Monday 31 December 2012

Happy New Year from Goodly Raiment!

This blog has barely begun, and I'm awaiting the New Year with great anticipation. I did a lot of creative crafting and sewing in 2012, including developing patterns!

In the New Year, I plan to discuss more costume history, but I also want to share how to make patterns for various types of things, including garments.

Nightshirt: front view
To begin, let me share with you some photos of a piece I was commissioned to make for Christmas: an Old West-style nightshirt. I've made Old West shirts before, but never a nightshirt.

Looking for nightshirt patterns was a nightmare! The few things I could find labeled nightshirt were all too short for the comfort of the man whose present this was to be. And none of them had the kind of detail I wanted. Most of them had either modern collars, or, worse yet, no collars at all! What I really wanted was a band collar.

Nightshirt: back view
After searching pattern catalogs in vain, I did some research and decided to develop my own pattern. Basing it on drawings of Old West shirts I'd seen in various places, I created a nightshirt pattern that would be long enough to come about mid-calf on its intended recipient.








This nightshirt included a lot of firsts for me:
Nightshirt: collar detail showing matching plaid across front

  • First time working with flannel 
  • First time matching plaids
  • First time matching a pocket design to a shirt front
Matching the plaid was probably the biggest challenge. Making sure I had the fabric in the correct direction was another. As you can see from the design, the NorthWoods fabric has the animals both right side up and upside down. That created its own challenges. To make matters more difficult, the animals placement didn't repeat on closely spaced regular intervals. They were much farther apart in their order than was apparent on first inspection.

Nightshirt detail showing pocket & cuff
Another challenge was matching the pocket to the shirt fabric. My first effort failed miserably! In order to be sure I had it correct, I had to create a transparent pattern piece, so I could see where the animals were. Can you see where the pocket is in the photo? It's right above the cuff. When you look inside the pocket, it's the same as outside! 

I really enjoyed shopping for the fabric and buttons for this shirt. Finding buttons that have the look of animal horn was a delightful surprise. The flannel is lovely and soft, and, best of all, the recipient and commissioner were both pleased with it!

Check back often for details on how to develop pattern ideas and make your own patterns, as well as get ideas for your own garments and accessories!


Is there anything you want to see in the Goodly Raiment blog in the New Year? How about in the Goodly Raiment Etsy Shop? I'm open to suggestions. Please post them here, and let me know what you'd like to see!

Thanks! Have a wonderful & healthy 2013!

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