1837-41 Morning Dress Patterns of Fashion 1 – Highly Commended Award

In this post I’m going to go over my process for my entry into the 2020 Costume Society Patterns of Fashion Award. This will cover my planning, research, toiling, fabric selection, construction, styling, final judging and a reflection on my experiences.

Deadlines for the competition were as follows,

7th of December 2019 – Deadline for application form
This application form registers your interest in the award, it is essential to do if you plan to participate.

30th of January 2020 – Deadline for submitting a slideshow containing images of the finished garment both interior and exterior, toile process and any other relevant information
Note that normally the Costume Society Conference would take place later in the year for final judging where (if selected as a finalist) you would bring your finished garment, a research file, work book, copies of the pattern/relevant POF book pages and any other material you felt necessary to judging. Because of this the powerpoint does not need to be overloaded with information just key details of your process.

Unfortunately due to the Covid-19 pandemic the Costume Society Conference could not take place this year and judging happened online via video chat. 


Planning

Planning for the competition began at the end of my second year, one of my tutors organised for any interested students to come to a meeting after our final hand in to discuss the competition, look over the garments we were interested in and discuss our decision.  This wasn’t a final decision, there was all of summer to reconsider but having the discussion then would allow for research and planning to be done over the holidays.

I had narrowed my choices down to three dresses,
1837-41 Morning dress, 1827-9 wedding dress and the 1745-60 jacket and petticoat (All from Janet Arnold Patterns of Fashion 1)

My biggest consideration when selecting a dress was that I wanted it to be hand sewn, hand sewing a dress was seen as a bit of a taboo in the 3rd year studio as everything is so time critical. My tutor did attempt to dissuade me from choosing a hand sewn dress, citing a previous student hand sewing a dress and how much time it took them and the stress it put them under.
But I was pretty determined, I knew that a completely hand sewn dress would be a stand out piece of my portfolio it would also allow me to further develop and refine my hand sewing skills, immerse myself in period techniques and engage with primary and secondary resources which is one of my favourite aspects of historical dress.

When it came to selecting a dress I decided on the 1837-41 Morning dress – Gloucester Museum.
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My reasons for selection this dress over the other two were as follows,
It predates the sewing machine fulfilling my hand sewn criteria. I believed it would be achievable to make in 12 weeks, this is due to the simple base cut of the bodice and skirt which are embellished upon with decoration.  Sourcing materials would be straight forward, as I wanted to reproduce the dress in its entirety (The Costume Society does suggest making from calico or other neutral fabrics to reduce costs but this is a just suggestion)  the fabrics used for the original dress would be straightforward to source or find a modern substitute for.
My reason for not following the suggestion of using neutral low cost fabrics is simply because I knew I would be putting a lot of time into the costume, that it would be on display at degree show/in my portfolio and that I had the intention of selling it. I could not justify making it from plain fabrics, I wanted it to have the same grand appearance as the original and stand out in displays and also for it to be profitable.
I understand not wanting to use expensive materials for financial reasons and that is a decision down to each individual.
For perceptive the material costs for this garment was approximately £250.


Research

As mentioned above I wanted to use my summer break to get all of my research done for the dress in time for my return to university. My top priority was enquiring if I could view and examine the original dress, it did take me a while to get in contact with someone at Gloucester Museum to arrange an appointment but I was successful in doing so. At my appointment I met a curator who showed me to the dress which was laid out on a table, I was given a pair of gloves so that I could move smaller elements of the dress on my own and the curator helped me with turning the dress over.
I must have spent three hours looking over the dress and I took hundreds of pictures of everything imaginable. I also took notes as I went over the dress but I really found the pictures to be my best point of reference. While my notes were great sharing the pictures  with my tutors was very helpful when I got stuck. I really recommend taking as many pictures as possible and of everything, even simple things such as the stitching on the hem as it will just give you a visual reassurance even when it seems straight forward.

I do plan to make a separate post containing all of my images I took of the original dress (or maybe a public google album). For now if you would like them please get in contact and I can send them.

In addition to viewing the original dress I also viewed three other dresses from the 1830’s in the National Trust Killerton Estate Textile Archive. I found viewing these dresses really beneficial to my research and it gave me a broader view as to how dresses were constructed during the period. In addition to this each dress had a similar attribute to the 1837-14 Morning Dress, the brown dress had a very similar cut bodice, the plaid dress had similar smocking on the sleeve and the girl’s dress like the morning dress had a lot of piping on the bodice.
Viewing other garments in addition to the original dress (or if the original can not be viewed) is a really great source of construction evidence. For example if you didn’t know exactly how a waistband was attached on the original because the pattern is vague or the waistband is obscured on the original, citing other extant garments as your reasoning for how you approached it is great method of problem solving and shows great investigation skills.
I was praised during judging for examining addition dresses from the period. 

(in order 1830s Brown Dress, 1830 Green Plaid Dress, 1833 Girl’s Green Dress )

The National Trust is defiantly worth looking into for extant garment research (They also hold a few Patterns of Fashion garments). You can search through their online archive using the National Trust Collections Page you can refine the search to Places, Category (costume!) and Date. You can view a maximum of three items and there is a £25 charge for the use of the service. Booking an appointment is easy, email the location, explain your interest/reason for wanting to view the items and include the NT item number for the items you want to view in the email.
The staff at Gloucester Museum and Killerton Estate were extremely helpful and I’m very grateful for the opportunity to view the dresses.
I recommend enquiring about viewing extant garments in advance (this goes for any location, museum or archive) as there is usually a few weeks wait before you can be booked in.

I really stress doing your research over the summer holidays if you can. Doing so gave me a leaping start when I got back to University. I had all of the information, reference and visuals to get started from day one. Had I been chasing museums for appointments it would have put me back weeks and I’m sure I would have made mistakes along the way that would have been time critical or irreversible. This is especially important if you are hand sewing a garment. I averaged eleven and a half hours at university everyday, you need to devote all of your time to being productive. 


WorkLog

Toiling

I began my construction process with scaling up the pattern from Patterns of Fashion 1. This was done using 1” dot and cross paper to ensure accuracy to the scale used in the book. With my complete dress pattern I began the process of toiling to ensure everything lined up, resolve any issues and test procedures and decorations.

 IMG_1058I found the bodice came together nicely, noting that the bust dart required a large amount of ease, I marked the mid point on either side of the dart, this could then be used to match when joining together and easing the fabric between these points.


I sampled sewing the piping onto the vandyke decoration, practicing how the piping would be turned over without visible stitching, this included clipping into and mitering the points. I also realised at this stage that the piping size I was using (size 2) was larger than the size used on the original dress, when constructing the dress I downsized to a size 1 cord.
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I decided to test the smocking on the sleeve, the sleeve pattern features small dashed lines that are used as a guide for how large the stitches should be, I encountered a few issues with this trial.
The first issue was that these dashed lines were far too large to replicate the original smocking on the dress but I acknowledge that they were most likely intended to be used as an indication that the direction of the smocking stitches followed.
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First smocking test.

As I had the opportunity to examine the original dress I knew from looking at the interior of the sleeve that the stitches were tiny, no more than 1-2mm in length. I produced a sample following this smocking stitch size and found that it resulted in a very near match to the original.

The second Issue I found was that the grading for the smocking was slightly uneven (using the marked lowermost line to grade upwards). Grading the smocking evenly up from the lowermost line would cause the top two lines of stitching to wiggle in and out over the edge of the pattern. To fix this issue I applied the measurements that I had taken from the original dress and graded downwards from the sleeve head.
I had measured that the distance between each line of stitching was approximately 8mm and using the start and finish of the smocking stitches on the pattern as a guide I marked this on the sleeve.
While on the original dress I could find no visual indicators that the smocking lines were marked, the smocking did appear to be very consistent from an interior and exterior point of view.

The third issue I found was in the pleating of the skirt, for the purposes of the toile I cut myself a croped length of the skirt so that I could test the pleating and gathering.
The pattern states that the center front of the skirt features a 1” box pleat, with adjacent sides of the skirt 1” knife pleated in the direction of the centre front, the pleating continues until it meets the gathered portion of the skirt at the back of the dress, the centre back is slashed open with gathering 4” either side.

Screen Shot 2020-08-05 at 20.04.10When toiling the knife pleating I soon realised that the pleat depth was too deep which was causing the pleated portion of the skirt to finish at the centre back (well beyond where it was meant to finish), this left no room for the additional 8” of gathering at the centre back.

I decided to sample a shallower pleat depth to see if this would bring the pleats back to where they should be sitting and allow for the 4 inches of gathering before the centre back.
I reduced the pleat depth down to ¾” and the issue was immediately resolved. The pleating finished 4” from the centre back allowing for the remaining fabric to be gathered down.

The final issue I found in pattern was one that I didn’t catch until far too late. In the pattern for the vandyke decoration Janet Arnold draws it with 12 points and I did not  question this. It wasn’t until I had made the decoration up and was attempting to mount it onto the bodice that I came to the realisation that the original decoration only has 11 points. I realised this because I was struggling to get the decoration to lie flat as it does in the original dress but it refused to. I identified that the 7th point (counting up from the bottom) could be pinched (omitting it) and this would cause the vandyke to lay smooth against the bodice rather than puckering. What’s more is that Janet’s illustration of the full dress correctly depicts the vandyke with 11 points, it is her pattern that is incorrect with 12 points.
I believe that had I noticed this earlier, corrected the pattern to remove the 7th point and then redistribute the other points on the pattern my vandyke decorations would have sat flat against the bodice as seen on the original dress.

I do want to note though that I’m not sure changing the pattern would be in accordance with the Patterns of Fashion Award guidelines as you’re supposed to make the garment up as it with no alteration. Within my submission I found issues with the patterns but I manipulated them to work to the best of my ability without making alterations.


