I'd mentioned in this post that I'd recently organized my vast pattern collection by creating a database in Google Docs and then sorting the patterns in numerical order by pattern company. The idea is that I can peruse the database (which I've also printed), select a pattern, and then find it in one of the drawers of my awesome cutting table created by Aloysius and Mehetabel (my son-in-law and daughter). During the process of organizing my patterns, I realized I had a lot that I'd never used, so I'm giving myself a challenge to use at least one never-used-by-me pattern per month. Granted, that's only 12 patterns per year, but hey! It's better than letting them languish in a dresser. And maybe I'll do more than one per month!
I'm starting this challenge a bit late--September!--because 2019 has had its challenges. My mother moved into my house after Thanksgiving 2018 because she became very ill--too ill to live on her own. She had several hospital stays and one operation between November and February. After her last hospital stay, she opted for hospice care so she was able to come back to my house. She passed away mid-February with Mehetabel and I at her bedside. She lived a good, long life: 90 years. She was also very creative and an excellent seamstress. Mom made the majority of my dresses when I was a child, and in her 60s, she studied costume design and millinery, and employed her talents as a volunteer with a local community college theater program.
Other things happened in 2019: Mehetabel and I took a trip to England and Scotland which was so much fun! But when I got back in early June, my house had a plumbing leak, and since the foundation is a slab, the whole house needed to be re-piped. This was an expensive, lengthy, and messy process, but it is so nice to have running water again! I don't think I'd have made a good pioneer. Part of the re-piping process involved jackhammering the foundation so that new pipes could get to the kitchen island, so new flooring was also needed.
That brings us to September! As I write this, I'm wearing earplugs and sitting in my studio. The flooring guys are tearing up my floors not with jackhammers, but something almost as noisy, and they're blast 1970s heavy metal music. The hardwoods were original to the house and they were apparently glued in place. They're not coming up without a fight. But I am so looking forward to new floors. I've decided to go with luxury vinyl plank instead of hardwood. I've had LVP in a house before; it is waterproof and low maintenance. It holds up well to skittering German Shepherds, snow, and furniture moving.
Top left: 1 of the Simplicity drawers Top right: Some of the categories
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My mother in 1930 |
Bjorn's not sure about this |
So back to sewing: In my studio, my cutting table sits on top of four Ikea Brimes dressers that are bolted together. Each drawer can hold four rows of standard envelope/Big 4 patterns. With my new system, it is relatively easy to find the pattern I'm looking for by selecting it in the database, getting the company and number, and finding it in the corresponding drawer.
I have a tendency to use patterns multiple times. I guess it's because I've already tweaked the fit, I like the finished products, and why re-invent the wheel. But now it's time to push some boundaries (gently, gently).
For my first pattern in this challenge, I made McCall's 6793 which is now out-of-print but still available on Etsy, Amazon, and eBay. I made View B but sleeveless, using a polyester shirting from Fashion Fabrics Club. I chose this fabric because I loved the vibrant floral print. Also, I thought it would be a good back-to-school top for Mehetabel; she has several Talbot's "Charming" cardigans that coordinate with the fabric. It's way too hot right now in our neck of the woods for more traditional fall clothing.
Another organizational boon has been the Meet Cora app which I have on my iPhone. It's been a great resource for keeping track of my fabric stash. With it, I have fabric info at the ready: length, content, price, where it was purchased, date of purchase, etc. So, Cora tells me (among other things) I bought three yards of this 58"-wide polyester shirting and I paid $4.46 per yard. Of course, Meet Cora is only effective if one actually enters the information!
This top was started on the first day the flooring guys were here, and mostly finished on the second day--except for hand-stitching. I didn't make any adjustments to the pattern, and sewed the medium (12-14). I used my Pfaff to stitch all seams, and trimmed/finished them with the serger. I hand-sewed the hem, armscye bindings, and the inside collar.
Another organizational boon has been the Meet Cora app which I have on my iPhone. It's been a great resource for keeping track of my fabric stash. With it, I have fabric info at the ready: length, content, price, where it was purchased, date of purchase, etc. So, Cora tells me (among other things) I bought three yards of this 58"-wide polyester shirting and I paid $4.46 per yard. Of course, Meet Cora is only effective if one actually enters the information!
Mehetabel is wearing the top with another pair of mom-made Jalie Éléonore jeans (different colors blogged here). The red stretch denim is from Sew Much Fabric. Like the other pairs of Jalie jeans that I've made, all topstitching was done on my coverstitch, seams were sewn with a stretch stitch on my sewing machine, and all seams were trimmed and finished with the serger.
Now it's time for me to head back to the studio for some more organization. That notions' dresser isn't going to sort itself!
Now it's time for me to head back to the studio for some more organization. That notions' dresser isn't going to sort itself!
Notes to self: Pfaff 3.5; Stitch # 1; 1.5 . Babylock Imagine
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