Showing posts with label refashioning. Show all posts
Showing posts with label refashioning. Show all posts

Refashioning Project: Boho, ethnic, romantic skirt/dress fusion Part 2 - Making a chatelaine

I've worked on costume and window display projects in the past and my best friend has always been the glue gun. This includes the time I made thousands of fabric roses for an artists' group working on the Spring windows at Fortnum and Mason and I still have the scars to prove it. This time however, with camera close-ups and strenuous physical movement by actors, I decided I would stitch and often hand-stitch most of the costumes and accessories, which is probably why it took me so long! Being a glutton for punishment, the worst design idea I had was the witch's hat veil but more of that later.

How to make a hat veil
   Hand-sewing black on black, not a good idea, felt on tulle, even worse....

The Chatelaine


I'm starting with this accessory as it is one which certainly should make a comeback into everyday life. It was also a relatively easy piece to source and put together, furthermore it involved a satisfying mix of refashioning and upcycling. The chatelaine, being worn either by the housekeeper or 'lady of the house' carried all sorts of useful items such as keys and scissors but I, imagined the old woman/witch would have a different set of accoutrements.

how to make a chatelaine for a costumeExample of a fine old chatelaineThe chatelaine on the right comes from the Pinterest boards of steclub.ru, which has many other fine examples on show. Instead of silver filigree and chain, mine has as its basis, a surprising find from a French haberdashers. To wit a bikini scarf made from blue thread interwoven between feng shui lucky Emperor coins!

Feng shui lucky emperor coins upcycled
It's probably not the usual item on a tourist's bucket list but fabric shops in France can be wonderful Aladdin's caves and well worth a visit. Our local one is piled high, from floor to ceiling with folded lengths of fabric, which are sold as whole pieces or you can purchase metre lengths. There are rolls of fabric too, mainly furnishing fabric and also a great deal of carnival and fancy dress material. There are hundreds of metres of lace and ribbons, sequins and buttons and made-up parcels of 2 Euro 'Lucky bags' from which I got the above. The shop owner buys from auction, so you never know what is going to turn up but I've bought 1920's original metal lace pieces and 1930's silk and cotton spools.

recycling fabrics and shoes

The other ingredient in the mix was a Turkish-style slipper. I had bought this for pennies at a thrift shop and worn them to destruction over the previous Summer but had saved the uppers for future use. Seen here above is the remaining piece of one upper after I had cut out the central motif to use on the costume collar. As the upper was lined with a faux silver leather and the top fabric could be split from it, this gave me options to use thinner or thicker sections of slipper, so as to cut out complete motifs (as above) and/or to remove individual beads and sequins more easily. Somewhere in all my belongings resides the actual Turkish slippers I bought in Istanbul, which I was lucky to visit as a child. They are not to be compared with the false ones. Their workmanship is exquisite formed onto a beautifully shaped piece of leather sole and it was this visit which informed on my life-long love of beadwork and embellishment. However, with the magic that is cinema, the witch wore rich rubies from her red slippers.

making a chatelaine from a bikini scarfSo having found a suitably narrow, navy blue belt on which to base my chatelaine, one given me by my cousin, I started to deconstruct the thread and tassels of the bikini scarf, so as to rebraid and remake them into the supporting hangers for the witch's paraphernalia. To keep each chain separate and facing forward and also to carry on the theme of fortune telling and introduce a far eastern theme to my witch, I used the emperor coins and held them in place with beads taken from the slipper. Feng shui coins are considered to be even luckier when associated with the colour red and I do like the fact that this detail will, according to the shooting schedule, be picked up by the camera. In reality whether minute detail is seen, is not an issue, I will know it is there!


Vade mecum or Grimoire


I had real fun planning and making this. I had decided to use only one slipper on the whole costume and as most of it already had a designated place in the design, I was down to small sections but these made the finished book look even more ancient and mystical.

making a spellbook from recycled fabric


how to make a small book for a witch's costumeFor the book covers I used one of our standard materials (other than pallets), fruit crate wood and covered the front and spine with slipper fabric.

how to make a grimoire for a witch's costume
The pages were made from a paper napkin, which had a great mediaeval illuminated manuscript design. The back cover had the same design but in a thicker tissue paper (shown above left) I had found some years earlier and used to cover and upcycle an old dressing table mirror.

using tissue paper to make refurbish a mirror
This sort of ephemera turns up regularly in thrift shops for a few cents, relics of defunct craft and card making shops. It is well worth squirrelling away for further use and keeping all the scraps too!


sewing a spell book for a costume
making a witch's spell bookI sewed a row of beads from the slipper onto the spine, to both embellish it and define the edges of the book. The whole piece was glued together including adding a 'lock', of which I'm sure the witch would approve.
making a grimoire or witch's vade mecum 
making a grimoire from upcycled materials
When the character moved  it would not matter if she was in close-up as the book would have interest visually from both sides. I also wanted to make the accessories look real. I think costume should help to carry the narrative. This also helps to expand the character, particularly within the limits of a short.