Fabric Section

Screen Shot 2020-08-05 at 20.12.20For my reproduction of this dress I decided to select materials to match the original as closely as possible.
In patterns of Fashion 1 Janet Arnold doesn’t specify what kind of silk the dress is made from, in my research examining other day dresses of the period I knew it was likely made from taffeta as this was a common for the period. When examining the original dress I identified it to be a silk taffeta. I had brought along with me a selection of silk swatches (mostly taffetas) in brown shades so that I could best match the original dress.
I decided on a silk taffeta from Silk Baron in the colour ‘Topaz’, this taffeta had a really nice weight to it, ideal for the dress and was a near perfect colour match to the original dress.

The original dress used glazed cotton for the bodice and skirt lining, I struggled to find a supplier for glazed cotton and after a discussion with my tutors about similar fabrics that could be used as a substitute I decided on cotton silesia. I bought white cotton silesia, I cut my bodice pattern pieces from it and cut a strip for the waistband, the remaining silesia was dyed a light brown to match the skirt lining.

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Calico was used to line the sleeves in the original dress, I selected a medium weight calico to replicate this which would help give body to the smocking and further sleeve.

I also used 100% cotton muslin to back the vandykes, I am unsure if the originals were backed but I felt the single layer of silk would need some support, the sleeve bands were also backed using this muslin. I had identified while examining the dress that the sleeve bands were backed with a loose weave fabric but as I could only see a small fragment of this material I was unable to identify the fabric with 100% certainty.

The muslin was dyed a light brown colour.

I also selected a brown 100% silk thread to use to sew the dress together.
I also used brightly coloured polyester threads for basting and tacking, the bright colours made them easy to see/identify and remove at the end of construction.


Construction

I cut out all of my pattern pieces, using a ½” seam allowance on all seams but the centre front which I added a 1” seam allowance to. This was because I noted that these seam allowances were of that size on the original dress.

I began my construction with basting all of the bodice silecia layers to the silk layers along the pattern lines to serve as a guide and prevent the two layers from shifting. I also marked any construction lines such as the placement line for the vandykes, the point where the decorative sleeve band crosses over etc.
This same process was used for the silk sleeve and calico lining.

I decided to get the smocking on the sleeves done first as I knew it would be a time consuming element to recreate. I started with grading the smocking onto the calico lining which I had already tested the placement in my toile.
I then started the long process of sewing the smocking stitches into the sleeve, I doubled my silk thread for this as I wanted the lines of stitching to be as durable as possible to prevent the threads from snapping. Because the stitches are so small (1-2mm in length) I found it was much more time effective to use a running stitch and catch the fabric multiple times in one stitch rather than sewing each stitch individually.

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It took 12 hours to sew the smocking stitches onto each sleeve.
After sewing the smocking I decided to make up all of the piping I would need for the dress, I took measurements over the dress and estimated how much piping I would need and also noted what areas required longer/continuous piping.  I cut 1” wides strips of bias from my silk taffeta and made up the piping by tacking the size 1 cording into the folded bias strips.

When the smocking was completed I moved on with making up the rest of the sleeves, I started with the cuffs, tacking the piping to one side of the silk cuffs before taking down the other side of the cuff. The sleeve was prepared, I sewed the sleeve seam up using a back stitch to the notched point on the pattern where the sleeve placket is. I constructed the sleeve  placket by folding both the silk and calico layers inward, leaving a slight step so that the calico was folded a few millimeters back further. This was then fixd down with a bar tack at the top of the placket on the inside to prevent the fabrics from shifting and then the calico was whipped down to the silk with small stitches.
Next two lines of gathering were sewn just above the construction line into the seam allowance between the two notch points indicated on the pattern. The threads of these gathering stitches were then pulled so that the end of the sleeve was reduced down to the width of the cuff.

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The cuffs were then sewn right sides together to the sleeve, catching the lowermost row of piping so it was snug between the sleeve and the cuff. The wrong side of the cuff was then whip stitched down to the calico along the pattern line with the seam allowance folded up on the inside.

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Next I began constructing the bodice, I tacked all of the piping onto one side of the seam before tacking down the other side securing the piping between the two pattern pieces. These seams were then sewn permanently with my silk thread using a back stitch.

Screen Shot 2020-08-05 at 20.45.20I found that the bust darts required easing in order for them to match up, I did this by marking the centre of each side of the darts, matching them up and distributing the ease evenly above and below these points.

The armhole was pipped in preparation for the sleeve to be sewn in but the neckline and lower edge of the bodice was left as these are finished off later in the process.

With my base bodice out together I moved onto making the decorations for the dress.

Starting with the vandykes, I basted the silk layer to the supporting muslin layer. The piping was then sewn on, I had to be carul during this process and precise with my sewing to ensure that when the piping was rolled over none of my stitches would be visible, this was particularly crucial over the zigzaged portion of the vandyke.
The next step was to roll the piping over and secur it to the wrong side, this was a straightforward process on the straight edges of the vandyke as they rolled easily and I secured them with a running back stitch. The zigzagged side had a few more steps involved. In order to get the outer points to turn over cleanly I clipped into and mitered the points, the inner points were also clipped into. Once this was done they were free to roll back to the wrong side where the seam allowance was back stitched down to the muslin layer.
The bottom of the vandyke was left unpiped, this is because it will be caught by the piping applied to the over edge of the bodice later on.

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The vandykes feature small pleated bands which cover the inner points, initially to create these I tried pressing pleats into bias cut strips of taffeta but found the taffeta to be too springy for this and it would not hold the shape. I then decided to experiment with creating a small scale pleating board which could be used to get the tiny knife pleat to sit flat.

Screen Shot 2020-08-05 at 20.47.54Using some thick card paper I created the pleating board y soring the card and folding it into shape, I made two of these boards so that the silk taffeta could sit between them. Using clips I secured the taffeta between the boards and started to steam and press down on my pleating boards. I was very pleased when I had fantastic results straight away.

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Once I had pleated up the fabric I carefully cut out sections to use for the bands on the vandykes.
They were then sewn to the vandykes, right sides together and rolled around to the wrong side where they were whipped down.

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Next I made up the sleeve bands, they were also basted through to the muslin layer and the button placement was thead marked.

Screen Shot 2020-08-05 at 20.51.42When I examined the original dress I measured that the piping sits approximately 1cm away from the edge of the sleeve band, with this in mind I tacked my piping 1cm away from the raw edge with the seam allowances facing outwards. In order for the piping to curve around the pointed ends of the sleeve band I clipped into the piping seamallowence in these areas, this released the piping slightly allowing for it to curve around the points.
I then sewed on a strip of bias cut taffeta, this taffeta strip was sewn on the same stitching line as the piping and would act as binding encasing the raw edge of the sleeve band. As with the piping I had to allow the bias strip to curve around the point of the band, however from examining the original dress I knew that three small pleats were inserted into the strip which allowed it to curve. I applied this technique to the strip and then finished it off but folding it over to the wrong side and whipping it into place.

I then moved onto sewing the sleeve onto the bodice, in order to do this the sleeve had to be smocked down. I took the armhole measurement from the bodice and used this as my guide to smock the sleeve down to fit. This was another long process, I was very nervous about threads snapping so I took it slowly, easing the threads smaller in increments working my way through each row. It took approximately 5 hours to reduce each sleeve. When I was happy with the size and I had tested it fit the armhole I evened out the smocking until I was again happy. The long threads were then tied off to prevent them from loosening.
The sleeve was then inserted into the armhole and back stitched into place.
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I then made covered buttons (1.5cm in diameter) which were sewn directly onto the thread marked position on the sleeve band.

Screen Shot 2020-08-05 at 20.55.22I then moved onto sewing the sleeve onto the bodice, in order to do this the sleeve had to be smocked down. I took the armhole measurement from the bodice and used this as my guide to smock the sleeve down to fit. This was another long process, I was very nervous about threads snapping so I took it slowly, easing the threads smaller in increments working my way through each row. It took approximately 5 hours to reduce each sleeve. When I was happy with the size and I had tested it fit the armhole I evened out the smocking until I was again happy. The long threads were then tied off to prevent them from loosening.
The sleeve was then inserted into the armhole and back stitched into place.

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Next I attached the sleeve band, this was a straightforward process as I knew where the band crossed over on itself and where that crossover point sat on the sleeve. I lined these points up and carefully stitched it into place from the inside of the sleeve. I noted during examining the dress that the band appeared to have tacked at the seam on the sleeve and that the points on the bands had also been stitched down securing them in place. Again from the inside of the sleeve I sewed small tacking stitches through the seam of the sleeve and catching the ‘ditch’ of the piping on the sleeve band, securing it. The points of the sleeve band were also secured in the ‘ditch’ of the piping which further helped hide my stitches securing them to the sleeve.

I decided it was time to make up the skirt, I started with the silk taffeta panels, sewing them together using a back stitch, this process was then repeated using a silesia lining layer.
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When complete I had two tubes of silk and silesia. I thread marked the centre front and the centre back on both to ensure I wouldn’t get muddles when it came to bringing the layers together. I then pressed open the seam allowances on both the silk and silecia layers. With the help of a few classmates the silesia layer was inserted inside the silk layer, wrong sides together, it was very difficult to get the two layers to lay flat with one another on my own so the extra hands were appreciated. I then pinned along the top edge of the skirt making sure all of the seams lined up. I then sewed a running stitch down each seam to join the seams together flush and prevent them from separating.

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I then moved onto hemming the skirt, I knew what the drop of the skirt was from waist to floor thanks to the pattern so I was safe to hem the skirt.
The hem was created by folding up 1 ½”, then ½” of silesia was trimmed away, the remaining ½” of silk taffeta was folded down and a small running stitch was sewn securing the hem in place.
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I then measured up from the hem to mark the waistline, I referenced the pattern to ensure I got the subtle gradient. This was then marked by a running stitch all the way around the skirt.

