atherleisure (
atherleisure) wrote2023-12-18 07:31 pm
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Entry tags:
Pictures
I have pictures of the 1940's cotton dress I made a few months ago.


The pattern is a reprint of a Simplicity pattern sold by Bright Young Things on Etsy - https://www.etsy.com/listing/897439570/1940s-40s-reproduction-vintage-sewing. I scaled it down from a 38" bust to a 36" bust by the expedient of printing it out at 95% scaling, which of course scaled the length as well as the width. I know that's not how you grade patterns, but for only one size difference on a short-waisted person, it usually works. When I mocked it up, I took something out of the length on the waist because I often have to do that, even with scaling like this, but I had to put it back in for the final dress. Modern Simplicity patterns - well at least patterns from 10-20 years ago - tend to have a good waist length for me, and it looks like that's probably true for the vintage versions too. The front ended up a trifle short, but it's not bad. The back is just about right.
I used a cotton print that is a little lighter weight than a quilting cotton. It hangs well, and the shoulder filler pieces do a good job of keeping the sleeves puffed. I chose not to use the sleeve bands on the sleeves because I thought they would be harder to iron. And I'm not that keen on puffed sleeves. I would recommend using a fabric where the wrong side is nearly the same color as the right side because it's going to show on the sash ends. Mine was a tan cotton printed with rust so the wrong side is definitely different from the right side. I have to be careful with the ties. The other change I made was to use a twill tape to face the bias edge at the neckline. I've had too much trouble in my life with bias necklines stretching to be confident in a bias facing. I had to move the snap at the crossover point down an inch or so, but that was trivial.
It's a cute dress, and I'm happy with it.


The pattern is a reprint of a Simplicity pattern sold by Bright Young Things on Etsy - https://www.etsy.com/listing/897439570/1940s-40s-reproduction-vintage-sewing. I scaled it down from a 38" bust to a 36" bust by the expedient of printing it out at 95% scaling, which of course scaled the length as well as the width. I know that's not how you grade patterns, but for only one size difference on a short-waisted person, it usually works. When I mocked it up, I took something out of the length on the waist because I often have to do that, even with scaling like this, but I had to put it back in for the final dress. Modern Simplicity patterns - well at least patterns from 10-20 years ago - tend to have a good waist length for me, and it looks like that's probably true for the vintage versions too. The front ended up a trifle short, but it's not bad. The back is just about right.
I used a cotton print that is a little lighter weight than a quilting cotton. It hangs well, and the shoulder filler pieces do a good job of keeping the sleeves puffed. I chose not to use the sleeve bands on the sleeves because I thought they would be harder to iron. And I'm not that keen on puffed sleeves. I would recommend using a fabric where the wrong side is nearly the same color as the right side because it's going to show on the sash ends. Mine was a tan cotton printed with rust so the wrong side is definitely different from the right side. I have to be careful with the ties. The other change I made was to use a twill tape to face the bias edge at the neckline. I've had too much trouble in my life with bias necklines stretching to be confident in a bias facing. I had to move the snap at the crossover point down an inch or so, but that was trivial.
It's a cute dress, and I'm happy with it.
no subject
(no subject)
no subject
(no subject)
no subject
(no subject)
no subject
(no subject)
no subject
(no subject)
no subject
(no subject)