Potion or Poison Bottle


Again this was another fun thing to make and used up yet another item from my hoard, this time one of those small perfume bottles that come in duty free collections.

making a potion bottle for a costume

How to make a potion bottle from upcycled materials


This was created with the aid of an old wine cork, sculpted to fit, gold thread, beads from the slipper and some purple/violet watercolour paint! This time the glue gun proved invaluable!
Chatelaine from upcycled materials



I also added a bouquet of feathers both from my own chickens, which I always collect when they moult and some Guinea hen plumes from my neighbour's poultry. This I decided was some unexplained aigrette, a totem of the witches fabrication and gave  balance to the chatelaine. I made it from a bunch of feathers, with the ends enclosed in a piece of slipper.





Rosie Willis on the set of the Golden Goblet
You can find my Pinterest Costume Inspiration Board here and find out more about The Golden Goblet and Climb The Ivy Films here


If you have enjoyed this piece and found it useful think about sharing it and also about joining this blog to be assured of new posts. Please also feel free to ask questions or make comments in the section below.

All the very best,
Sue

RELATED ARTICLES

Refashioning Project - Boho Chic, Ethnic skirt and sheath dress fusion

I made this as part of a witch's costume but it is eminently suitably streetware or a party frock.. read more

How to Make a Gothic Witch's Hat from Remnants and Found Objects

This project was a great deal of fun because although I had the design firmly set in my mind when I started, I still allowed it to grow...read more


© 2015 Sue Cross


Refashioning Project - Boho Chic, Ethnic Gown. A skirt and sheath dress fusion.

You know how it is, your favourite skirt, worse for wear, is languishing at the bottom of the wardrobe, also hanging on in there, is a long silk sheath dress in a difficult combination of colours and moreover too tight around the hips for comfort. Yes, if like me you are a sucker for quality fabric at knock down prices then fear not, here is a project to accommodate both pieces and get them out of the wardrobe and back on to the street or in my case onto the set.

Rosie Willis in full costume as the old woman Climb the Ivy Films

   Rosie Willis in full costume on location filming The Golden Goblet from
   Climb the Ivy Films

The Backstory

Over Christmas and the New Year 2014-15 my niece, the filmmaker, Vic Lockhart and I discussed her upcoming project for which she had asked me to create the costumes. The inspiration for the above dress was taken from the idea that although the screenplay was based on an old Estonian folk legend, there would be no rigidly fixed geographical or costume references. I just had hints and colour combinations received from mood boards and an idea of each costume being inspired by a signature wild creature. In the case of Rosie's character I chose one of the standard Gothic Witch familiars, the Raven.

Madre by Natalie Shau inspiration for raven costume
I started by building up a Pinterest board. This was fun and I found many images to inspire me, such as Madre by Natalie Shau, via Tina Tarnoff's blog: Thought Patterns. In the spirit of mend and make do - very common amongst independent film companies, I wanted to use fabrics and notions which I already possessed. This not only helped with the tight film budget but also allowed me to get creative with a backlog of materials which needed to be seen. Fabrics should move. I'd boxed mine up for too long, gloating over my hoard like a dragon with its gold.

The Skirt

refashioning an old embroidered skirt
This was a Christmas present from way back and I had worn it so often, the lining was beginning to creep disgracefully into old age. The fabric design was a vague mishmash of ethnicities, also typically for a mass-produced, machine-stitched skirt it had more embellishment on the front.
 
fusion of skirt and dress to man boho party frock

I calculated that I could get at least two if not three inserts out of it to fill out the skirt of the sheath dress and that there would be enough left over to make reasonably full, leg o'mutton sleeves. An added advantage was the colour which was a great match and broke up the rigid lines of the stripes and created what I wanted, my take on a sarafan or Russian trapezoidal pinafore dress.

Mezőkövesd traditional embroidered folk dress



These type of traditional costumes are redolent of many Eastern and Northern cultures. This one I pinned from folkcostume.blogspot.jp and shows a 1930's Hungarian dress from from the town of Mezőkövesd and its environs, famous for their embroidery. I was particularly concerned to get the trompe l'oeil effect of an apron over a skirt aka pinafore dress.