Next I created the centre back opening, the measurement for this is marked on the pattern which I transferred onto the centre back panel of the skirt. The centre back is then slashed open to this point, the silk taffeta and silesia are then turned inwards (same process used on the sleeve plackets) and whip stitched down. I then sewed a bar tack at the bottom of the slash to prevent it from opening any further

Moving onto pleating up the waistband, I transfered where the pleating finishes and the gathering begins onto my skirt panels. I decided it would be easier to sew in my two lines of gathering stitches before pleating up the waistband. I positioned one line just above the waistline and one just below the waistband.

I pleated the skirt on a stand which I had previously padded up to size, I pinned a petersham tape to the stand at the waistline which I would use to pleat onto (this was purely used to help stabilize the pleats on the stand so I had something secure to pleat onto). Starting at the centre front I pleated the skirt fabric onto the waistband alternating from side to side to ensure it would be even. Once I reached the notched point that indicated to stop pleating I went back and checked all of the pleats and made any minor tweeks if needed. When I was happy I tacked the pleats down using a large herringbone stitch, removing the skirt off the petersham tape in the process. When I was happy the pleats were secure with the herringbone stitch I removed it from the stand.
I moved onto gathering the remainder of the skirt, I got out a measuring tape and pulled in my gathering stitches on the waistline until I had reduced the section of fabric down to 4”, I then tied off the long strands of thread. The skirt was now reduced down to the waist size.

Screen Shot 2020-08-05 at 21.03.37At this point I came back to finishing off the bodice, I started with sewing the piping and bias binding onto the neckline, leaving a little bit extra for finishing off the centre back. The bias binding is used to conceal the raw edge of the piping on the neckline.
Next the vandykes had to be sewn on, the smooth side of the vandykes went on with ease as I was following the construction line for this on the pattern. The pointed side of the vandykes was more difficult as explained in my toile process. There is an additional point added to the pattern for the vandykes which makes it impossible to get it to lay flat against the bodice. With a lot of easing I did my best to get both sides to sit evenly but I could not prevent the wrinkling.
The vandyke was then sewn down in the ‘ditch’ of the piping to hide visible stitching.

Next the piping and bias binding were sewn to the lower edge of the bodice, the bottom of the vandyke is caught during this conseaming its raw edge in the process. Like the neckline the bias binding is folded up to conceal the raw edge of the bodice and piping and then whip stitched into place.

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The centre back was finished by adding piping to the edges of the opening, a strip of taffeta cut on the straight 1 ½” wide is then sewn onto this edge with ¼” use as seam allowance, 1” of the strip is then visible and the remaining ¼” is turn inward and whipped down. This finishes off the centre back placket.

Screen Shot 2020-08-05 at 21.05.43Attaching the waistband was my next step, I decided to test Janet Arnold’s instruction for this to ensure the skirt would fall correctly.
On the bodice pattern there is a notch on the side seam side of the dart, this notch indicates that between the notch points the skirt/waistband is not attached to the bodice but that it is sewn through to the bodice on the other sides of the notches.
I tested this by pinning the skirt onto the bodice from the centre back through to the notch points leaving a gap where the skirt was not pinned to the bodice of about 8” across the centre front. The skirt sagged between these points, the white waistband surely would have been visible as it dropped below the centre front point of the bodice.
Unfortunately I didn’t take a picture at this stage so I have drawn on a picture of the dress to help illustrate what I saw.

Because of this I decided to take another look at the pictures I had taken when examining the dress, focusing on the waistband on the front of the bodice.

Screen Shot 2020-08-05 at 21.06.53Taking a closer look there appears to be threads beyond the notch point which may have once held the waistband in place across the centre front. There are also small holes in the lining which line up with the waistband level which could further indicate that it was sewn beyond that point.

With this information in mind I decided to proceed with attaching the waistband across the centre front of the bodice.

I attached the waistband by first folding the top of the skirt along the waistline (folded so the lining was folded in on itself). This fold was then matched up with the lower edge of the bodice so that the fold lined up over top of the piping. The skirt was then sewn onto the bodice through the piping ditch being sure to catch the fold while doing so. At the notch points I stopped and tied off my threads and then continued from the other notch point round to the centre back. I then lightly pressed down the fold and whip stitched it down to the lining in order to keep it flush with the body and not add extra bulk.

The waistband is then sewn on, the waistband is made from a strip of silesia cut on the straight ¾” wide (2cm). I noted on the original that the waistband folds in on itself so there is now raw top or lower edge. Because of this I cut mine 4cm wide and ironed up 1cm on the lower and top edge.

Screen Shot 2020-08-05 at 21.08.22The waistband strip is then applied evenly over the skirt and bodice join, a running back stitch is then used to sew it onto place along the top and lower edge of the waistband. Between the notch points across the centre front I pinned the waistband to the skirt though the bodice following the straight direction of the waistband before the notch points. This lifted the skirt and fixed it in place preventing it from falling down like in my trial. The waistband is sewn across these points.
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To finish the dress off fastenings were sewn. The original dress closes with metal hooks and hand work loops down the centre back with one single metal loop sitting on the waistline. I replicated this assortment of hand worked loops, metal hooks and single metal bar. The sleeve cuffs are also closed using two metal hooks and two hand worked loops.


Styling

Styling is one of the elements your judged on for the competition, this focuses on how you display the garment when submitting final pictures and displaying it at the conference. You can style your garment as little or as much as you want but the basic expectation is to achieve a period silhouette through period foundation garments. In addition you could create a chemisette, under sleeves, a hat or any sort of clothing or accessory item that complements the garment.
I believe styling items do not need to be sewn in accordance to the period of the main garment, neither of my two styling items were hand sewn and I wasn’t questioned if they were or not. This makes sense as it is the main garment you’re being judged on with the styling items just being used to assist the appearance of your garment.

I used two items to style my my dress, I used the 1830s petticoat I made in second year to give the skirt its full shape, you can read about how I made my 1830s Petticoat Here. I also made a small corded bustle from The Workwoman’s Guide Page 54 Plate 11 fig 31, you can view the book for free online using Google Books Here (Workwoman’s Guide 1838). There is also a copy of the book in the Wimbledon College of Arts Library for my fellow Wimbledon Students!
Admittedly the bustle did not kick out the skirt as much as it should have an I really should have made another that had more volume, this was the only negative feedback I got during judging but I will talk about that more in a bit.

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I displayed my dress on a stand (I worked on this stand throughout construction), I decided not to make a pair of stays for the dress as I felt I achieved a good shape without through padding the stand.
You could also take pictures of the garment on a live model and or in a scenic location but for detail shots I really recommend taking pictures on a stand in a controlled environment to best display your workmanship.



Final Judging

While I can’t speak from personal experience what judging would be like at The Costume Society Conference (though the guidelines do give you a good idea) I can speak from experience what judging is like during a pandemic should that situation arise again!

After being contacted about being selected as a finalist (27th of March 2020) we was told that they planned for judging to go ahead in some physical form but they weren’t sure how, along the way suggesting it could be postponed to as late as September/October 2020.
As lockdown continued we were told that judging would go ahead on the 26th of June 2020 via Microsoft Teams with Michele Clapton on the judging panel. As there was no physical judging, the original powerpoint we sent in would be used for judging and we were told to create an addition three slides on our research to accompany it.

If its not already clear three slides for research is not enough.  I had prepared so much to bring with me for final judging, the full workbook you’ve just read, research notes on the four dresses I viewed, a sample book containing each technique used on the dress in addition to the requested print of the appropriate POF book pages and my patterns. 
I was so, so disappointed that the judging had been condensed down like that in addition to not being able to see the dress in person.
I 100% understand the reasoning behind it but I just felt so deflated by it.

On the 26th of June 2020 judging took place, we each had an allocated time to join the MS Teams call where we would speak face to face (via video) to Michele Clapton for fifteen minutes while Joanna Jarvis and Louise Chapman (members of The Costume Society) listened.
Michele asked all sorts of questions to do with the pattern, issues, examining the dress, time management, fabric selection and the underpinnings.
I was overwhelmed with the incredible positive feedback and it was truly such an honour to hear it come from Michele. She said many lovely things including,
That I evidenced throughout and had an excellent understanding the process… the dress was made with great confidence… that I had excellent time management… I had a key attention to detail…the photography and presentation was excellent and evidenced your methods and final outcomes very well. The only natural feedback I got was regarding the bustle at the back and how it didn’t quite lift the skirt as much as it does in Janet Arnold’s illustration of the dress, which is fair enough and I agree (silently kicking myself).
I was so pleased with myself coming away from the video call, later that day we were emailed the results.

I was awarded The Highly Commended Award (2nd place) and a cash prize of £400. I feel truly honoured to have my work recognised at such a high level.



Post Award Reflection

A few weeks later I received my cheque and certificate in the mail which for me nicely tied a bow on the competition and I could finally call it finished.
I’m really thankful I made the decision to enter the competition, it gave me the opportunity to really push myself and my skill set to create something truly spectacular. I’ve learnt so much about period sewing, my hand sewing skills have greatly improved in both speed and precision. This was also a fantastic research based project too and I’m glad I made contact with Gloucester Museum about examining the dress as it had a huge impact on how I reproduced the dress. It also gave me a good experience in time management as I juggled all of my deadlines in third year. I would come into the studio at 8:30am and leave most days at 8:30pm having worked on the dress all day and somehow managing to write my dissertation along side it.
I am disappointed that The Costume Society Conference could not go ahead for physical judging as I feel that would have really enhanced the experience.

I really recommend doing this competition, it addresses so many disciplines as a costume interpreter and executing them all with precision will undoubtedly reward you with a stand out portfolio piece. It shows research based skills, pattern toiling skills and period construction skills all of which are highly valued.

I’m not going to go in to any detail at this stage but I believe this competition has already opened doors for me within the film industry. I’ve also potentially found a temporary home for the dress before it’s sold. Things are looking good, I’m just waiting for lockdown restrictions to ease more for the film industry to get moving again so I can get to work!


