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Showing posts with label princesses. Show all posts
Showing posts with label princesses. Show all posts

Saturday, 15 March 2014

The Princess And The Frog

So, Christmas rolled around again in 2011 and it was time to make more costumes.  With a lot of persuading Charlotte decided that she would like Tiana's green dress from 'The Princess and the Frog'.  It took a lot of persuading.  I kind of wish I'd left this dress until later.  I love the look of the dress in the film and don't think I did it justice.  I'd like to have another go, as I'm sure now with some more experience that I could do a better job, but I'm not sure either of the girls would let me have another go at it.

I love it! There's no pink.

I used crepe back satin for most of the dress with tulle for the very bottom layer of the skirt.  I used one shade of green, but I used both sides of the fabric to get a bit of colour and texture variation.  I used double the fabric in all of the leaves and petals of the dress and that's where the major problem lies.  The finished dress is just sooo heavy.  It would even have been better as a skirt and top, but I'm not sure the skirt would have stayed up, Charlotte hasn't got any hips to speak of.  Perhaps braces would have been the way forward?!  There was real concern at the time that Charlotte wouldn't actually be able to wear it because of the weight.

I made and lined (yet more weight) a bodice for underneath the petals at the top and then just attached the petals on before attaching the skirt.  If memory serves correctly (we are talking three years ago) I had to sew the skirt on by hand as my poor machine couldn't cope with all the layers where leaves overlapped.



This is Charlotte on Christmas morning just after she'd unwrapped the dress.  Hence the clutter around her.  I am very proud of the headband to go with this one.  If only we'd managed to straighten the pollen type bits on top before the photos!  I also really like the giant detachable waterlily on her hip.  I seem to be having problems with photos for this project.  I can either have them like this so you can't see the detailing or crop the photos and have everything so pixellated you can't see anything at all.  I might get the hang of this technology thing eventually.  I might not as well.

She is also wearing an underskirt as well.  Not that you can tell.  For a few of the princess dresses now I've tried to make hooped skirts to go underneath.  It's never been a roaring success.  If I didn't leave things until the last minute (ie the week before Christmas) I might do better.  One day I'll look up instructions on how to make them properly.  For the Tiana dress I tried to first use plastic hooping but the weight from the dress meant that it buckled.  I then had to try metal hooping. As you can see It doesn't seem to make that much difference.


On the positive side, I did learn a lot making this dress.  Not to make a dress that weighs more than the child wearing it, for instance.


Wednesday, 12 March 2014

Rapunzel, Rapunzel, Let down your ... dress?

So, back in January of 2011, Disney released a new film, Tangled. And the girls loved it (of course). No prizes for guessing what kind of dresses Auntie Sandra would be making next.
Katie's birthday's in March and Charlotte's is in May, and they both decided that they wanted the same dress.  This is actually quite unusual.  I actually really like Rapunzel's dress.  It's a bit pink for my tastes, but it's not too "princessey"I like the purplely colour (I'm just making up words left, right and centre now) and all the details.  Not quite so keen on the details when I had to incorporate them all.  Snow White and Cinderella were both simple dresses without much detailing, but as computer animation gets better the dresses seem to get more and more elaborate.  I suppose it's because you don't have to keep drawing them all by hand!

I used the same bodice pattern as Snow White and Cinderella, Simplicity 2817 (notice the point at the front of Rapunzel's bodice).  I thought I could change the Snow White sleeves up a bit to make them three-quarter length and put a piece on the front of the bodice like the witch dresses for the lacing on the front.

Only make it a bit smaller and try to line up the ribbons better.  I didn't realise how far out I was at some of the edges until I enlarged that picture.  Or more technically enlarged one of the front of Katie's dress and I decided I couldn't share that with the World!

I had some purple crepe backed satin left over from Katie's witch, so that was going to be the over skirt.  I also got some pink and lilac satin for the bodice and sleeves.  The underskirt proved more problematical.  I wanted something in a similar purple but with a pattern on.  In the end I found some fabric with what seemed to be tinsel running through it.  It was a bit of a pain to sew, but nothing like as bad as organza!  The main problem seemed to be when my needle hit one of the strips of tinsel. It would stretch that strip and pull at the rest of the fabric.  D'oh

I used wide pink ribbon for the stripes on the sleeves.  I managed to find some almost exactly the same colour as the crepe backed satin.  I also found the cute butterfly trim that matched the lilac.  It's not strictly the same as Rapunzel's, but I thought she would approve.  The way I tried to extend the sleeves wasn't great.  It wasn't until after I'd made them and lined them (I think that was the main problem) that I discovered I had a pattern with the exact sleeves I needed.  The witch pattern!  Double d'oh.

