Showing posts with label Pockets. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pockets. Show all posts

Saturday, October 8, 2022

The Apple Picking Corduroy Jumper

 Apple picking sounds fun. 

This thought went through my head a few weeks ago. I texted my friends, "I want to go apple picking"

"My cousin just said the same thing" my friend texted back, "She knows a place. Do we want to make an outing of it?"

"Yes!!!!"


Apple picking was scheduled for the next weekend I would be in town visiting my family.


For the occasion (with the ulterior motive of getting my friend to take pictures for me), I wore a corduroy jumper I made back in the spring. This jumper didn't get much wear upon completion as it quickly became too warm to wear corduroy, so I was excited to pull the dress out and give it some attention!


I found 2 yards of dusty pink pinwale corduroy in the pre-cut bin at Walmart and snatched it up. Then I spent a couple weeks brainstorming what to make out of it. 2 yards really isn't a bunch of fabric to work with, but I was sure I could figure out something to do with it.



Around the same time I picked up Simplicity 9449 on sale, and just wanting to make something out of the fabric before it went to languish in my stash I decided to use that bodice pattern with a plain, rectangular, pleated skirt to make a jumper/pinafore.


I squeezed the bodice onto as little fabric as possible, cut the remaining yardage in half to make two skirt panels, cut the bodice facings out of scrap cotton, and cut two patch pockets out of the scraps of corduroy leftover from the bodice. From cutting out to hemming, the dress only took a few hours to make. It was done in a day!


The big patch pockets made it the perfect apple picking dress!


The orchard had several different types of apples and sold them by the 5 gallon bucket. 


My friends and I decided to pick a 5 gallon bucket of each variety we liked. So we stuck the bucket in the middle, all went out to different trees to pick apples and brought them back until the bucket was full.


My pockets transported lots of apples from the trees to the bucket!


Once we had all the apples of one variety we wanted, we loaded back up in the car.



And drove to the trees of the next variety we wanted, with our apple picking sticks hanging out the windows. 


You can fit a surprising amount of people, buckets, apples, and apple picking stick things in a small car!


And more apples we would pick!


I ate quite a few apples over the course of the afternoon. They're one of my very favorite fruits!


By the end of the afternoon we'd picked 6 buckets of apples to split between us.


And we had a ton of fun together!


It had been much too long since I'd just spent an afternoon with my friends!



We divided the apples amongst ourselves, and after everyone else took what they wanted, several buckets full went back to my parents house (because #apartmentliving, I don't have room for everything at home) to be used through the winter. 


I have plans to make apple pies, and apple cakes, and cooked apples, and maybe even apple sauce! Last week I made dried apples for the first time ever with the bag full of apples I brought home with me.


The plan was to mix these with my morning granola and yogurt, but they were so good I ate them all up before that could happen. Apparently next time I visit my parents I need to bring home lots more apples to make more! They're so easy! And yummy!


Apple picking really was splendid! 


I think we need to make at a yearly tradition!

Sunday, September 12, 2021

A Festival Friendly, Little Women Inspired, Burnside Bibs Excessively Pocketed Pinafore

 My two best friends and I still make it our habit to go to the Japanese Festival at the botanical gardens every year.


But it's a whole lot simpler now than it used to be. We haven't bothered dressing up in the past 5 years, so now we just go and enjoy the festival without being sleep deprived. Dressing up as teenagers and college students was a lot of fun, but just going now, without having to plan and execute elaborate costumes first is very nice! (2015 costumes can be seen here, 2016 costumes can be seen here.)


That said, in the 10+ years we've been attending the festival, I've learned what makes a good outfit for traipsing around the botanical gardens all day.

~ BIG Pockets, so one does not need to carry a purse or backpack.
~ A convenient way to carry a water bottle, because staying hydrated on hot summer days is important!
~ Personally, I prefer skirts or dresses as they can accommodate larger pockets than shorts can, and allow for good air flow and comfort on the afore mentioned hot summer days in a way that pants don't.

Really, it all comes down to the pockets.



The week before Labor Day Weekend, it dawned on my friends and I that the Japanese festival would be that weekend, as it always is, and yeah, we wanted to go, as we always do. So, we checked our schedules, decided Sunday would work best for us this year, bought our tickets for that day, and arranged to meet each other at the festival. 
I then started considering what I would wear for the occasion. 


Now, I'm sure there was something already in my closet that would have worked just fine for the day. However, when I was running through my mental catalogue of clothing I own on Tuesday, I couldn't come up with anything. I have dresses and skirts with fantastic pockets, but none of them had a good water bottle carrying system. I have dresses with belts I can easily attach a water bottle to, but those don't have pockets worthy to replace purses.
By Wednesday, I'd decided I would be making something new to wear to the Japanese festival this year. 


