Liana's first Easter, and the inspiration for the flower girl dress. |
Photo by EverythingYourMamaMade&More |
I know that I want to make a dress just like the photo above for my daughter someday (who wouldn't?) but for now I needed to focus ...
I bought the pattern (you can too, click here), gathered the material, and set to work. I chose a material that had a little stretch (part spandex) for the top. I bought some tulle off amazon, and loose rose petals from the wedding section of Jo-Ann Fabric. The bride-to-be provided me a sash with a big bow so that her dress will match perfectly with the bridesmaids.
I have to stop and be honest right now. Although I consider myself a sewer, I don't really know anything. I am self-taught, I rarely follow patterns and I tend to stay in my comfort zone. But as the maker of this pattern recently told me, "going out of your comfort zone is often how you learn new things." So with that in mind, this pattern is intermediate. It uses sewing terms, techniques and ideas that I had to search for (actually, there are links right on the pattern to answer most of your sewing questions).
So I read through the pattern, got out of my comfort zone and got to work. Right after pouring a glass of wine. That helps me think.
This pattern was a lot of fun to do. I learned a lot of techniques that I am excited to use in future sewing adventures. The pattern comes with 4 different ways to complete the outfit: 2 skirt options and 2 dress options. I followed the pattern for the top of the dress but had to get creative in order to add tulle to the bottom. Tulle is probably the most frustrating thing I have ever dealt with so I gave up for a bit and made this dress and pants set for my daughter as a quick distraction. I ended up making her dolls matching dresses too.
Back to the tulle. I finally kicked the tulle's butt into gear and used every pin I owned to pin it into place. A quick sew attached the top to the bottom. And Boom! Done!!
This dress called for button holes, but that was a little too out of my comfort zone. Baby steps. So I ended up adding Velcro instead and sewing on fake buttons just to make it look cute. They are actually covered up by the bow anyway. I didn't attach the bow. Instead I just tie the bow around the waist and it stays. This way when I use this dress for Easter after the wedding I can change the sash to any color she wants.
I sewed this at night, long after my daughter had drifted off into dream land, so I had to wait until morning to see her in it. Fingers crossed it fits...
And it was totally worth the wait. The best part: my daughter telling everyone she sees that her mommy made her a flower girl princess dress.
I love the faces she makes when I ask her to act "natural" |
Love this face, even if her hair is a mess |
The back of the dress |
This photo shows off the lining of the dress |
Made her a matching hairband from extra tulle and rose petals |
This is the part where her brother tries to get into the photo and eat her hair bow |
Thank you Kymy for letting me join in on this wonderful blog tour and providing the world with this amazing versatile pattern. Check out the rest of the blog posts and dates to come. No shoes required.
BLOG TOUR DATES:
2/14 My 3 Little Kiwi’s
2/15 Calm & Carrion
2/16 Confessions of a Barefoot Housewife (hey that's me!)
2/17 PiePie Designs
2/18 bebelambs
2/19 Crafty Biggers
2/20 The Berry Bunch
2/21 Sunflower Circle
I'm with you on the tulle. Not a fan of the stuff. But it does add an element to dresses. I love what you have done! Just gorgeous!
ReplyDeleteI love the look of tulle but I'll leave that to the professionals I think. Or at least take a break from it.
ReplyDeleteWOW! Your petals in the tulle bubble are very effective. Dress and model are very cute :)
ReplyDelete