Big thank you to all of the costume staff at Wimbledon College of Arts, my friends for their support (and tea breaks!), my class mates (sorry for taking up an entire cutting table for a term!), Gloucester Museum, National Trust Killerton and all of the lovely support I received online along the way.

If you would like to view images of my dress you can find a collection on my instagram @nivera.costumes
If you’re interested in hiring me please do get in touch using my email address nivera.costumes@gmail.com

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1905 Sanakor Plunge front corset

As a self directed project at university I decided to make a corset to keep further my corsetry skills. For this is chose the 1905 Sanakor plunged front corset (extant corset is held in the Symington Collection Leicestershire) because it was a cut I have never attempted before and looked to be a unique challenge. This corset presented many new techniques and I learnt a lot of new valuable skills.


As I’m using ‘Stays and Corsets: Volume 2’ (Mandy Barrington) for the construction of this corset I followed the instructions for the pattern drafting process. I’ve made a few corsets from the previous book volume so this process is quite familiar to me.
I started by drafting the block to Imogen’s measurements, I found that as she has a small bust it was better to use her hips as the widest measurement on the block (bust is suggested for this measurement in the book). The block is then widened by 30cm in the side of the block, this allows for additional space for drafting the corset patterns.
Additional measurements are added to the block such as point to point, high hip to further aid in plotting the pattern of the corset.

I decided to make a toile out of drill as I didn’t feel comfortable with my skills to make it up in my duchess satin first time. My biggest concern was marking the satin so the drill toile seemed to be the safest option.
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The pattern pieces were all cut out from two layers of cotton drill with one inch seam allowance. The pieces were tacked to indicate bust, waist, high hip and hip.
For the toile I focused on fit rather than construction, this meant I could speedily sew the toile together, get the fit alterations right and then move onto the real corset with much more time to work on perfecting the overall construction.
The toile corset was sewn with seams to the outside with 1” seam allowance (and shape adjustment space) added all the way around the pattern pieces. The centre front was sewn together as a seam to replicate the busk and the toile was fully boned using synthetic whalebone which were numbered corresponding with the boning channels on my patterns so they could be easily identified and recycled into the finished corset.

The first fitting went well with only a few alterations necessary. The bust seam needed to be taken in a bit as it was gaping and the side to centre back below the waist needed taking in also.
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These alterations were safety pined and then chalked so that this new information could be transferred and sewn for a final fitting.


The second fitting was a success with the alterations fitting Imogen perfectly.

Now that the pattern was finalised it could be retraced and used for the final corset, I traced off the new patterns by dismantling one side of the corset, laying pattern paper over carbon paper and using a tracing wheel through the pattern pieces to transfer the new information.


Once all of the pattern pieces had been transferred using the carbon I used a pattern master to clean up the lines and straighten boning channels.
No alterations were made to the busk panel so that panel was left as is to be used in the final corset.


As the original 1905 corset feature a while lining I decided to replicate this in my version of it. The top fabric was cut from black double duchess satin and the inside was cut from white coutil. 1.5cm was added to all of the pattern pieces with an extra 1” of satin added to the busk panel. It was this panel I was most worried about messing up so I wanted as much room for that as possible so any mistakes could be amended.

IMG_0066I started construction with the back panels, It was difficult to work out the construction of these from the images of the extant garment I had (no further explanation in the book) so I decided to sew the satin to the coutil wrong sides together on the centre back, press, fold them back so right sides were out and then press so the satin rolled over the centre back with a slight lip.

After making my 1820’s corded stays where rather than back stitching my stitch lines I left my threads long, threaded them to the wrong side and then tied them off. I found it difficult to back stitch on this corset as tying threads back makes them look so clean. So I decided on tying my threads back on this corset for all of my boning channels/visible lines of stitching.

On the side panel there was an internal boning chanel made up from tape that was hand sewn into place, for this I used petersham tap and extended the tape into the seam so it could be caught when sewing, the tape was slip stitched into place, catching the coutil layer and not the satin.
I have sewn busks into corsets before but for this corset decided to add a small facing/modesty panel to the hook side which would prevent any skin from showing in the small gap when worn. This was done by sewing the hook side of the busk 5mm to the side of the centre front line (this included sewing along the top edge so that it could be bagged out in the next step), folding this back with right sides showing and then sewing the centre front line of stitching. The eye side of the busk was sewn along the centre front, skipping where the eyes would poke through the seam (right sides together) again including sewing the top edge of the busk panel so that it too could be bagged out.

IMG_0178I have sewn busks into corsets before but for this corset decided to add a small facing/modesty panel to the hook side which would prevent any skin from showing in the small gap when worn. This was done by sewing the hook side of the busk 5mm to the side of the centre front line (this included sewing along the top edge so that it could be bagged out in the next step), folding this back with right sides showing and then sewing the centre front line of stitching. The eye side of the busk was sewn along the centre front, skipping where the eyes would poke through the seam (right sides together) again including sewing the top edge of the busk panel so that it too could be bagged out.

IMG_0181The eye side of the busk was then inserted and using a zipper foot fixed into place. The hook side was marked on the wrong side of the satin with chalk and I used an awl to poke the holes through from the wrong side. When all of the holes had been made the hooks were carefully inserted through them. I later used steam to shrink the fibers of the satin back together closing the holes around the hooks. A zipper foot was then used to sew the hook side of the busk into place.

CBAF22CC-AE4A-4791-9F6A-2BAA9D9182E6Next the bust panel was sewn to the busk panel, Hester (one of our lovely studio technicians) and I had to have a long discussion about this and spent about an hour examining pictures of the extant Sanakor corset and another surviving white variant of the Sanakor. We decided in the end that the bust and busk panels are first assembled with the coutil right sides together. Then the satin bust panel is line up over the top of this right sides together and sewn. This encases the top edge of the bust panel so that it can be bagged out after clipping into it and trimming the seam allowance. The seam is then pressed adding a slight roll/lip to the bust panel edge. A line of stitching is then sewn around the new bust seam approximately 2mm from the edge/seam line this helps to fix everything in place.

Then the boning channels for the bust seam could be sewn, like the boning channels elsewhere on the corset these were tied to the wrong side so that there was no visible back stitching.

 

Next the side seams were prepared, I secured the cotton petersham tape I was using as a waist tape over the waistline, ensuring it was long enough to be caught into the front to side seam.
The side to bust panels were then sewn together right sides together, making sure the bagged out bust top edge lined up with the tacking stitches on the side seam for a smooth finish.

The seam allowances could then be trimmed down. This seam is covered with a taped boning channel so a length of tape was cut to size and then pinned evenly over the seam.
This was followed by using a ‘stitch in the ditch’ foot from the right side of the corset. This foot lines up perfectly with the seam and stitches in the ditch of the seam resulting in beautiful invisible stitching. These threads were also tied to the wrong side. Then boning channels are sewn on either side of the stitch in ditch seam.

IMG_0202The side to centre back panels were then sewn together in the same fashion. Although the waist tape was not caught in this initial seam. After the initial seam had been sewn it was pressed and trimmed, the waist tape was then brought across following the waist line (keeping it taunt in this process) and pinned to keep it in place while the tapped seam was sewn.

966F86B6-2C50-4158-B2D1-602674EA4096The stitch in the ditch foot was used for this process and boning channels were again sewn on either side of the seam.
Lastly the waist tape is caught into the final eyelet channel bone channel. This bone chenel is also tapped, the waist tape was brought up to where the bone hennl would be sewn and then was folded back on itself a fraction to prevent any raw/exposed edges. The taped boning channel was then sewn over this.

A98831A1-C5B4-4706-8219-A1430FDEBD38With the boning channels all sewn the main construction process was finished and it was time to move on to bias binding the edges and inserting the bones into the channels.
The top edge had to be bias bound first as the top edge of the bust panel had already been closed when it was bagged out and there would be no other way to insert the bones than from the lower edge.
Hester and I had another in depth conversation about how the edges were finished, it was difficult to tell from the pictures I had found of the extant corset but we finally settled on the top edge being bias bound with white tape, the tape was sewn 2mm above the white tacking lines so that when the corset was trimmed down and the bias binding rolled over no bias would be visible. Once this binding was sewn and whip stitched down the bones could be inserted into the channels. As I hadn’t filed the edges on the synthetic whalebone down during the toile corst I had to do this first to limit the chance of any of them bursting out and creating a hole. Flat steel bones were used on the centre back boning channels and these were capped. I had always had issues with the caps coming off steel boning but Hester taught me that you can glue the caps on with ‘uhu glue’, which seems extremely obvious but had never occurred to me before and I will be including that in all of my future steel boned corset practices!
IMG_0230With the bones inserted the lower edge of the corset could be finished off.
The binding on the lower edge is something I’ve never seen or heard of on a corset before. There’s a strip of visible black satin bias running along the bottom edge but the black bias is faced with white bias binding which is turned to the wrong side.
The black satin bias binding is sewn on wrong sides together 1cm above the white tacking line, this is then pressed down and the white tacking line is then restitched through the black bias binding, white bias binding is then sewn on 2mm below the white tacking line, the remaining fabric below is then trimmed and the white bias binding is then rolled to the wrong side (whip stitched in place) so that the seam joining the black satin binding to the white bias binding sits exactly at the bottom of the corset and the white tape is not visible.
Eyelets are then inserted into the eyelet chanel, I followed the eyelet placement indicated in the book and spread out 9 eyelets evenly with one eyelet sitting on the waist.
A ribbon is then sewn 2cm above the busk on the bust panel so that it can be tied when worn offering a little more bust support/modestly.

The corset was then complete.


I am extremely pleased with the outcome of this self directed project. I feel as though I have accomplished all that I set out to do with it and more. I made up my first corset using satin and successfully completed it without marking the satin which I was terrified of doing. The new shape was a challenge but I feel as though it came together rather successfully. Alterations were needed in fitting but nothing that took away from the overall silhouette. I inserted my first waist tape into a corset which thankfully wasn’t as difficult as I expected it to be. I got to have another experience fitting a corset which I feel was extremely beneficial to my skills as an interpreter. I think I now have a better ‘eye’ for fitting and can now assess what needs altering with little input from technicians. Finally I am so pleased with myself with this finished corset, its so clean and the lines are sharp. I have received many compliments in the studio on it and I’m just so proud! Corsetry is a still I want to use more in the future and I feel as though completing this corset was a major step in the right direction.


