Princess seamed dress with short puff-sleeves and collar

TOTAL TIME COMMITMENT: 37 hours including toile

Toile & pattern fitting: 15 hours

Cut out & transfer all pattern markings: 2 hours

Main construction: 9.5 hours

Lining construction, attachment and hemming: none

Finishings (attach buttons, make button holes, hem sleeve and hem skirt): 9.5 hours



PATTERN CHANGES

  • Deepened the scoop neckline

  • Changed the patch pockets to pockets concealed in the front skirt seams

SEAM FINISHING & DECORATIVE EXTRAS

  • Princess seams on bodice – overlock together

  • Armscye & attach skirt to bodice – overlock together

  • Skirt seams – overlock together

  • Shoulder seam – Overlock each side separately

  • Sleeve seam – Overlock each side separately

  • Facing edge – bias bind raw edge

  • Topstitch sleeve hem

  • Handworked buttonholes

 

VERDICT & LESSONS LEARNT

This is my first princess-seamed garment, and I spent a loooooong time analysing the fit on the toile, pinching out excess and transferring the adjustments to the paper pattern. In the end, this amounted to removing some excess both just above and just below the waist to account for my hollows, a slight decrease in the shoulder width, and a slight tapering in at the underarm. This is probably the very first garment I have made so many fit adjustments to, and even though this process took quite a while, and the adjustments were really quite small, I am thrilled with the result. It fits me so well, especially around the shoulder and bustline, and hence, looks so lovely on me.

I liked working with the shirting fabric, but not sure the Panama weave is totally ‘me’ in style. It’s quite a loose airy weave, and I find the resulting fabric has that kind of floppy lived-in chic of linen, where I prefer something a little crisper.


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Floral needlecord dress from 1970’s pattern