Always check what patterns you have at home people!  The sleeves pull a bit funny and don't quite lie right, but neither of the girls seemed to mind.  I'm not looking forward to them getting older and wanting perfection.

You'll notice on the completed bodice that my ribbons line up much better than in the witch dress above.  Please, please notice.  Just don't take too much notice of the point at the front.  Again, I didn't trim it enough so it's quite bulky.  
More trim.  The 'lace' at the bottom and around the neckline is more than double the width showing.  It's got large holes down the centre of it.  I'm not sure if you knit with it or thread ribbon through it, but I thought it worked quite well here.

I seemed to take loads of photos of one of these dresses while making it, but I can only find a few with a child actually in it.  None are very good I'm afraid.  They all involve Katie being her naturally stylish self.

Ah, socks and messy hair.  A killer combination.  How she's going to love these photos when she's older.  If you look carefully, you can see her Rapunzel plait. Blonde plait with brown hair.  You just can't tell it's not natural can you?

This is Katie's cute face.  Terrifying.

And finally
There was a reason for the red hair and cheeks.  She was going to school dressed up for Red Nose Day (Comic Relief).  I'm not sure what the theme was supposed to be that year, but I'm sure a princess dress, red hair and a clown face was appropriate!

Friday, 7 March 2014

The Little Princess(es)

Flushed with success from making two witch dresses for Halloween 2010, I decided it would be a good idea (!) to make princess dresses for Christmas that year.  That was before I discovered organza was the work of the Devil, but more on that later.  Simplicity have an official Disney princess pattern for Snow White and Cinderella.
They also have an 'adult' version of these dresses, best not to get them mixed up!  Apparently you used to be able to get lots of other Disney patterns that have since gone out of print but I have noticed that they've started printing more (eg. Tinkerbell, Tangled) recently.  Other pattern companies do similar patterns, made up in colours to look like Disney princesses but with different design details.  I wanted my little princesses to look exactly right (or as close as I could get), so Simplicity it was.  

Charlotte decided she would be Cinderella and Katie wanted to be Snow White.  If I'd had the choice (like my opinion matters!) that's what I'd have gone for too.  Charlotte's fair with straight(ish) hair, and Katie's got brown (very) curly hair.  I ordered fabric.  Crepe backed satin for most of the dresses, some kind of dark blue crepe(?) for Katie's cloak and bodice, and organza for Charlotte's sleeves and puffy bits (I have no idea what to call them!).  This was back in the days when I took notice of fabric allowances on the backs of patterns.  I ended up with loads of left over fabric.  I think for Charlotte's I had twice as much as I actually needed.  Ah well, you live and learn.  Left over fabric will be making an appearance in later projects.  See if you can spot it.  It's a game for the whole family to play!

I'm not sure how much I changed the pattern in size.  I know I kept reading in reviews (I know, sewing pattern reviews, who knew!) that the pattern was quite low cut, so I'm fairly certain I raised the front and inch or so.  I know I have in all the other projects I've used this bodice pattern and  I've lost count of the number of times I've used it now.  With the point at the front, it works for most princesses.  One change I did make was to press the seam allowances of the sleeve in towards the bodice, rather than out as stated in the instructions.  I just thought it was a bit odd when you'd be able to see them through the sleeves.

I can't really remember much about constructing these dresses.  I know it took me a few weeks, but that was just because I was only learning and I was petrified of making mistakes.  With all that spare fabric I don't know why!  I thought the red on Snow White's sleeves was going to be really hard, but actually it was easy.  Bondaweb to the rescue.  The points at the front of the dresses aren't that good.  It's mainly because although the pattern told me too I didn't trim as much seam allowance as I should.  I've since learnt that you can snip right to the sewing line and the whole dress won't fall to pieces.  The only major problem I can remember was the organza.  How I hated it.  I vowed I would never use the stuff again.  You just had to look at it and it frayed all over the place.  I had to cut it with ordinary dressmaking shears because my pinking shears just ate it up.  I kept pulling threads in it when sewing it on the machine, but I think that was probably to do with the machine settings.  I was a nightmare.  It was probably the first bit of the project where I threatened to throw it out of the window.  It's a threat I now make on a regular basis.

When the dresses were almost complete I had to change the length of the skirts.  I had to cut a good foot off the length to get them about right.  Again with these oddly shaped children.

I also covered hairbands to match the dresses and added the padded 'bow' on Snow White's.  I'm sure there's an easier way of covering a hairband, but it always seems to involve me sticking loads of pins in it and then trying to manoeuvre around them (you've seen nothing like me trying to spell manoeuvre!).  I also put some velcro on some black ribbon to make Cinderella's choker.

And here are my first proper princess dresses.


We couldn't find any pictures of Katie in hers, so we just have the lovely Charlotte modelling both.  I know after Christmas the cloak was quite controversial.  Cinderella wanted one too!