The Material Girl - Making nice things - one pattern at a time

  • home
  • tracy's blog
  • contact me
Home

refashion

White elephant refashions at Somerset House

thematerialgirl — Wed, 07/14/2010 - 20:09

I love living in London – but sometime you get reminded just how great it is and how lucky I am to have the museums so close to me. 
 
I’ve mentioned before that I am a member of the East London Burda sewing club (http://burdastyleclubs.ning.com/), run by the wonderful Amy Scaife. We usually meet once a month at a pub in East London . We were due to meet last Wednesday – but they happened to be some football thing (ok, the World Cup semi-finals) on which the pub wanted to show – not great for our usual chat and sew.
 
So what to do? Move the meeting or do something else? That’s when another of the club members (Chanelle) suggested going to an event at Somerset House. They are currently running an exhibition of  Maison Martin Margiela (well worth a look - http://www.somersethouse.org.uk/fashion/maison_martin_margiela_20/). So to celebrate the decontronstructural (wow, I did learn something at the exhibition!) element of their work Somerset  put on a “White Elephant” event – basically you have a couple of hours to create an outfit from old clothes, fabric and anything else you brought or was supplied on the night.  The only catch was that everything had to be white.
 
It was fantastic – to see everyone come in and start ripping things apart and then putting them back together again, using needle and thread, staplers or even sellotape, was amazing. It really did make you think creatively.
 
So what did we come up with?  I’ve nicked the photos below from the Somerset House Facebook page – you can see all the photos here - http://www.facebook.com/#!/album.php?aid=189525&id=8481421869
 
But here are Amy, Chanelle and me in all our glory…

White elephant refashion 01

 
White elephant refashion 02
White elephant refashion 03
White elephant refashion 04
My outfit was made from an old white shirt  - I took that in and took off the sleeves. I then got a couple of those scrunchy things you use to wash in the shower. I unravelled one to get a long tube of nylon mesh and made the new sleeves with it. The other one I just unravelled a bit to make the very fetching collar / ruff.
The hat is a dust mask used in decorating and I poked through some plastic curler grips. The same were used for the – uhm, shoulder pad things.
 
I think I look fierce! My husband thought I looked like a pierrot clown doll!
  • east london burda sewing club
  • refashion
  • thematerialgirl's blog
  • Add new comment

Back from the dead - but with longer hair

thematerialgirl — Fri, 07/09/2010 - 16:24

Hello! It's been a while hasn't it.  My complete lack of blogging can be explained away in word word (and it's not "lazy") - it's "shingles"

Yes, I had the dreaded chicken-pox related infection over the last month.  It is as horrible as people say - very painful - but in the end I count myself as lucky as I've heard some real horror stories.

Well, in the time I haven't been blogging my hair has been growing and it's been time to do something about it. I've been tying it back using a headband I bought from Accessorize years ago. I love it but it gets a bit samey and also a bit smelly if I've been to the gym (it does happen!).  So I decided to make a new one from an old pair of jeans.

I drew out a template for the band itself using the one I already had - it really is just a piece of elastic covered in fabric attached to a more shaped piece. I just drew around the band and added 0.5 cm for a seam allowance. I then cut two pieces of denim using it on a fold each time.

Here was my template...

Headband template

These two identical pieces were pinned right sides together and then I sewed around the two long edges to make an elongated tube getting wider in the middle whilst narrow at the two ends. This was then turned rightside out and I top stitched around the two long edges again just so that it would hold its shape. 

Next I cut a piece of elastic the same size as the one in my original.  Then I had a piece of luck which saved me a little time and effort - the elastic I used was the exact same thickness as the hem on the jeans. This meant I had a ready made tube to put the elastic in! In reality it would have taken 2 minutes to make up a tube from the denim but I saw this as an omen that the sewing gods were smiling on this project. 

I cut the tube to be about3 inches longer than the elastic - you need space for it to stretch into.

Headband template

I threaded the elastic through the tube, holding on carefully to the elastic edges and rouching the tube along its length.  Then I stitch the two edges of the tube into the open edges of the band part - making sure you catch the elastic at both ends. This is the place that the pressure of the elastic holds so it I stitched and backstitched over it a few times for strength.

I decided to decorate mine with some fabric daisies just to make it a bit more summery.

And here it is - please excuse the armpits shot! I haven't quite worked out how to take a photo of myself whilst not contorting myself into strange angles.

Finished Headband made from old jeans

This was so easy I'm going to make a load more of all the pieces of fabric I have around - I'll have headbands to match everything I've ever made!

  • Accessorize
  • headband
  • refashion
  • tutorial
  • thematerialgirl's blog
  • Add new comment

Facebook Share

Syndicate content

Syndicate content

Latest pins on Pininterest


Source: theexchangelondon.com via Tracy on Pinterest


Source: ln-cc.com via Tracy on Pinterest


Source: net-a-porter.com via Tracy on Pinterest

Recent blog posts

  • Silent night
  • First Japanese Pattern book fail
  • A peak inside couture clothing at the Fashion Museum
  • Christmas pinafore for Evie
  • Ginger spice - that was my favourite skirt you know
  • 2012 - my sewing resolutions
  • More Pattern Magic - second day of Japanese pattern cutting
  • Pattern magic - Creative pattern cutting at Morley College
  • A little birdie told me
  • Pattern bonanza – or “what a lucky woman I am”!
more

User login

  • Request new password
  • home
  • tracy's blog
  • contact me

Copyright: The Material Girl 2011