I’ve noticed that this post is receiving a lot of traffic recently so I decided to add the additional pictures I took of this corset in February 2020 modelled by my friend Imogen who the corset was made for (and she made the lovely combinations!)

I hope to make more corsets over the holidays, I’m still determined to finish my ‘Corseted through the Century Challenge’ so I’d like to work on that over the holidays as well as a few other costume and day to day clothes for myself.

Thank you for reading, comments are always welcome!

-Nivera

Examining a 1905 Corset V&A T .228-1968

Today I had the pleasure of visiting the Clothworker Centre for the first time. I was able to examine two corsets, spending an hour with each one. This post will share my notes and photos from the first of the two corsets I examined, I will share my notes and photos  for the second of the two corsets in the next few days.

The first corset is from 1905 made by S&S Corsets and its museum number is T. 228-1968


Front Observations

Blue cotton twill has faded much over time and the corset is now a very pale blue and mostly appears to be off white.
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Straight busk, five hooks and eyes. The holes for the eyes are lightly frayed. The hook side of the busk has ’S&S’ printed onto each individual hook.
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The busk is inserted  between a facing. Satin (used for the boning channels) has also been caught into the facing which has been top stitched down, this encases the busk. A braid of flossing has been sewn at the bottom of the busk, I imagine this it mirrored at the top of the busk also to prevent any movement.

 

 

Flossing adorns each boning channel at the bottom of the bone, the top of the boning channel does not appear to have flossing, lace covers this area. The flossing design is a cross pattern consisting of five strands of flossing that do not intersect with one another.
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The bone inserted on the side of the corset consists of a similar flossing design though on a larger scale, this flossing design does intersect with each other in a weave pattern. This floss pattern is made up using 16 threads.  This boning channel is much larger, referred to as ‘wide bones’ in archive description.
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Cotton ribbon insert lace decorates the top edge of the corset, the cotton lace is dagged with two rows of ribbon insets approximately 5mm part from each other. The ribbon inserts appear to be white/cream though originally could have been blue to match the body of the corset.
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Boning channels are external and appear to be made up from satin which is topstitched with a small stitch length into place.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Back Observations
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IMG_9859Between wide bone positioned on the side of the corset and the eyelet panel there is a section of three bones clustered together. The cluster of boning channels also feature flossing. There are four strands of thread to make up the cross over flossing design, the design does not incorporate  wearing and the flossing lays over each of each other.

 

 

 

img_9860.jpgThe eyelet panel is boned on either side, on the CB the bone runs the full length of the CB. The bone on the opposite side of the eyelets runs from the bottom edge until the third eyelet from the top and stops, rust has visibly bleed through the twill here. Continuing from where this bone stops two bones half its size continue upwards.

 

 

 

 

 

IMG_9861There are 17 eyelets in total running the eyelet panel, the topmost one is completely hidden by lace, the one lower to this is half covered by the end of the lace.
Both bones on the eyelet panel have a braided flossing very similar to what holds the busk in place.

Simple bias binding runs the bottom edge off the corset, top stitch in place presumably to catch the underside of the bias tape in the process as one full stitch motion.

 

Interior Observations
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IMG_9867Flossing thread is visibly prick stitched through with very little thread showing through. No flossing along top bones, no prick stitching visible.

 

 

 

 

 

IMG_9871Small ’S&S’ corset label on left hand back side with 23” written on it, only a short distance away on the side closest to the eyelet panel is ’23’ written in pencil. Indication of waist measure.

 

 

 

 

 

 

IMG_9870A waist tape featuring more branding from ’S&S’ is still very vibrant, the statue of liberty is featured also. The waist tape which is stamped in blue cursive writing on the right hand side with ‘NOUVELLE FORM DROIT DEVANT’ and on the left side with ‘THE S & S CORSET REGISTERED made in Belgium’.

Thread holding lace down is visible along top edge, long running stitch with small pricks to catch the lace. Thread is also visible running through the bias binding.

IMG_9872Eyelet panel appears to have been made with excess fabric on the CB so that it can be turned back to the wrong side, reenforcing the panel at the same time. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Additional Photos

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I’m really pleased I got the opportunity to examine these extant corsets, corsetry is still something that I’m very interested in, seeing these up close and being able to soak up all of the craftsmanship was an amazing experience.
I know for sure I’ll be back at the Clothworkers Centre sometime soon. I’m starting to weigh up my third year project options and making something that I can view in person through the Victoria and Albert museum archives should benefit the project. There are a few pieces I have in mind but I’ll wait for our briefing in a few weeks time before making any big decisions.

Thanks for reading,

-Nivera

1870s Corded and Quilted Corset

The latest corset I made apart of my Corseted through the Century Challenge is a lovely 1870s quilted and corded corset.

This corset caught my eye as soon as I opened ‘Stays and Corsets’ though it seamed intimidating at first but I’m happy to report I really enjoyed this process and learnt a lot along the way.
For this corset I used a light royal blue cotton drill (two layer corset), all boning channels, quilting and cording sewn in a gold thread while interior construction was sewn in a matching blue. And of course the flossing, sewn in a matching gold embroidery floss.

Below is a picture of my materials alongside the surviving historical corset my pattern is based on.
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The pattern was drafted following the books instructions, with alterations to the waist measurement as I’ve since found this book on some bodies isn’t reliable with maintaining the suggested waist size and often the waist measurement will be 3+ inches larger than it should be at no mistake of the pattern drafter. So I downsized the waist size by three sizes, I’d tried two previously which resulted in a full closure corset without reduction (too large).
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The fabric was then cut out (on the fold) with added seam allowance.
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Carbon paper was then used to transfer markings to the wrong side (lining) pattern pieces. Stitching lines (boning channels) and seam allowances. The wrong side of top gusset and hip pad pieces also had seam allowance and grain lines transferee in carbon paper. This makes inserting them easier and grading out the quilting.

I decided to sew the quilting first which now I’m looking back on it would have been better to sew the two layers together in this process rather than just the ‘top’ fabric. I used the grain to ‘set’ the direction of the quilting and then used the edge of my quilting foot as a width guide for the squares which are approximately 7mm/7mm in size. This was a full days work of sewing
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Next was sewing the gussets, I hadn’t sewn gussets into a corset before so this was a new technique for me. Because I used the two layer method for this corset I assembled each layer gusset into the corset individually so when I was finished I still had two separated layers. I don’t know if this was the correct way of assembling a corset like this however due to the cording and boning (mostly vertical) it made sense to me to keep the layers separate so that they were joined as I sewed the cording and boning in.
Everything was carefully basted before being sewn by matching with the basting removed when everything was complete.

I had originally intended to sew the gussets in with the colour matched blue but decided to go with the gold and keep up with the contrast theme. I decision I’m very happy with.
And finally the hip padding (not sure thats the right term but its what I’m going with), this took a very long time to baste in correctly and I kept having my needle catch where it wasn’t supposed to. You know when something puckers and it looks horrible but the cause is something so small? That’s what kept happening, one stitch too many!
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The busk was then inserted which joined the two layers together. I’m getting much quicker at inserting busks.
My next step was to start inserting the boning and cording working from the CF (busk) outwards. This was lengthy. I also had to be really cautious of keeping the two layers together so they mirrored without a shift. I did start with sewing a boning channel/cord on one side then doing the same on the other side but this just became a hassle so I completed one side then the other. To ensure my boning/cording lines of sewing hit the right mark on the hip pad boning line I sewed a running stitch on the top layer where it would be sewn later down the track. This just meant I could sew the lines to where they needed to be a whip the running stitch out to be sewn in properly when it made sense.
Hopefully the below picture makes more sense than I am! (The red stitches are just tacking lines to hold everything on place, its the gold running stitch we’re looking at!)
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I continued cording and sewing the boning channels until it looked something like this,
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Keeping cording straight is defiantly an art and is something I am yet to master but as a whole I’m extremely pleased with this outcome!
But of course, the other side has to be sewn too. Which went about as smoothly as you’d expect. Apart from that time I read my placement lines wrong and started cording about an inch below where it was supposed to start.img_8603.jpg
All of that was unpicked and I had to start again.
One thing I really like about vertical cording is that you can see that progress your making which I found really motiving.
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When all of the cording and boning channels were sewn it was time for eyelets and steel boning. I need up using the eyelet press at uni for this corset as I didn’t bring a hammer with me to London for term (do you blame me?). I made a big o’l error here but we’ll get to that.
For boning I used a combination of flat steel and spiral steel. The spiral steel was used for the bust and hip pad channels while the flat steel was used everywhere else.
Satin bias binding was used to bind the edges, I think it looks really elegant and the slightly darker blue is a nice contrast. For flossing I used the original corset flossing as reference. Its very simple but its position and shape works really well with the overall design.
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The first try on reviled a few things.
Lets start by ignoring my wonky busk in this picture, it does sit centrally but I attempted to move (my boobs) while I was wearing it which shifted its position.