My husband and I live in a one bedroom apartment at the moment, and there's just not enough room here for all the sewing stuff I have acquired over the years. Thus, the majority of my fabric and pattern stash resides in my parents' basement, two hours away from me. At any given time, I have approximately five projects' worth of patterns and fabrics hanging out on the back of my pantry door here. Whatever I was wearing to the Japanese Festival would need to be made from those materials.

 
Current Sewing Space

So what were my options? A 1940's style wrap dress? A 1950's style shirt dress? A fancy satin and lace dress? After looking through my fabric and patterns I quickly narrowed down my options to one - a project that has been in the back of my mind and on my "to make sometime soon" list for over a year. A pinafore inspired by the one Jo wears in the final scene of the 2019 Little Women movie.


The costumes in that movie were disappointing from a historically accurate? Adequate? Plausible even? stand point, as they didn't draw one into the story and the era particularly well and actually proved rather distracting at some points. That said, I appreciated the story telling choices in the movie, and I immediately fell in love with Jo's pinafore at the end of the movie - for every day modern wear, not historical. 


The bodice shape of Jo's pinafore reminded me of the Burnside Bibs pattern from Sew House 7 - which I've had in my stash a while.


A look through my fabric stash revealed 3 or 4 yards of a brown poly/cotton blend with a subtle all over pattern, given to me by a friend of a friend along with a bunch of other fabrics. Not quite the pink linen of Jo's pinafore, but well suited to every day life. A pinafore hack of the Burnside bibs out of this fabric went on my "to sew soon" list.


 Well, soon didn't happen as soon as I'd thought it would. Since planning this project I got engaged, got married, and moved. When packing for the move, I decided to pack the fabric and pattern for this project. And so, that is how it found it's way to a bag hanging on the back of my pantry door, ready and waiting when I started brain storming the perfect Japanese Festival dress 3 or 4 days before I planned on going to the festival.


I quickly realized with the addition of extra pockets and a water bottle carrying system, this pinafore would be just the thing!


  I cut out the pinafore on Thursday. I cut out the straps and scoop neck bodice front just as the pattern dictated, without change. For the bodice back/ back waistband piece I cut two of the version #2 back facing pieces.


The skirt is just two panels of 44" wide fabric, cut to be ankle length like Jo's pinafore from the movie.


I cut HUGE inseam pockets for the side seams.


And then for good measure, I also cut a set of large patch pockets to sew on the front of the skirt.


I wanted something a little more interesting than a plain rectangular patch pocket, so I gave these a bit of a tulip shape at the top edge.


I really like the result! I'll be remembering this pocket shape for future use!


I placed the patch pockets rather low on the skirt so they wouldn't overlap the inseam pockets much and cause excess bulk when all the pockets were filled.


The bottom edge of the skirt got a nice deep hem and the top edge got gathered down to the circumference of the bottom edge of the bodice. It definitly has a different shape than the skirt of Jo's pinafore, but I'm good with that. The goal was just "inspired by", not an exact reproduction.


As for my water bottle carrying need, I accommodated that by adding extra belt loops to the front of the pinafore, sewn into the front waistband. 


These belt loops have an extra little loop sewn at the bottom, perfect for slipping a carabiner through to clip a water bottle too. The weight of the water bottle does distort the shape of the garment a little bit, but I prefer that to having to carry the water bottle in my hand, or carrying a backpack to carry the water bottle.


The pinafore came together pretty quickly - which was good since I didn't allow myself much time to make it! I got it over half done Friday evening after work - and I probably would have finished it too that night had I not decided to go for a walk with my husband instead.


Saturday morning I was back at it, and finished in an hour or two. All together, it probably took about 4 or 5 hours to sew this pinafore - not bad at all!


Sunday I wore it to the Japanese festival, and found it to be very comfortable and serviceable, just as I'd hoped!

The only thing I hadn't thought about was a way to carry the fans they always give out at the Bon Odori dancing demonstration - but that was easily accommodated anyway! By best friend slipped it through the ties on the back waistband, where it stayed quite securely while we walked through the gardens in the twilight.  


Now that this pinafore is done, I want to make an un-hacked version of the Burnside Bibs! I've been trying to decide if I wanted to make the loose or fitted back version of the pattern ever since I got it. After making the pinafore, I've decided I want to make the fitted version. There's a lot of fabric to be gathered up by the ties in the loose version - which is fine with a skirt, but I think would look a bit awkward with pants.


Overall, I love the flexibility of both sizing and styling this pattern offers! My pinafore was perfect for the Japanese Festival, and I look forward to wearing it lots more now that it's finally off my "to sew" list and in my closet!


And the Japanese Festival? Once again, it was great fun to attend!