KCW Summer 2013: Halter Top & Skirt

It’s Kids Clothes Week again! This is the first time that Kids Clothes Week has ever been held during the summer. I’d like to jump up and down with excitement, but it’s too darn hot. Sweat through your shirt with the slightest effort kind of hot. Yuck. I’ve been gnashing my teeth and shaking a fist at this heat and humidity for weeks now.

I feel really lucky to have a dedicated sewing space in my home, but that space is essentially in a finished portion of the attic and has no air conditioning. So sewing is a pretty steamy affair around here right now. Despite the fact that I have enough visions of cute summery dresses and fun shorts to easily fill a week’s worth of sewing, I think I may keep my KCW contributions to a minimum this time around. I’m happy to divert my energy toward cheerleading for those KCW participants who are braving the heat. Unless of course they’re sewing while in the comfort of their air-conditioned homes. In which case I am jealously giving them the evil eye. Kidding (sort of)!

Before succumbing to generalized humidity-induced crankiness – a condition that has been known to last even beyond summer – I did manage a project for Kids Clothes Week. Unfortunately, I don’t have any good detail pictures. I’m going to blame that on the heat and humidity, too! It definitely has nothing to do with the fact that a certain mommy dragged her children to the park at noontime on a 90+-degree day to take pictures. Nope. While we’re at it, can I also blame the humidity for my daughter’s hair? It’s time for that fine baby hair to give way to luscious locks, or at least a little curl. Please!! It’s kind of funny how we’re on opposite ends of the hair spectrum. Mine is a thick frizz-fest right now.

Despite the fact that I spent some time this past weekend purposefully selecting fabrics and sketching ideas for KCW, this project was a spur of the moment idea. The halter top fabric and the skirt fabric ended up next to each other in my fabric stash quite accidentally (yeah, I wish my stash was organized enough to be sorted by color), and they caught my eye as I sat down for a night of sewing. Given all this sticky weather, I was determined to sew something for staying cool. The shirt fabric is a linen/rayon blend I purchased a few weeks ago with plans to make a skirt for myself, and the skirt fabric is a cotton print from the clearance rack at Jo-Anns.

Yes, the halter top wrinkles more easily than cotton because of the linen, but it has a great drape with the rayon. I think I need to resurrect my plans to make myself a skirt, since I have enough fabric leftover.

I made the halter top the same way I’d make a pillowcase dress, so it was very simple. I upgraded the project a bit by using french seams on the top and skirt for a nice finished look on for the interior. The top is faced around the armholes using the same fabric as for the skirt, cut on the bias to give it stretch. Rather than a long ribbon or tie to close the neckline (like here), I enclosed a skinny piece of elastic (1/4 inch) in a loop of fabric made with the coordinating cotton print. The elastic stretches enough to make it easy to pull the top on and off, and eliminates the need for a long ribbon that ends up flapping around, coming untied and getting in the way. This may become my new method for finishing pillowcase dresses and tops.

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These kamagra jellies have reduced the time required for completing the cialis uk no prescription treatment varies as per the severity of the asthma sufferer. Carnosine – is a powerful antioxidant, but it also cheapest cialis is a common disease for men. Even though you may be missing all or part of your breasts, it is unlikely that your partner stopped viagra cipla india loving you because you look different. So it is possible, but you have to break out of the mind set that has been sold you, that it takes four years to get to the rank of cialis properien downtownsault.org black belt. So, I really did take my children to the park for a photo shoot, at noontime, on a day that reached well over 90 degrees. Bad mommy award? Well, at least they were slathered with sunblock! And to make it even better, on our short drive to the park I had to explain that although we were going to a park, it was not a park with a playground. “Just slides, then?”, Eli asked optimistically. Nope, but there is a fountain!! And then I remembered that it’s not even a shoot up in the air kind of water fountain, but a rather passive fountain that for some reason gives me a cold war era vibe (clearly, I was not an architecture major!).

I love this park. When Daisy was a newborn this park was on our regular walking route, and it was so peaceful to push the carriage through here. Probably in large part because it’s not a “playground park”; it’s quiet, with big open spaces, a greenhouse, an area for community gardens, and some remaining structures from when the land was privately owned, all surrounded by a stone wall. It has a very interesting history. And despite the heat, the kids were having a fun (sweaty) time exploring. Eli has already proposed that we return with a picnic lunch.

No, we did not add our initials!

Unintentionally coordinated outfits — obviously I like these colors!

It was reassuring to see them embrace this park without a playground. It’s easy to feel like we’re constantly overloaded with distractions that keep us from enjoying the simple beauty around us.  And while I have fun sliding and swinging with them at the playground, too, I welcomed the break from jungle gyms, bats, balls and toys. And especially, sandboxes. Eeeww, I still feel the same way about sandboxes.

 

A-Tisket, A-Tasket, a Baby Shower Basket

One of my favorite people is having a baby later this summer, and we celebrated her baby shower a couple weeks ago. I am so excited for her and love that sewing allows me to show that excitement with something handmade. Definitely made with love.

