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05/30/2008

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Penny

There are several kimono pattern designs available to choose from . McCall's 4953 costume kimono, as well as Simplicity 4080 which is a Geisha costume pattern. Have one 1950s kimono robe with monogram pattern. Pacifica has several authentic Hawaiin garments for the reader searching for a halter dress pattern.

Rina

Um, a waist stay for Laura? It's entire reason for being is to stop skirt/dress shiftiness.Rina

Latter-Day Flapper

Unless it's a particularly complicated pattern, missing pieces don't faze me. If it's something basic, like a sleeve or skirt panel, I just borrow one from another pattern (similar age/style) and tweak it to fit. If it's a more important piece like a bodice panel, I have no qualms about at least attempting to reproduce it through a combination of borrowed pieces and pure winging-it.I figure, I usually have to adapt stuff to fit better, anyway, right?

Jenny

For Kate:I have been looking for a similar dress pattern, and the closest match I can find is Simplicity 3780. There is also a recently out-of-print pattern you might want to check out - Simplicity 4481. It's supposed to be a fancy bias-cut evening gown, but I think you could work out how to use the bodice on the skirt of your choice. Good luck!

Anonymous

For the skirt twisting problem - I think they make a rubbery substance that comes in strips, like elastic, that can be sewn inside the waistband and stays. Alternatively, a strip of the wider elastic that is kind of rubbery sewn inside the waistband would probably do the same thing.Toddson

Lydia

That Modes Royale pattern stopped me in my tracks. WANT. It's even my size! *whimper*

Anonymous

wearing a slip always helps me with twisty problems. it cuts down on the friction between your legs and the skirt fabric especially when wearing tights?

melissa

Kate - Simplicity 3780 is a great 1950s halterneck dress that's a reissue of an original vintage pattern. I recently sewed it up into a Porsche dress and it's a really great pattern, especially if your bust is proportionately larger than the rest of you because with the gathered cups you can just fuse a bigger size up top onto a smaller size everywhere else! Highly recommended.

Mia

for Laura- I had that problem growing up and into my twenties with any skirt I wore, then after my first child I began getting adjusted regularly by a chiropractor. Apparently it was my pelvis/hips that were misaligned and I haven't had that problem for the last 3 years, everything stays put now....who knew!

Julia

Laura, suggestion #1 - stop wearing skirts - wear dresses, they are unlikely to turn around on you unless there is something you haven't told us. Suggestion #2 - try a nylon slip with the skirt. Are you sure you are wearing the correct size?Cat - check outthis link:http://www.bellaonline.com/articles/art14081.asp

Jillian

Laura - I agree with Mia. I have a high right hip and it causes a lot of my skirts to twist unless I make pattern alterations before sewing up my skirts. I think I read about this in one my sewing books but I can't remember which one right now...maybe it was Fast Fit: Easy Pattern Alterations for Every Figure.

harthad

For Kate: Scissorhappy sells a reproduction of a 1950-60's Hawaiian-style halter pattern with a sarong skirt, see here: http://www.scissorhappy.com/catalog/item/1744458/1174446.htmI actually have the original of this pattern (alas, missing the bodice pieces!), which also had a full dirndl-type skirt option. No reason you can't tack on any skirt style you like.

bellystitch

You can buy summer kimono patterns at www.fabrictales.com. The patterns are Japanese but the sewing instructions are in diagram form so they aren't difficult at all to follow. I can get confused when the directions are in English and even I have managed to use them.

Anonymous

Skirt twirling: they used to make (OMG I'm old) a sort of elastic with rubberized strand on one side that you sew on the inside to the waistband. It clings to your slip or blouse or whatever is between you and the band and helps the skirt stay in place. Like the stuff they put in the band of thigh-high stockings. That is a stunning dress with all the buttons and pockets. Rather a gangster look - you could slip your shotgun down that long pocket and no one would be the wiser. this is your fault, Erin, I keep creating Secret Lives for Dresses.

