Posted on Sunday, October 25th, 2009 at 11:31 am
Posted in Blog, Experiments | 3 Comments »
…but only if you really like pink.
Mom and I were in Milwaukee a couple weeks ago, and we stopped in to a fab little yarn shop called Just 4 Ewe. The owner, Jan, enthusiastically shared enough fiber tips and tricks to send my brain into complete and happy overload (while her dog, just as enthusiastically, kept trying to lick my feet). If you’re in the area, I strongly recommend the shop – but think carefully about your choice of shoes. Anyway, one of the things Jan recommended was using Wilton’s Past Food Colors to dye fiber. She showed me roving in a series of joyful pinks.
Now, I have some sort of crafter’s disorder that causes me to believe in absolutely every trick I see, read, or hear. Read the rest of this entry »
Tags: Costuming, Crafts, Dyes, Theater
Posted in Blog, Experiments |
Posted on Saturday, August 22nd, 2009 at 2:59 pm
Posted in Demos, Instructions | 2 Comments »
So, you’ve bought, begged, borrowed, stolen (I hope not), or been gifted with a dress dummy. It came with directions about how to adjust it to your size. The instructions they gave you were for modern clothing, and you wanted the dummy for to make ‘bethans. Read the rest of this entry »
Tags: Costuming, Dressform, Patterning, Rennie, Theater
Posted in Demos, Instructions |
Posted on Saturday, August 22nd, 2009 at 2:53 pm
Posted in Instructions | 3 Comments »

You can make a lovely skirt from a 90" table cloth.
Read the rest of this entry »
Tags: 1500s, Costuming, Elizabethan, Fabric, On the Cheap, Rennie, Tablecloth, Theater
Posted in Instructions |
Posted on Saturday, August 22nd, 2009 at 2:47 pm
Posted in Experiments | No Comments »
This is a corded effigy style corset. The idea of using cording
instead of a more normal boning belongs to Jen, who did a lot of research in
that direction in the course of her
Italien dress. The pattern for this corset more closely follows the actual
effigy corset than the effigy style corsets I have made in the past. The corset
is made of two layers of cotton broadcloth, and stiffened with hemp cord. Some
parts of the side back, which do not provide support to anything crucial, are
stiffened with jute packing twine (I ran out of hemp at an inopportune time).
Where hemp is used, there are two strands per channel. Where jute is used, there
are 4.
Results and Notes:The corset provides more than adequate support,
as you can see above. It is also extremely easy to move and bend in (I can do
backbends in this), and does not seem to have any serious effects on my attempts to breathe. The effigy pattern is generally far less restrictive than the standard issue back lacing corsets that some people prefer, but the corded effigy seems even more so. The only problem that I have noticed so far is that the line of the corset deformed in the face of rather extreme heat and humidity, as seen
in the picture to the right. However, I should note that when I say, “rather extreme”, what I mean is that it was 97 or so at faire that day, and I was overheating in a big bad way, so I stuck a hose down the back of my dress and turned it on. Hemp seems to lose some of it’s rigidity when soaked through.
Would I do it again?: No. I don’t think I’m willing to
rely on just hemp for boning in the more rigid, later elizabethan styles like
the effigy. I will most likely make up another “working class” corset with the
boning running straight up and down, solely done up with hemp. I will probably
also try to do up an effigy boned with reed, which is significantly less floppy
than hemp cord.
Tags: 1500s, Boning, Corsetry, Costuming, Elizabethan, Hemp, Rennie
Posted in Experiments |