It's day 2 of the Carina Gardner "Playdate Outfit" sew along and today we are going to be working on the top or dress. The dress is made in the exact same way as the top, but just cut a little longer. So for the purpose of this post I will refer to this as "the top" instead of dress.
Whenever you start sewing with a pattern it's a good idea to read through the pattern several times before you begin. Check all the instructions, make sure you've cut all your pieces and pay careful attention to the seam allowances given for each step. Generally, there is a 1/2" - 5/8" seam allowance for most pieces, but you always need to double check and see.....the fit of your garment depends on it!
Sometimes I have to read things three times just to wrap my head around what the designer intended us to do during a certain step. It's not that an instruction is poorly written, it's usually that we all have different ways of understanding how a garment comes together. On a rare occassion, I will take things into my own hands and do it "my way", but that's only if I feel really strongly about the garment construction or I have absolutely no idea what they are talking about.
Let's get started..........
The Top/Dress:
The first step in the pattern is to assemble the bodice. We've got to insert the accent piece of fabric into the exterior and interior of the top. Place right-sides together and stitch along the raw edge. Do this for both front bodice pieces (exterior and lining).
I've mentioned before that I am a huge fan of my iron, so here's where the love affair begins. I'm just warning you that you might get annoyed with the word "press" by the end of this sew along (I apologize in advance). Press the seams open and then flip your bodice and press again on the right side. Typically I would use my serger for the seams, but since this garment is lined, I went ahead and used the regular sewing machine.
A serger is not a necessary tool, it just makes the stitching move a little quicker, adds a nice clean edge and makes garments very durable.
Now we need to set up our machine to run a gathering stitch along the other front piece of the top. Set your machine to the longest stitch length (mine is 5.0). Stitch along the entire top of the piece, but make sure NOT to back-stitch at the beginning or end (otherwise you won't be able to gather). Stitch using about an 1/8" seam allowance.
Above is what the gathered piece will look like after you've run your gathering stitch. It will be somewhat gathered, but not quite enough.....which is where you come in.
Pull the bobbin thread (or the top thread) to gather the fabric. I like to gather from both sides because it makes things go a little faster. You want to gather your fabric until it lines up with the upper front bodice piece. Space your gathers out evenly.
Once you have gathered your piece to equal the same width as the top bodice, pin in place with right sides together. Stitch using seam allowance given in pattern, press your seams open, and then press on the right side.
Repeat and do the exact same thing with the lining pieces.
Next we need to sew the shoulder seams of both the exterior of the top and the lining. Line up the back pieces with the front pieces, right sides together, and stitch in place at the shoulder. Press seams open.
Now to sew around the neck-line. Place the exterior fabric and the lining fabric, right sides together. Pin around the neck-line. Stitch all the way around.
Next you need to notch out the collar in order to make sure it lays nice and flat. You could do traditional notching as I've shown in the first picture. Or you could do my "cheater" version that I've been doing a bit lately and use your pinking shears to cut around the collar. I find this notches out a wider neck-line just enough to make it lay flat. Turn right side out and press, making sure to get the seams nice and flat.
Next step......the shoulder ruffles. Place the shoulder ruffles right sides together and stitch along the straight side. Turn right side out and press.
After you've pressed the shoulder ruffles, run them back through your machine with a 1/8" seam allowance and top-stitch. Top-stitching adds a really nice finished look to an edge and is also great for increasing the durability of clothing due to the wear and tear a child can have on their clothing.
Now run a gathering stitch along the curved edge of the shoulder ruffles.
Pull the bobbin thread to gather and make the shoulder pieces into ruffles. So, this is a spot that was a little confusing in regards to the placement of the shoulder ruffles. I didn't see specific markings for where they were supposed to start and end (though I could have just missed it), so I just kind of interpreted things and went with where I thought they should go.
Gather the ruffles until they have reached your desired length. I started mine right where the accent fabric piece started on the front of the bodice and ran it about halfway down the back bodice arm hole. Run a basting stitch along the edge. A basting stitch is just a stitch length a little longer than your normal stitch to hold things in place - I usually do mine at 3.0.
Baste the shoulder ruffle ONLY to the exterior fabric. You're going to have to pull the lining away so you don't catch it in your stitches.
Ok, so this next step might have confused some of you or it might not have. I'm very used to doing arm holes this way since a lot of my garments in the shop are fully lined and this is my favorite way to achieve that nice look. Pull your two arm hole pieces apart from one another. Pull the exterior fabric over the top of the garment and pull the lining fabric underneath. Pull both pieces to the other side so they will now be right sides together.
You are going to scrunch the other arm hole pieces in so you can have the pieces you just pulled over from the other side with their right sides together. Make sure to bunch the other arm hole pieces up so you don't catch them in your seam. This is also why we used our basting stitch earlier so that we don't have to worry about the shoulder ruffle shifting.
Once you have scrunched the other arm hole piece up inside this arm hole piece, you'll want to pin it in place. Stitch according to given seam allowance. Clip around the curved seam so it lays flat. Pull the fabric through the stitched arm hole and repeat on the other side.
Here's how your shoulder ruffle should look in the arm hole once it is complete.
Ok, so that's been quite a bit of sewing for today. What do you say we call it quits and pick it up again tomorrow? Sounds like a good idea to me. See you tomorrow, when we finish the second half of our top/dress!
0 comments:
Post a Comment