Did you guess that she’s having a boy?!

As part of my gift, I made this fabric basket using the Noodlehead Divided Basket Pattern by Anna Graham of Noodlehead. The pattern is well written and easy to follow along; and there are several variations, including adding pockets and different options for the handles. I’m a sucker for projects that are well-suited for mixing and matching fabrics. This is definitely a pattern I will use again.

The basket became a bit of a baby grab bag, filled with some items off her registry, a bunch of newborn-sized diapers, a couple tie-dyed onesies (have I mentioned my recent obsession with fabric dye? I dyed the basket handles, too!), and other helpful baby items. And, I didn’t even have to wrap it – bonus!
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The basket seems like a natural fit for holding diapers in the early years, but I predict it will be useful for years to come. Can’t you see this on a bedside table filled with children’s books for eager little hands to peruse? Or used as easy transport for favorite things — I can picture my son moving all his plastic dinosaurs around from room to room in a basket like this. The Noodlehead site showcases some of the baskets Anna Graham has made from her pattern and suggests more potential uses, too. And her lovely fabric choices are always a treat to look at.

A-tisket, a-tasket,

A baby shower basket.

Filled with treats for a babe to come

and all my love sent with it …

 

All Dressed Up

Before I forget, I want to share the dress I made my daughter to wear at a recent family wedding. The dress that I almost talked myself out of making. Which is an easy thing to do when you stop by TJMaxx the week of the wedding and see a handful of really cute dresses for less than $15.00 each, and think to yourself, “gee, how fast and easy would it be to just have her wear that?!” But then you remind yourself that you have been wanting to make her a dress with these Amy Butler fabrics for a long time now. And you steer clear of the children’s department and you go home and sketch a pattern and sew and are happy you did it.

I intended for the dress to be worn sleeveless, but unfortunately it was rainy and cold the day of the wedding. Rather than change gears and dress my daughter in something warmer, I surrendered to pairing the dress with a t-shirt and leggings underneath. It wasn’t really the look I was going for, but I was (stubbornly) determined that she wear the dress.  And, of course, her zebra-striped dancing shoes!

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And although the day’s weather mostly resembled a monsoon, there was a brief respite from the rain that allowed the bride and groom a chance for outdoor photographs. Hurrah! They were radiant and we had a blast celebrating with them.

Eli wore a suit for the first time, and my emotions went from “oh, look how cute,” to “wait a second, he’s growing up WAY too fast,” in about five seconds flat.  While his suit jacket was a decent enough fit, the matching pants were too baggy. A quick serge along the outside seams of each pant leg transformed the pants into a slimmer fit. Okay, so that’s not the way a tailor would have done it, but it got the job done, fast. And he was ready to dance, too, in his Converse!

I think Eli accurately captured all of our sentiments about the event.  “Mommy, I really like weddings,” he said at breakfast the next morning.  Me, too! Best wishes and much love to the happy couple!

Easy Tank Dress: Finishing What Old Navy Started

Sometimes the opportunity to try something new presents itself so perfectly that it would be downright rude to deny it. Or at least that’s how I’m spinning this one.

Last month we celebrated the birthday of one of our neighbors. An adorable, happy nugget who I seriously have to contain myself from squeezing and tickling every time I see her. There was no expectation of a gift but I couldn’t help but see it as an opportunity to give this project a try. If it didn’t work, then there would be no gift. If it worked, bonus!

Enter, the tank-top-turned-dress dress. It took only a small investment in a store-made tank top (thank you, Old Navy summer sale!) and about a half-yard of coordinating fabric (less if you’re not making a double-layer skirt). And the sewing was all straight stitches and a gathering stitch. A whole lot of cute for not too much work.

I wasn’t sure how it would work to add a woven skirt to a knit tank top, since the tank fabric is much stretchier than the skirt, but so far everything is holding up. In that regard, I suggest using a zig zag stitch to attach the skirt to the knit tank, so the stitching won’t bust when pulling the dress on/off.

Tank by Old Navy; Skirt fabric Patty Young for Michael Miller Fabrics, Heaven & Helsinki collection

Of course I had to share some of this cuteness with my own nugget!
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The skirt fabric is from the Heaven & Helsinki collection by Patty Young for Michael Miller Fabrics. I adored this city block fabric when I first purchased it, but then it just sat on my shelf, half-forgotten. Boo hoo. When I saw the aqua tank at Old Navy, I instantly remembered this fabric — fate!  It makes me so happy to see it on this dress now.

I used my serger to finish the raw edges where the two skirt layers were attached to the tank, and the bulk of the serged seam gives the skirt some unintentional pouffiness. I suppose I could have taken the next step and pressed and topstitched that serged edge down to flatten it, but I think the extra fullness looks pretty cute, and the bulky seam doesn’t seem to bother my daughter when she’s wearing the dress.

“Don’t look at her, Bro. She’s got that camera pointed at us, again!!”

It’s possible I scored a few more tees and tanks at the Old Navy sale, so this look may become a summer staple in our house!