Teresa

My thoughts almost exactly regarding the dress with the pockets and buttons. That long side pocket could hold just about anything....maybe a samurai sword or witches wand or ....the imagination runs wild with the possibilities of this dress.Thanks Erin for the distraction!Have a great Friday.Teresa

Chantelle

Incomplete patterns: They don't bother me too much because I also have to make alterations to make things fit. I can draft a facing or skirt piece.If a critical piece (or all pieces!) are gone but the instructions are there with the technical sketch of the piece, I might try to draft the piece if I loved it THAT much. If the instructions were also missing, well, I'd have to love it too much for my own good to use it. I haven't done much draping but I think I would try to drape the pattern to match the envelope picture.There are some people out there that collect vintage pattern envelopes and make things like buttons or magnets or whatever out of them, too. So a vintage envelope containing nothing is still saleable.

La BellaDonna

Erin, I suggest that Kate, and anyone else who would like that dress, hop on over to http://www.evadress.com/50s-02.html, where Xandra has what appears to be that exact pattern, only it's MULTI-SIZED! It's $18, and well worth it.The twisting skirt is, as you surmised, because the skirt is what we technically call too big. (A high hip can aggravate this, as well as you.) Fixes: move the button over, which can look kind of ehh, or not work if there is in fact no button; or, better, open up the inside ends of the waistband (seriously, I would just snip a neat cut on the inside, on the inside ONLY of the waistband) and insert a piece of elastic narrow enough to fit through the whole waistband, and, preferably, almost wide enough to fill the entire waistband. The elastic should be cut to your waist measure, plus about an inch for fiddling. Use a bodkin or a sturdy safety pin (pinned right through the elastic, and closed) to slide the elastic through the first slit, and ANCHOR the loose end of the elastic with another safety pin so you dont pull it out again. Work the strip of elastic all the way through to the other end, and pin it. Now put the skirt on backwards so you can see what youre working on; close it up, and start tugging on the elastic until it feels snug, but not uncomfortable. The finished elastic will usually wind up about 4 shorter than your waist measurement, to get this snugness, but your mileage may vary. When its comfy, anchor the ends, and stitch up the slits or finish them and leave them open so you can replace the elastic, if you need to. Once youre wearing the skirt, unless it was huuuuuge on you, the fact that there is elastic in there should not be apparent.And Sandy doesnt really, truly need a special Halston skirt pattern. You know that, right, Sandy? Because if you make two skirts (best, I find, using a gored, half-circle, or certain bias skirts patterns, made with elastic waist finishes) and you finish the hems off, then sew them together at the waist, right sides together, turn right side out (one skirt will have the right side on the outside, one skirt will have the right side on the inside facing your legs) and either make a narrow casing by stitching below the waist wide enough to slip a piece of elastic in, or make a separate waistband to take an elastic. You could probably finish it with a standard waistband, but I think it would be too much work and then it might swing around you like Kates skirts. I have several reversible skirts mostly theyre just mounted on a very narrow elastic, as the waistband itself! But no special pattern is needed. (You can also finish the waist first, and then hem the skirts, but it can get a little awkward.)

La BellaDonna

I'm A Nidiot; the pattern that's wanted is, I think, the last pattern on Page 2 of the 50s section of evadress.com; I forgot that there are several similar ones on that page, but the one that's exactly the same is the very last one on Page 2.

Cookie

Wow, that asymmetrical "gangster moll" dress could really do a number on drunks in a bar; they'd be seeing double trying to figure out why it makes the room seem to tilt. I LOVE that shirtdress with the stripes reversed on the bodice. Very, very extra cute.

cathy

I really wanted to see a prom dress on a bowling pin, but I got 404.

Oldpatterns

try http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2146/2487852243_70a65b1b3b.jpgfor the bowling pin dress. That is a direct link to the image.

Ai

The bowling pin link seems to have an extra "/ /" (without that many spaces). Try this link

vespabelle

John Marshall's book Make Your Own Japanese Clothes is a very good resource for making kimonos. It is very clearly written with good instructions and illustrations. Here's a picture of my daughter in her kimono made from the book's instructions.

peanut

There are some free kimono patterns available from Nani Iro's website (http://www.kokka.co.jp/so-ing/sewing/index.html - click on the pictures for the instructions, scroll to the bottom for the men's version). I haven't actually tried making a kimono up yet (mostly due to a lack of large enough pieces of fabric) but I have made one or two of the other patterns and the drafting out isn't as scary as it looks at first - I use freezer paper, a tape measure and a couple of straight edges. All the numbers are in centimetres. The actual instructions are in Japanese but if you know what a kimono is supposed to look like you should be able to figure it out. :)

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