Things I learnt making this corset

  • I now know that the cotton drill I bought for my recent four corsets has a stretch to it. It was something I didn’t really notice but now that I’ve put two and two together it really makes sense that this corset may measure 24″ at the waist when flat but 26″ at the waist when worn. Because it stretched. It hurts my soul a little bit with close to thirty hours put into this corset but its taught me the valuable lesson on properly identifying my fabrics before using them. Would it have been more beneficial to have learnt this lesson three corsets ago? Yes!
    Regardless of this utterly stupid mistake I hold my head high knowing that this is still a very good example of my skill, it is a lovely corset and 2″ of reduction is still reduction at the end of the day. Its a very comfortable corset to wear (thats probably the stretch HA) and I’d go as far as saying its the most comfortable one I’ve made.
  • Reenforcing the eyelet panel is a must and on this occasion I forgot. I did add an extra 2″ to the CB so that they could be turned inwards creating a facing/also reinforcing the eyelet channel. However, when I was finishing off the last of the cording and boning towards the CB I cut down the 2″ so I’d ‘just’ have enough to turn them to the inside. I realised pretty quickly the mistake I had made. What I should have done is open it up and sewn in a facing which would also cover the eyelet channel and reenforce it. But in my head I thought I’d be okay and that it would be alright just this once. Cue eyelets tearing on the first try on. The eyelets only tore at the waistline (luckily none tore out), I was able to ‘save’ them by binding the hell out of them and secure them. It probably didn’t help that my fabric had a stretch to it either, this will be a running joke until I’ve learn my lesson!!
  • Spiral steel should ideally be used in any curved boning channel. Initially I tried using flat steel in the over bust channels but it ‘cut’ into my bust resulting in an unflattering and unnatural shape. These steels were replaced with spiral steels and the shape was greatly improved. I wouldn’t say this was something I learnt, I did know this before hand it was more something I accepted. I’ve been really stingy when using spiral steel and I shouldn’t be. It is a brilliant material to work with.
  • Cording is cool. I really enjoyed cording this corset, although is was straightforward and repetitive it kept me thinking constantly. With my next corded corset I’d like to focus more on symmetry as I know this corset isn’t symmetrical, I think to accomplish this I’ll need to use a cording needle which I will experiment with.
  • I need more practice with inserting gussets, I’ll give the ones I did on this corset a pass but I’d like to do better next time around

Overall I’m extremely pleased with this corset. I think its beautiful and a true statement in terms of my skill growing. I’m going to continue challenging myself with each corset I make and endeavour to make the next one better than the last.

To finish up here are a few clear detail shots and a (grainy) shot showing off the waist reduction.
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This corset only gives me 2″ of waist reduction but I’m amazed at how dramatic it makes my waist look. I am hoping to get additional photos of this corset over the holidays and I will make a new post containing those pictures as well as adding them to this post when they’re available. I have an 1820’s corset to complete over the holidays and I’d love to get the base of an 1880’s corset made as well which I will be updating here.

Comments are always appreciated, thank you very much for reading.

-Nivera

Examining an 1880’s Dress

Today I had the pleasure of examining an authentic dress from the 1880’s. I was lucky enough to have been lent this dress from my mothers friend who owns a vintage fashion shop. I was beyond excited when she pulled it out and finally had the time to examine it today.
Unfortunately there isn’t much history to the dress, there aren’t any identifying prints or names to be found on it anywhere. Aside from the label from the vintage shop identifying is as “Victorian, Silk, Skirt + Jacket c. 1880” there isn’t anything else to go on, which is a shame! I would have loved to have know who wore this dress or at least find out where it was made.
The dress itself is an olive green in colour although the colour didn’t pick up too well on my camera and reflected more of an shimmery grey/green.


Please note: I am no expert, I do one day have the hopes of becoming a dress historian/historical dress expert but at the age of 19 and only entering my second year of costume interpretation this October that is not the case.. Yet! Any comments made following in this blog post are assumptions based on my current knowledge and guess work. I would love to make a follow up post after speaking to one of my tutors and getting their opinion on these photos.
If you have anything to add to these photos/post please leave a comment!



Bodice Front

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Bodice Back

Skirt Front
Skirt front 1
Skirt Back + Gathered Detail

Skirt Back 1Skirt Back 2

Sleeves


Full Dress
Full Dress 2Full Dress 3
Inside Bodice Detail


Inside skirt detail


I want to start by saying I was amazed by just how heavy the jacket/skirt was, I wasn’t expecting it to be that heavy but as the skirt and jacket are fully lined (canvas I think) as well as the silk it does make sense for it to have some weight to it.
I think the jacket has had some alterations after they were initially made.  The jacket trim appears to have been resewn on (it looks to be original but I’m not sure), I say this because the trim is current sewn on with what looks to be a long (hand sewn) running stitch with a cream (it may have been white at some stage) thread. This stitching is quite obvious and just appears to have been done in order to tack the original trim in place. I would imagine the original with trim was starting to come off which was why this was done. Alternatively it could be the original stitching (using a contrasting colour for some reason) but I’m not too inclined to believe this as it does look quite sloppy where other original stitching is fine and precise. There also a few places on the jacket where a blue thread has been used which is out of place with the rest of the garment, this mostly appears on the pipped edges of the jacket. After doing some research into fastenings in the Victorian era I believe the hooks in the bodice are all originals as well as the two on the skirt. I was fascinated by how small the eyelets were that the hooks attached to, they’re so finely sewn and ever so small. Clearly I need to practice my hand sewn eyelets more. I adore the sleeves, the pleating thats gone into them is lovely. I like the style of having the pleating at the top half of the sleeve and then finishing with a two piece sleeve. The bottom half looks as though it would have been fitted. The front of the skirt looks as though there was stitching forming an inverted triangle (though it wouldn’t pick up on camera with the sheen), perhaps some sort of decorative panel that had been removed. This could of course just be the result of the silk being pulled but I thought it was worth mentioning. I believe the velvet sitting just below the skirt hem is a dust ruffle of sorts, it was quite firm, likely lined with canvas as well.

This was a very fascinating exercise for me and is something I want to do more frequently through museum visits to the archives. As I’m very focused on corsets at the moment I would love to see what the Victoria and Albert museum has hidden away. I recently bought the VA book on ’19th Century Fashion in Detail’ which has shown me there is much, much more behind closed doors! I really want to do more historic dress research with this coming academic year.


So what do you think of this wonderful dress? If you have anything to add please do, as said earlier these are just my assumptions!

Thank you for reading,
Nivera

Customising a Dress Form

I current live in London nine months of the year and sew for all twelve months. When I moved to London I decided not to bring my Singer dress form with me because I knew when I went home for visits brining it with me would be an issue (that and it wouldn’t fit in the car on the drive up to London). I decided on buying a cheap non adjustable dress form off Amazon instead which I would keep in London and have my adjustable form for at home. As im sure many of you know non adjustable dresss forms are a pain as they’re never quite your exact measurements. I shopped around a little bit and eventually decided on a Size 8/10 Dress Form with the intention of padding it up. I’ve lost a lot of weight in the past year (still losing weight now) and I currently sit between a size 10 and 12 so the 8/10 size seamed perfect to pad up and eventually take away from (the padding) in order to best suit my size.

Here is the process on how I went about doing just that!

 

Materials you’ll need,

•Dress form (size smaller SUGGESTED) Ideally the dress form should have a cover too.

•1 meter of thin quilt batting, I found 1m was enough for me but depending on how much you have to add you may need more. Alternatively you could use thinker batting but I found the thinner batting easier to work with as you could create more gradual shapes.

•Dressmaker pins (these are the metal ones without colourful tips on the end)

•plastic wrap (optional)

•Fabric scissors

•Felt tip pen

•Silicon bust filler (optional, you can just use an old bra)

•Your measurements! Please write them down somewhere so they’re easy to access while padding.

 

Tutorial Time

I started with the bust area and then worked my way down to the waist and hips.

Because the bust needed filling the most I bought a silicone bust filler to help keep the shape correct (you can also use an old bra!). First I traced the general shape of the bust filler onto quilt batting,
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Through trial and error and lots of re pinning every five seconds I found that I needed two layers of batting under the bust filler as well as two layers of the batting continuing around my back in order to meet my bust circumference.
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It’s really important to keep checking your measurements as your going.

I then set about patterning the area under the bust, this took some refining… Thankfully the thinner quilt batting does have some stretch to it which makes it so much easier to manipulate over curves.
9d2f56e70b874131bfb026aa62abe8e9b9e53315v2_hqI was actually quite surprised by how easy things were going! I used my measuring tape to ensure things would be symmetrical. Most of my pattern pieces consisted of front bust, back bust, front waist, back waist etc…
304ec8006d0ea97a4e0c991347e13f589663b8c4v2_hqI was really lucky and found that doubling the quilt batting for all of my patterns resulted in my measurements.

The back looked like this,

3fb4d0c628326e48e094624257c28aeccd860520v2_hqMake sure that you match where the batting should meet perfectly! Otherwise little gaps can appear and the dress form won’t be as smooth.

I continued with the hips which I decided to make into two large sections (following my previous pattern work) rather than splitting it up. There wasn’t as much shape to curve around and the batting wrapped around perfectly!
8c46c377cd23f29a6212b7a69d7894d32414599fv2_hqNext I patterned above the bust on the front and back.

The bust front was a bit more of an awkward shape and I do recommend using lots of pins to keep the batting in place and to ensure it lays flat!
7a5afb300814ba92734c5ab9e15b5d20c4d5386fv2_hqYou can see I used a lot of pins here!!!

At this point you are kind of done although if you want to you can cover the quilt batting in plastic wrap. This will help ‘set’ the batting and hold it in place as well as keep pins from moving too much.
4b785cfe0258ebb186767df866842d87d928e1e9v2_hqI do recommend getting a friend or family member to help with this so you can apply the wrap as tight as possible.

That step is optional!! If you want to throw the cover back on straight away you can do that too!

Speaking of covers, this is what mine looked like when complete!

The sharpie is visible on the quilt batting through the cover, this could be fixed by trimming away these fibers before putting the cover on. In all honesty I wasn’t bothered by it and it won’t be something I change until I alter the dress form again. Maybe I’ll dye my cover lilac, that would be cute…

So what do you think! Is it something you’d look into knowing dress forms can be altered cheaply? I literally spent £1 on the quilt batting for this project, everything else I had in my room. It’s certainly something to look into! Do tell me if you use this tutorial or find it useful!


