Sunday 29 January 2012

The "Sick as a Leopard" Skirt


 (As usual, I'm cutting and pasting straight from The Sew Weekly because I'm just that thrifty with my time.  Yes, thrifty.)

The Facts
Fabric: thrifted 100% cotton leopard print = $1.99
Pattern: Simplicity 7216
Year: 1967
Notions: tan couloured zipper = $1
Time to complete: 3 hours
First worn: this week to work
Wear again? Yes!
Total price: $2.99




I’m letting my dress form stand in for me this week because I’m sick and not willing to take off my jammies.  As for the title of this post, I was going to say “sick as a dog”, but having lived with dogs before, I’ve never seen one look particularly sick…….so leopard it is.

I’ve been pinning a lot of leopard prints lately, but what actually inspired me this week was a skirt worn by a toddler at my daughter’s daycare.  Not being the type to snap candid photos of someone else’s child and post them on the internet, you’ll have to make due with my Pintrest photos.  My only hesitancy about making a leopard print skirt was the fact that I live in Montreal, and once Quebecoise women reach “a certain age”, they tend to do three things:  dye their hair a garish shade of red, wear ill-fitting white capri jeans with cheap high heeled sandals, and most importantly, wear WAY TOO MUCH animal print.  Usually it is a cheap synthetic with lots of stretch and added sequins.  And worn too small.  *shudder*

 To avoid this fashion travesty, I chose a 100% cotton fabric and made an A-line skirt, rather than going with a tight pencil skirt or a super short miniskirt.  Here’s a wide shot, the way I would have worn it to take photos today.  I used a vintage zipper that I got in a big mixed bag at a thrift store for a few dollars, and luckily it matches quite well.  (The other zips are quite interesting: heavy metal ones, funky ones with ring pulls, invisible ones…….every colour of the rainbow.  I’m waiting for a zipper challenge to use some of them in different ways.)

The zip looks a bit sloppy, now that I see it up here, but I won’t nitpick.  I slip-stitched the hem to make the stitches invisible.  This is a great simple pattern that I’ve used before, but somehow I ended up making a measuring mistake this time around:  because the waist measurement is 10cm too small for me, I usually just add the needed width to the centre front and back seam when I cut the fabric, but somehow this time I added twice the needed width, which meant I had to pick out one set of darts, reset them and then correct the side seam.  That added an extra hour to the time; hopefully I’ll remember correctly the next time I use this pattern!  I blame it on constantly switching between metric and imperial measurements when I’m sewing.  Why can’t everything be standardized?!? (and by standardized, I mean metric  :P)




And the good thing about being a scrap saver?  We can use the leftovers for yayas (our family vernacular for stuffed animals.  It’s a long story, but basically my son started it and now the whole extended family calls stuffed animals “yayas”.)















A Totoro was requested, so I drew a sketch that would fit the scraps, then sewed around the sides with a 1.5mm stitch and a 5mm seam allowance.  My son cut up some foam into small chunks for stuffing, and my daughter had to get in on the action and ask for a yaya too.  Luckily, she wanted a much easier shape ;)



10 comments:

  1. ooooh prints, looks good. I love the yayas too! I too think we should stick to metric!

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    1. I know...every time I use an american pattern and see "2 5/8 yards", I have to get out my calculator and try to figure out exactly how many metres that is! One yard is 36 inches, so 2 5/8 yards is.....something....oh, forget it! ;)

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  2. Love the print! I agree I think everything should be standardized!

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    Replies
    1. Thanks Jamie - I picked up two leopard prints that day, as luck would have it, but the other is a nasty poly/cotton blend, which on second look, I may bin.

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  3. I love the yayas! What a cute name. :) The skirt is gorgeous, of course. I always admire a woman who can pull off leopard print!

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    1. Thanks Heather. I think I've created a monster, because now that my kids know custom ordered yayas are possible, there are never-ending requests and the house is overflowing with oddly-shaped scraps that have to be sewn together RIGHT NOW!

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  4. Love it, you lovely Leopard Mama! I think you've made a very fabulous skirt and some fabulous yayas :)

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    1. Thanks Meg! and there are a lot more where that came from....I should post a photo of the pile of felt yayas made in the past week. The funny thing is that my son is becoming more educated about textiles, and he was looking very carefully at the dollar store felt I used...he was not impressed. He said we should go to a better store and get that kind of felt "not made in China". eep.

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  5. Looks cute! I love the part about women of a certain age. I better stay away my white capris!

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    1. Thanks, and I love the leather dress you made for your little girl. It's made me keep an eye out for damaged leather jackets at the thrift store to reuse.

      And I have nothing against white capris per se; It's just....how shall I put it delicately?.....they need to have sufficient crotch depth to look good, if you know what I mean. :P

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