Headless wonder !
Currently haunting my
hall radiator is the finished calico and PVA dress. It does look strange without a body in it and is not at all what I expected at the start – perhaps it was rather ambitious to do a sack back but a good experiment overall. It is fairly rigid, quite cardboard-like, but how this will last I do not know.
Process Problems – supporting the weight of wet fabric as it dries.
Keeping shape as drying – strange things can happen.
Preventing set areas becoming wet and pliable again.
Drying times.
Unblocking pipes having spilt large bowl of glue solution down the sink( hot water and unresolved anger issues worked wonders)
Benefits - do not
have holes in fingers from sewing,
very direct way of
working – see it, do it, dunk it,small periods of working then put to one side to dry,
errors can be undone – frustrating but satisfying in the end.
Would I do it again?
Yes.
Would want to use different fabrics – cotton-based for absorbency- patterned/ striped?
Like the idea of having the 'seams' raw on the surface – really looking at the construction and fitting.
Might keep a body form inside or a wire armature .
Will try just with cutting out and sticking, no sewing.
In the background is the dress I've been making while the glue dress dried. This is a fairly straight forward 1780s polonaise pattern, loosely based on the extant example from LACMA. I've gone for
en ferreau back and front fastening with hooks and eyes. A pain - quite literally- to do - an awful lot of sewing before construction and and then a lot of finishing. I didn't help myself by adding a stiff interfacing and lining late in the process - to give that corseted look. It just needs a wash to get the blue marker pen out and a press over to be officially finished! I do like the fabric, it is summery and fresh, and yes it is Laura Ashley curtaining. One extra tip - do not stab yourself with the needle and then bleed onto the nice crisply white fabric. It is an avoidable trauma - washing it out, not the stabbing.
Next task is going to be doing illustrations for this - patterns, drafting and construction notes and then the fun bit - painting. Romney I think for this - making the most of the creases without getting precious.
No comments:
Post a Comment