say, not what I do” (because that type of advice always works so well…)

If you don’t give yourself enough prep time (or you spend you prep time tangled up, and not really sure what to make), you’ll probably end up in a couple situations with nothing to wear (kind of literally).

There were plenty of mornings at the beginning of this project where I woke up, had nothing to wear, and scrambled to make something in time to wear to whatever I needed to do outside my apartment that day.

This skirt, was one of those projects (so was my black maxi skirt – and to a lesser extent my grey one too).

MATERIALS

– A million yards of a crinkle rayon, that I got from my great-aunt. I don’t know what she was planning to make when she bought it (she doesn’t know either), but there were two pieces that probably totaled 5 or 6 yards.
– Thread
– 3/4” elastic
– 2” safety pin

flower-skirt-close-up

PATTERN

I based the skirt off of this pin on pinterest. It’s a page from a vintage homemakers magazine or pamphlet, for a “4.5 hour skirt.” The skirt is made up of 6 trapezoid panels, this gives the skirt a really nice shape, and also lets you be really efficient with your cutting layout (not that I had a shortage of fabric).

I assume that the original skirt has you put a zipper in, but I went with a simple elastic waistband instead.

Since this was one of the first garments I made for the self-made wardrobe, time was a very real constraint, so I used the selvage of the fabric as a hem – which I think lends an air of modernity to the skirt, and which set off my love affair with unhemmed clothing.

I love drapping, and since this fabric has such an amazing drape to it, I added a tuck and secured it in place with a safety pin.

flower-skirt-drape-2

WHAT WORKED WELL

The shape, the fabric, and the safety pin.

The shape – I love the shape of this skirt, and how the pattern is so simple, but so wonderful.

The fabric – It’s a simple printed crinkle rayon with a beautiful drape, and a really nice weight. And most importantly, it’s a floral print without being flowery.

The safety pin – I originally planned on replacing the safety pin with stitching, once I decided on the final placement, but I really love how it gives me options. Some days I fold one layer, some days I fold both layers, some days I fold neither layer – so I’m leaving the safety pin.

WHAT I’D DO DIFFERENTLY

I’d use wider elastic – this skirt is quite heavy, and the 3/4” elastic is teetering on the edge of not being up to the job. So I think once this elastic wears out, I’ll replace it with 1” elastic.

And as soon as this project ends I’m going to have to go at that hem with some stain remover and a scrub brush – regular washing is just not cutting it against a year of New York City dirt.

cascading-flowers-skirt

10
Mar
2015

Finished: handspun yarn – a red & purple, 3 ply, worsted weight yarn

handspun yarn

handspun yarn

handspun yarn

Yarn!

This particular yarn has been a long time in the making. I originally spun the Redfish DyeWorks (bright red) fiber with the intention of making my standard 2ply – upon finishing the singles I realized that would be a damn intense yarn.

So the singles then sat on my desk for months* waiting for something.
*not a good spinning practice – but they didn’t end up too much the worse for it.

Turns out they were waiting for these 2 ounces of fiber from Wooliebullie (the darker purple-ier) – I originally thought about spinning this up on it’s own but that wouldn’t have yielded as much yardage as I would have wanted, and then when I held it with the bright red it seemed like the perfect match.

Fiber A (bright red): 4oz Redfish DyeWorks’s in an intense bright red
Fiber B (darker purple-ier): 2oz “Beaujolais” on Velvet from wooliebullie.etsy.com
(Both fibers are a 50/50 silk/merino blend.)
Yardage: 260 yards & 165 grams
Weight: somewhere around a worsted weight yarn

Spinning details: I spun the fibers worsted* and did a traditional 3 ply. The singles are spun with a Z twist, and plyed with an S twist. I also ended up with 15 or so yards of 2 ply from the singles that were left after the first bobbin ran out.
*for the non spinners – this is a spinning method and (just to be confusing) has nothing to do with producing a yarn worsted weight yarn.

Knitting plans: I don’t have any exact plans for this – but it’ll be something beautiful.

handspun yarn

handspun yarn

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