Spring break is a week away for me now and I’ve finished all of my work for the term so I’m looking forward to a stressless week ahead!
I’m really happy my dress form is accurate to my measurements now and its made me a lot more motivated for making things again! I’m hoping to take a huge step forward with my ballgown over the spring break but we’ll see how that goes with my work shifts again. I do want to get the new petticoat made and I plan to make a new corset when I’m back in London for my third term.
I keep you all update that’s for sure!

Thanks for reading,

-Nivera

Costume for Theatre and Screen Starts Tomorrow!

I started University just over a month ago and our first unit was not relevant to making costumes so I’m just going skip over it as its not that interesting!
Tomorrow marks the first day of my costume course which is really exciting. We’re starting off with corsets so I’m happy to have some previous experience going into the unit.
Each week (I’m planning on Saturday) I’m going to be posting a diary type blog post where I’ll talk about what I did in that week which I’ll be filing under one category. I’m really interested in documenting my progress both in and out of class so later I can look back on my posts and hopefully see some progress.
My at home project for October was making 18th century foundation garments which I’ll slowly being releasing posts of this month. I’m hoping to make a 18th century Redingote this month to go over said foundation garments so I’ll also be updating the designing process and the pattern drafting here too. Unfortunately October and September were really slow months for me and I was unable to update but thats defiantly changing this month onwards with weekly posts again.

And thats it really! Just a short sweet update on things to come!

Thank you for reading
-Nivera

Crinoline Construction, Let’s make Simplicity 9764

I’ve been planing to start on this costume for how long now? I’m hoping to make and shoot a 1860’s ballgown all before university starts, is it ambitious? Yes but I’ve made a start!

The pattern we’re using is Simplicity 9764 which is apart of the fashion historian collection. It’s an eleven hoop crinoline making it perfect for historical dress and cosplay!
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I believe this pattern is currently out of print (no worries as it’s frequently rebranded and sold under new names) so the best place to get one is online. Places like EBay and Amazon are great places to look. I got mine on EBay for £15, unopened. I highly suggest you try and find unopened ones as you can never fully trust how well others look after their used patterns!

Materials you’ll need.

All of this is stated on the packet but here’s a quick run down.

•4m of a medium/heavy weight material. I used bleached Calico.

•24 of twill tape. This is what will be used to create the boning channels.

•27m of 12mm wide plastic covered steel boning. (I used 10mm because I couldn’t find 12mm where the shipping wasn’t insane, it makes no difference)

•Hooks and Eyes.

•Disappearing ink pen (Also know as friction/fabric pens)

•Thread (lots of it!)

•Fabric scissors

•Top stitching thread in contrasting colour

•Top stitching thread in white

•Tape measure

•Heavy duty Duct Tape

•Wire cutters

And of course a trusty sewing machine.The crinoline is made up of five pattern pieces. The waistband and the skirt panels.
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The pattern pieces are quite large so give yourself some room and cut them out.
0ff26e1f2a60f60028a0f6f578a16dbe3bc7ebc2_hqI like to iron my pattern after cutting them out, this makes sure they’re flat with no creases.
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Then pin your patterns to the fabric and cut them out!

MAKE SURE YOU TRANSFER THE BONING CHANNEL LINES OVER TO YOUR FABRIC BEFORE CUTTING!!!
I cut my fabric out before transferring the lines over and it was a pain to re-pin them and then trace the lines out. Make sure to use your disappearing ink pen for this!

Also check out my sweet purple fabric scissors. My last pair of scissors died cutting adhesive velcro, RIP.
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373a3534e462f8bdec6340935415230f569c8b4a_hqOnce all of the pieces are cut out sew them together making sure to take notice of the seam that’s finished with a narrow hem.
It makes a hella nice cloak when all the seams are sewn.
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Back to the narrow hem! This my first time sewing one and although the sewing pattern does explain how to sew one it confused me. I decided to look up a tutorial and found This Tutorialwhich is super helpful and simplifies it down with lots of pictures!

They’re pretty simple, once you know what you’re doing!
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This will become the opening for the crinoline.
Next up is the waistband and gathering the top edge. Straight away I’m going to say cut the waistband pattern from the petticoat (apart of the same pattern pack) and double the fabric. The waistband intended for the crinoline is tiny and and just a genuine pain in the ass. I tried following the pattern using the original waistband and it was too small, came apart and didn’t even look like a waistband. I just didn’t work for me, I probably did something wrong but I found the petticoat pattern to be a great alternative.
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///Note: I changed the waistbands over after completing the crinoline///

The next step is to gather the skirt up. Now the instructions say to use a long machine stitch with a heavy thread.
Basically two lines of basting stitches using top stitching thread. Make sure to use a contrasting coloured thread.
Now when I did this and stated gathering it all up and the top stitching thread snapped. And I’d used both a bobbin and a spool of top stitching thread so it should have been secure as hell. I brushed it off and thought it just twisted it accidentally which made the thread more brittle. So I sewed the lines of stitching again and it snapped again…
So I decided it would be easier and more reliable to hand sew the gathers myself. This surprisingly wasn’t as time consuming as I thought it would be!
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Once all of the gathering is in place and it’s gathered to your waist band size. Sew the waist band on!
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The bottom edge is hemmed and this creates the bottom two boning channels.
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The others are created with the twill tape.
This is the time consuming part! Yay!
On the WRONG side starting from the back seam pin the twill tape centred over the lines you drew to indicate the boning channel all the way round the crinoline leaving at least an inch over lap when you get back to where you started. Make sure to leave a three inch opening so you can insert the boning later!

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I highly recommend doing one at a time it’s a lot easier to manage and if you’re like me you won’t have enough (good🙃straight🙃long) pins to do more than one at a time!
Once the twill tape is pinned in place sew it on either side of the tape as close to the edge as possible.
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Then repeat that nine times and try not to lose your mind.
But if you do, that’s okay.
We have a weekly sessions you can attended. This week we have a box of kittens to cheer everyone up after we talk about our feelings.

It took me around 11 hours to sew the boning channels in (with breaks).
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It looks so pretty and drapy ahhh. The next day I started on inserting the boning into the channels. I got my boning from Sew Curvy Sew Curvy is run by a really lovely team and I recommend buying from them!

Onto the hoops!4c9a8d4ad469e644d464316b74fec1f6ac64f3fa_hqYou’ll need your wire cutters now!
Steel boning is pretty sharp even with the plastic covering. The sharp edges are sharp enough to pierce the twill tape and your base fabric so it’s best to cover them up! This also makes inserting it a lot easier as it won’t snag on anything. You can get caps to put on the end of boning but heavy duty duct tape works just as well!

The instructions does have a chart to indicate how long each hoop should be,
f30b8b2ff35be17aa8591dc3f2099e2bb29d931b_hqBut I wanted quite a full crinoline so I just inserted the bonging while still on the roll and cut it to size once it made the full circle. Do what ever you feel most comfortable with🤷🏼‍♀

Before inserting the boning I covered the end with the duct tape. I’d cut of a section wider then the boning and tape half of it to the boning.
fed228b3dd8d98f425c2e3224a4c451c168d9a37_hqThen fold it over and press the sides where the tape meets. And then cut the excess off the sides. And it’s ready to be inserted into a channel!

It’s pretty simple to guide the boning around the channel just be carful where any seams are. When the end meets itself again leave about an inch of overlap. Then tape the end you just cut and bind the two ends together using the tape. You should have some overlapping twill tape as well so pin that over the hole you left for the boning and hand sew in place.
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Repeat this eleven times!
Once you’re finished inserting the boning and sewing the channels closed there are just a few things left to do.

You’ll need to sew sets of hook and eyes down the opening and to the waistband to create the closure.
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And three laces needed to be sewn on the inside to each of the top three hoops. This will pull the front of the crinoline towards you more and push the back outwards for the 1860’s silhouette. This is of course optional if that’s not the look you’re going for!

Here’s a picture from the instructions to explain the process better!
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And with that you’re done! You have your very own eleven hoop crinoline perfect for any princess occasion!!

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I’m making the petticoat and corset to go along with the crinoline so look out for future posts on those patterns!

This was a lot of fun to make and was very different from the regular store bought patterns I usually follow. I’m super happy with the outcome of this and I’m so excited to get a dress over it. I’ve just got this costume and my Nightingale Armour to make before I leave for University I really don’t want to be stressing myself too much before then because I’m sure I have a lot to make when course starts. I think my worst nightmare at this point will be my dress form not fitting in my room!

Thank you for reading,
-Nivera

Ana Amari Biotic Rifle:Construction

My first ever gun prop was a success! This was made roughly over a two week period using,
EVA Foam (5mm and 2mm) from CosplayShop.
Contact Cement (glue) also from CosplayShop.
Rubber Tubing from B&Q
Blue Clear File Not exact item (example)

I am so happy with how this prop has turned out and its defiantly my best one yet! I’ve learnt a lot through making this and whats really stuck with me is how useful blueprints are in cosplay. I will be using them for every prop I make from on!

Biggest thank you to Cosplay Amino user Beariore for sending me their blue print they made for their Ana cosplay!
I discussed with Beariore and they’re happy for me to give out the final blueprint that they altered from an Original Blueprint made by u/babomazer by adding line-work, scaling it and converting it to PDF.
Below is the blueprint unscaled.
Biotic AnaIf you would like the scaled PDF blueprint that I made/used for my cosplay then please contact me via direct message on either Instagram, Twitter or my Facebook page. You can find me @NiverasWings on all of those sites!
The PDF version I used is scaled to best suit my heigh, I’m 5’5. Another important thing to note is that its made for A4 paper as opposed to American letter paper, please keep that in mind before contacting me. I’m very busy at the moment and don’t have time to custom scale this blueprint on request.
Besides! I have a tutorial for doing exactly that using the Biotic rifle as an example, so Check it out!


