When I bought this fabric, I didn’t really like it. Â Oh sure it was a great price, and I am sure I could figure out something to make out of it … but was it really me? Â I bought 5 metres of it.
And so the first incarnation ….. a Tina Givens dress. Â A loose fitting, Lagenlook style dress, with attractive drawstring channels on the front giving movement to the bottom of the dress. Â This was supposedly from her Goddess range (sized particularly for plus sizes apparently). Â I checked the measurements, and considering online reviews consistently said this pattern range runs huge, I was confident choosing the size that matched my full bust measurement.
This, is the half finished dress …… on my daughter (size 8 at a push). Â The armholes are tiny, the neckline is incredibly shallow, and the whole thing is too small. Â I was kicking myself because I wasted a buttload of fabric, on a dramatic drafting error.
So the dress and scraps went into the UFO box, until I could figure out what to do with it. TG did give me my money back, so I at least was happy with the follow up customer service. In the email, I was encouraged to try again. So I did, using one of her free slip patterns, this time with a scoop at the front to create a high/low hemline. I did have to shorten the slip to a tunic length as I didn’t have a big enough complete piece of fabric, but the main features were still in place.
Yet another failure. Massive armholes revealing far more side boob than I am comfortable with, yet a neckline that was way too high. Weird shoulder seams that sat up like wings, and a tulip shape guaranteed to make me look like a blimp. The lack of any bust shaping, means that I had twin mountain ranges running down the front of the tunic. At this point, I recycled the TG patterns I had printed out, into the bin. I don’t ever want to touch their designs ….. ever again. They are poorly drafted, and shoddily designed. But, how to salvage at least some of the fabric?
A recent splurge on StyleArc patterns, brought me the Amber Woven Top as a freebie. Now my only other excursion with woven SA patterns wasn’t a success, however I was willing to give it another go. This top is raglan sleeved (a favourite style of mine), loose fitting pullover blouse. I used it as a template, choosing to not apply the piped facing pieces this time. Instead I left the bodice pieces plain, using bias binding on the complete neckline. As you can expect, whittling down this fabric with every failed incarnation, meant that I had to augment to achieve this design. The sleeves, along with the front inset, are white batiste.
The top is a little big across the upper back, resulting in a bit of excess under the arms, but that is an alteration I almost always have to make, so it will be easy to alter for the next version. Overall, a success after so much failure, and an exercise in persistence. Just a shame I had to use almost 5 metres of fabric to get to this point.
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