Over the past 3 weeks I've discovered corduroy! OK, *I* didn't discover it, obviously, but for the first time in the ~30 years I've been sewing I made something out of it! Actually, three things:
1. Oliver + S sandbox pants for the boy. OK, these weren't the most fun sewing I ever did but the pattern was well-written and the pants turned out nicely.
Last year the boy wore Comfort Cords from Hanna Andersson. These are great but they're expensive ($34 plus shipping) and the corduroy just can't match the quality of the gorgeous Spechler-Vogel featherwale from Sweet Treasures (that might sound like a sex toy site but it's actually an heirloom sewing shop). It's so soft and smooth. . . .
But we'll see how it holds up. I'm not optimistic; corduroy shows wear terribly and I patched the knees in all the boy's corduroy pants last year at least twice. But this year at least the patches can be the same fabric as the rest of the pants.
2. Navy Mary Jane jumper from Collars Etc. This is a good, plain jumper for everyday. The pattern only has two pieces (one front, one back); you cut them in the outside fabric (here the same beautiful Spechler Vogel corduroy) and in a lining. Sewing was easy and would have been fast except for the rickrack trim around the neck, armholes and hem. I sewed the rickrack onto the corduroy super slowly and carefully and then sewed on the same lines again to attach the corduroy and lining to each other.
Instead of one large button on each shoulder I used two small ones that I pulled off of a 10-year old J Crew sweater that was in my donation pile.
3. Bright pink Kitty jumper from Children's Corner patterns.
When I pulled out the fabric from the Sweet Treasures envelope I thought, "Oops. Too bright. This is what I get for ordering off the internet." But, happily, once sewn up it looks great to me. The jumper is certainly bright but not overwhelming as it was when seen in one big piece.
I think this jumper is gorgeous. The girl wishes it had pockets.
Tuesday, September 30, 2008
Sunday, September 14, 2008
Favorite toys -- wooden trains
Hands-down, wooden trains were the toy that got the most play at our house for about 5 years, starting when my boy was 1.5. For years they got so much use that we kept them in the living room; Daddy or I built a layout nearly every day.
We eschewed a train table; our layouts were just too big. Sometimes they wouldn't even fit in the living room and would snake around the dining room table too.
These days the trains do get less use; they're in the upstairs playroom now. But they still come out every month -- and now the kids build the layouts themselves.
These days the trains do get less use; they're in the upstairs playroom now. But they still come out every month -- and now the kids build the layouts themselves.
We started out with Brio trains but around 3 years old my boy started asking for Thomas engines. I was resistant -- why add to commercialism? -- but came around. Having engines with names added another dimension to their play -- at the height of their train interest the kids acted out story lines from the original books and made up their own stories about interactions between the various engines.
Best blue dress
I've been doing a bit more sewing lately, especially now that my girl likes to wear dresses. This is her best summer dress, made from Vogue 7504. I got the plaid fabric from Elegant Stitches and it's beautiful -- clear, crisp, 100% cotton but not very wrinkly. The dark purple piping is actually the reverse side of the leftovers from a dress I made for myself more than 10 years ago.
This dress took forever to make because I was matching the plaid -- along the tuck lines, between the bodice pieces, etc. Other than that it was straightforward.
I love this dress because it's not pink and nothing about it says 2008 to me. The girl loves it because it's twirly.
I love this dress because it's not pink and nothing about it says 2008 to me. The girl loves it because it's twirly.
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