Construction

I started by scaling and printing out my blueprinted and then taping it together. I taped it using masking tape on the back as it was stronger and not transparent and then for the front I used cello tape as it was transparent and wouldn’t effect any of the lines.
Ana BlueprintThis was then cut up into separate pieces based on how I had decided to construct it. I did this by laying the full pattern out and with a pencil I drew how many layers I’d need for each piece and then divided up the patterns into manageable sizes that would work and fit together well.
I’ve seen the combination of patterns and their sizes done differently from other cosplayers I looked at for reference but this is how I did mine. The red outlines represent the large patterns I cut out first, these we traced to foam and then cut into smaller patterns for internal details.
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The layering ranged from one to five layers depending on the area and pattern. For example the cover over the top barrel is just one later of 5mm foam while the butt of the gun is five layers of 5mm foam with an additional two layers of 5mm foam detailing the top triangle.
I’m currently painting the gun but once thats complete I’ll try and add an image here that shows how many layers each section was as well as foam thickness. And if I’m feeling extra kind I’ll outline all of the details I put in too which helped me simplify the design.

I then traced my patterns out onto the foam and cut everything out gluing them together with the contact cement. This was my first time using the contact cement and boy dose it have a strong smell to it!
Work in a well ventilated area or open some windows!! The trick with contact cement is to apply a thin even coat on the contact points (marking these out does help), leave it to dry for two or so minutes and then bind it together. If the glue is slippery and the contact points aren’t sticking you haven’t left it to dry long enough!
And soon enough the base gun was there.
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This was when I laid out my mop handles which would form my barrels for the gun later on. This was a huge boost of confidence and gave me an idea of the scale I was working with.
I then drew out an outline of what I wanted dremeled, this was only 0.5cm and I marked along the outside of the foam with a pen to give me an indication of when to stop dremeling. You can vaguely see these markings in the below picture.
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This was all glued together with contact cement, I applied it everywhere there might be contact for these pieces as I wanted no chance of it falling to bits.
Next I started adding details on top of this with the 2mm foam and some 5mm foam in places. I used the blueprint as a guide for this.7b85fc3037d036843d69e2d2a00bdececcd2024d_hq
Next up I added another small layer to the gun extending the pattern down slightly because I trimmed too much earlier in the build:sweat_smile:. You can see this gap in earlier pictures. I had to use a little bit of hot glue in the gap just to firmly hold things in place and also ‘fill’ the gap in where it was exposed on the edge.
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I also swapped out the foam I planed on using as the pipe for some rubber tubing. Which I think is such an improvement!
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Next up I made the canister thing as the bottom of the gun. I used the blue print patterns for this but just made the sides ever so slightly wider so they could be glued at the seams without shrinking in size too much.
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There’s air trapped inside it with the smallest hole in the seam so when you squeeze it it makes a hissing sound, I find it wayyyy too entertaining.
This was followed by another ‘mop-up’ (see what I did there mop-up instead of mock-up, I’m hilarious)
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This made me so happy!! There was light at the end of the tunnel yet!
I also fixed up the lower barrel mop end with some clay as it broke a little when I stomped on it to free it from the mop…
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And somehow it came together and looked pretty damn great!
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Next was putting the gun together, because I knew id have to take the gun on the tube I wanted it to be detachable so that I could take it apart to travel on the tube.
Originally I had wanted the gun to assemble with magnets inlaid into the foam for a seamless and sturdy finish. Unfortunately with the con only being two weeks away at this point and me not being able to find magnets in sizes that would fit/strong enough/reasonable price this changed to a good old friend of mine.
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No magnets? Industrial velcro it is.

So heres how I attached everything with velcro,
I’ve used coloured outlines which will match the opposite sides of the velcro to each other, hopefully this makes understanding how it was put together easier.
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I had a strip of velcro (toothed side) running along the top of the rifle (red). This is where the barrel would connect to.
There was a patch (toothed side) just below that (blue) which is where the cover folds over and connects to.
Then below that on the front of the gun is a circular patch (toothed side) (green) where the lower barrel would attach to.
A close up of the two lower velcro placements can be seen below.
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To put it together I would first get the lower barrel and stick it to the main rifle piece using the green velcro patches. The lower barrel piece also has two support beams(? I have no idea what to call them) which can been seen in pink and yellow (both soft side).
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When connected through the velcro in green the gun now looks like this.
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The next piece is the cover, this is the blue piece that literally just covers part of the barrel which is saw as a great opportunity to use as a weight to keep the barrel in place.
The light blue velcro (soft side) will attach onto the barrel.
The dark blue velcro (soft side) seen previously, will watch onto the base of the gun.
The pink and yellow velcro (toothed side) Which is actually just one strip attach onto the ‘support beams’ mentioned earlier.
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Below is a better picture of how it all attaches before being put together.
Watch was my drawing quality takes a turn for the worse.
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Are we still following?
Ignore the pink line line with the light blue at the bottom it was a mistake. Basically the cover just folds over connecting with the velcro along the way. The light pink line of velcro (toothed side) on top of the barrel is where the scope will attach later on. Theres a line of velcro (soft side) along the bottom of the barrel which attaches to the line of velcro on the base gun, this is seen in red.

The scope then attaches to the top of the barrel seen as the light pink lie in the previous picture.
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Which looks like this! Yay!
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And you’re all done!
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Finish it off with a shoddy paint job and you’re good to go!
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But in all seriousness I love this prop so much its defiantly my favourite to date!
If you want to know how to draw your own prop blueprints (with no fancy photoshop) I have a tutorial all about that Which you can read here!  And if you want to know how to scale and print those blueprints I have a another tutorial for that here!


I haven’t posted in a month and I am so sorry about that, it was such a rush to get all this done then I was away at the con wearing Ana and now work is super crazy every night!

I plan on having the last construction post for Ana to be up for next week maybe earlier and then I can start talking about new projects which I been saying I would do for months .. Ha ha.

Anyway back on board with regular posting! I love you all and if you have any questions don’t hesitate to ask!

Thank you for reading
-Nivera

Ana (Overwatch) Work-log 2

Its been just over a moth since I last updated on my Ana cosplay and I think I’ve covered a lot since than and would say that the base costume is now complete! Yay!

After completing the coat I made a start on the jacket thats worn beneath it. I unfortunately don’t have many photos of its construction as I completed the base in one day but it was pretty simple. (loose threads I know)
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It’s essentially a large ‘vest’ pattern with an diagonal opening on the front. I purposely made it extra large so it would look baggy. I also satin stitched the faux leather on to trim the zipper and around the edge of the collar. The collar is lined with interfacing and then padded with one layer of quilt batting to thicken it out, the middle portion of the collar is sewn with faux leather to add some more depth. In the above picture its only pinned so it does appear bulky.
On the collar you’ll spot a little triangle emblem.

This was sewn on with top stitching thread and I guess you could call it embroidery ? Maybe, its my first time doing anything of the sort. My grandmother was excited to see me trying this technique out but had some constructive criticism for me in the future.

The zipper I used was a chunky 18″ black zipper I dry brushed silver to give a worn look, it only needed the one coat. Even after frequently using the zipper I haven’t noticed and paint chipping or loss of colour.

The hood was again pretty simple, I traced a previously used hood pattern and made it a little larger (I wish I had made it bigger now) with the details cut from faux leather, ironed on with heat n bond and satin stitched down to create that bordered edge I love so much.
I think I’m obsessed with satin stitch, but it just looks so nice.

I also made her pants. I used Simplicity 8134, the crotch was really low for some reason
(I honestly don’t know why, I didn’t change the pattern at all and I did not get the patterns around the wrong way so that was a little confusing) so I had to bring the crotch up a little not too much as I did want some baggy-ness going on.
And I’m actually really pleased with the result.
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I also sewed little belt loops onto it and added cuffs to the bottom of the legs so they would sit close to my knee. I made a belt as well from left over brown fabric I had in my collection  the colour was different to the others I had used which I like, I think it makes a nice contrast.
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This photo leads us onto her pack which hangs off the belt. And boy did I make this hard for myself. I basically didn’t think about layering what so ever and ended up with six hours of hand sewing to pay for it. Ugh.
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I drew up the pattern for it on A3 measuring as I went and I was pretty happy with the size and shape of it. Excuse the paint, its what I used to eventually paint the real thing .
I used faux leather vinyl (you know the seriously thick stuff that’s like sewing rubber) for the top (facing side) and then black heavy weight cotton (possibly canvas, I can’t remember) for everything else.
Please don’t sew vinyl by hand, you will destroy your hands.
For the top details (I have no idea what they are!) I used vinyl backed with the cotton, this gave it enough thickness to spring away from the base layer giving it a 3D effect.
I then just used normal (thin) faux leather for the loops below that.
All sewn by hand, Haha ha…
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The paint job isn’t finished just yet but its the right size and shape and for that I’m really happy with it. I wanted the paint to match the blue fabric I used elsewhere on the costume as much as possible and was lucky to find one of my tubes (without any mixing) was an exact match.
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It’s pretty well perfect!! I usually hate mixing paint so this saved me a lot of time.
To get the lines perfect I use painters tape along the lines I drew to ensure there would be no leaking. Though there was little it’s easy enough to remove.
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I also sewed little loops onto the top of the pack so the belt could be threaded through them which would hold it up.
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I’ve also made a start on her rifle which I made using the blueprint from my previous post.
I’m just waiting on some contact cement (glue) before I can put it together. The parts that have been cut out are what I consider to be ‘main pieces’ and once those are together I’ll build on it with the smaller details.
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I got to use my Dremel for the first time on this so that was exciting and a bit of a learning experience. I messed up a few times but the holes and gashes I made can be fixed easily with Apoxie Sculpt later.

And that’s it for now!
My next goals are her armour, eye patch and gloved sleeves. With those done the cosplay will be finished with only her rifle left to make. I’ll buy the wig the next time I get paid. I still need to hem and weather the coat but that can wait for now.


More updates coming soon , I’ve half written a fabric/pattern haul post so that will be out in the next few days too.

Thank you for reading
-Nivera