Centuries-Sewing

Category: Things for the Shop

  • Week in Review: Silk Pincushion and Bobbin Lace

    Week in Review: Silk Pincushion and Bobbin Lace

    This post is a tiny bit misleading, I’m smooshing together last week’s missing review in with this week. I was sick last week and while I sat at the laptop with the Edit Post tab open it, it just wasn’t happening. (After typing the week that many times in a row the word has lost all meaning.)

    I have one big project off my plate, it just needs a few threads clipped and proper photos taken. Then I can pack it up and sent it off to its new home. It is a surprise for a friend so I won’t be able to post photos until she receives it.

    But until then here is what I worked on this week!

    Bobbin Lace

    Silver bobbin lace sample

     

    I’ve been trying to learn bobbin lace for the past two years. It has been an on and off process. The books I have don’t always explain the whys and sometimes I’m looking for very specific information with no idea what to call it. It is the beginner’s curse of standing on the edge of a mountain and looking at a sea of knowledge below, knowing that you can’t swim very well.

    Bobbin lace has a very long and rich history that crisscrosses various cultures and techniques. I know in a round about way there are different styles of lace grounds and different ways to work footsides. There are different ways of holding and working the bobbins depending on who teaches you and where you are taught.

    That is something I am not ready to dive into.

    For now, at least my interest in bobbin lace intersects with the 16th century and stays there. That means various types of laces usually based on plaits and braids. I’ve found a few resources online, some books that have filled in gaps.  Staring at Le Pompe and at zoomed in paintings helps too. The silver lace I made is far from perfect, working with a faux metallic thread is a new experience, my tension is wibbley and I suspect my pattern is too large for my thread weight.

    But it stayed together when I unpinned it and that counts for alot.

    Sewing Experiments and Samples

    Blue and Gold Silk Damask Pin Cushion

    This week I also made a few test pin cushions. These are made from an inner pillow of linen, stuffed with linen scraps, covered with silk damask and edged in gold cording. They are inspired by the embroidered pincushions that are often found with 16th century sweet bags, but I don’t know if they were ever made of fancy fabric in period.

    I might put a few of these in my Etsy shop, they have a nice weight to them and have kept my work table from being covered in random pins and needles.

    I also revisited my pouch pattern and streamlined how I make them. Prototype number 2 turned out a little smaller than version 1 but I’m overall pleased with my process for them.

     

    Next week I need to work on the silk taffeta kirtle and there are some silk damask sleeves that need my attention.

  • Week in Review: Worked on the Taffeta Kirtle – Organize Costume Projects and Silk

    Week in Review: Worked on the Taffeta Kirtle – Organize Costume Projects and Silk

    Let’s just get this out of the way first, silk damask photos:

    Brown and Gold Silk Damask

    Red silk damask

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    These will be turned into sleeves, purses, and pouches for the Etsy shop.

    Sewing

    Red and Gold Damask Pouch with Gold Silk Tassels

    This is prototype pouch version one, it is lined in silk taffeta and decorated with handmade silk tassels. I’m still deciding what the purse strings should be made from.

    I worked on the black silk taffeta kirtle this week. The skirt and the skirt lining are cut out, and I’ve started hand sewing the taffeta side together with Seta Reale Coats thread.

    Tonight I hope to get the back of the skirt together and then I’ll decide if I want to hand sew or machine sew the linen blend lining. I know I’ll have to do some edge finishing on the linen to keep it from fraying.

    I’ll take a photo of the skirt when it is together, right now it would just be a pile of black on black fabric.

    I’ve also started to organize my current projects using Todoist. I’m using the free version to make lists (and in some cases sublists) of all the steps for each project.

    Todoist for Costume Organization

    Green means an active project and grey means the project is still in planning stages. I may add more colors as I go along, like Red for “You are so sitting in time out” for when projects do not behave.

    Does anyone else use apps like Todoist or perhaps something better for large projects sewing projects?

  • 16th Century Pocket Prototype

    16th Century Pocket Prototype

     

     

    Based on a few different museum pieces I did a mock-up/prototype for a 16th-century pocket. These were worn under skirts, much like their 18th-century descendants. This is version 1, which I made a little roomier for our modern day needs. It will fit a phone, money and other often necessary items.

    It is all machine sewn but the only stitching that shows is at the top where the pocket is sewn down to the silk taffeta waist tie.

    I hope to offer a few of these in my Etsy shop soon.