Rosie Willis on set in the Golden Goblet from Climb the Ivy

I was also very happy I had enough material in the seams to open up the sheath dress and to insert three sections of embroidered skirt. Whilst in the planning stages, I contacted my niece to check on how much movement Rosie needed in her costume and found that one shot required her to run through the forest! After that I decided to check with her for each costume but the script revisions and even the shooting dates were posted so well in advance and I could find from the schedules exactly what was required physically of each character. This also helped to inspire the costumes too, as for example, when I found ballet was on the bill, I went off on a whole new tangent.

The Dress

silk sheath dress for refashioning project
One of my weaknesses is that I always buy silk whenever it is at a knock down price. This means I have a plethora of scarves but also items like this silk sheath dress, which I bought two decades ago from Next to Nothing in Birmingham U.K. for a couple of quid. I had Rosie's measurements up on the pallet wood dress form Andy had made me and calculated that to split it along the seams up to the hip would give her plenty of movement and the required full trapezium shape of the sarafan.


The Fusion:


I cut my three inserts from the front of the skirt, thus exhibiting the best of the beadwork for the hem of the dress. Above you can see the raw broken-down skirt skirtfront with one of the inserts in the foreground and before pressing! I then cut the sleeves from the back of the skirt, with the sleeves and the inserts running in opposite directions on the fabric. Thus I used the gathered sections of fabric, which made up the waistband of the skirt to full effect. In the former case this was to create the triangular side and back pleat and in the latter to create the cuff of the sleeve and the leg o'mutton top.

Skirt to Sleeves

refashioning sleeves from an embroidered skirtrefashioning an embroidered skirt to a boho dress
I just used an old sleeve pattern that I liked but it would have been as easy to cut the sleeve out simply by eye, as the back of the skirt, once folded makes a natural sleeve shape! You can see how the cuff forms by itself and the leg o'mutton top is a natural progression from the shape of the skirt.
embroidered skirt refashioned into sleeves

fitting embroidered sleeves refashione skirt and sheath dress fusion
I eased the top of the sleeve into the sheath armholes, neatened the cuffs and embellished them with a hem ruffle from an another defunct old skirt in the same tones. As you can see I toyed with the idea of using a fake fur remnant left over from a wolf puppet but eventually settled for real chicken feathers from my own poultry.

finishing a cuff on a refashioned boho dress beadwork on a refashioned gypsy romantic dressHowever, I did use a fake fur motif on one cuff and on the other one, added a few of the beads from remnants of fabric from the front of the skirt.

Skirt to Dress

Making your own clothes is just the same as cooking your own meals, you become more aware of how things are put together and thus a better judge of good workmanship. When I buy a dress, for example, I turn it inside out to look at the seams and always check fastenings, in particular zips. In the case of this silk sheath dress, I fully expected it to be cut to the absolute limit to save on fabric and therefore costs, so adding the gussets was an ideal way of modifying it to fit. Here you see me easing these latter into the sides of the dress. As I mentioned before, typically the front panels of the skirt are more luxuriously embellished, here with bugle beads, some of which were missing and I replenished from remnants. These beads also added some weight to the finished frock's hem, improving both the way it hung and the way I envisaged it would look when Rosie moved.

detail of a vintage skirt and silk sheath fusion dress


As already explained, I had decided to split the silk sheath dress to the hip on both side seams but I found that the length of the gusset or insert made from the whole length of the skirt was just a few centimetres short. I therefore, cut some triangular pieces out of remnants from the skirt back and embellished them with a few beads to match up with the design on the hem. I also added another row of embroidered stitching. 

detail of making a boho dress

I then fitted the gusset at the back of the dress buy opening up the back seam, this again added weight and movement to the final costume.

Creating an ethnic romantic dress

Refashioning for a gypsy romantic boho dress
So here we have this pinafore dress/skirt sheath fusion, before I started adding the elements to make a complete costume but quite ready to be worn out on the street or to a party. The trapezium-shaped shift was also a traditional maternity dress, so here too you have the chance to make a chic, romantic party frock from refashioned presently unwearable garments. You can however, see the start of the chatelaine, which can be found here and it also shows the trompe l'oeil apron look of the sarafan I was hoping to achieve.

You can find my Pinterest Costume Inspiration Board here and find out more about The Golden Goblet and Climb The Ivy Films here


If you have enjoyed this piece and found it useful think about sharing it and also about joining this blog to be assured of new posts. Please also feel free to ask questions or make comments in the section below.

All the very best,
Sue

RELATED ARTICLES

How to Make a Gothic Witch's Hat from Remnants and Found Objects

This project was a great deal of fun because although I had the design firmly set in my mind when I started, I still allowed it to...read more

How to make a chatelaine for a witch costume - refashioning project

All the essentials for the best dressed witch from refashioning and recuperated materials...read more


© 2015 Sue Cross

The Skeleton that is my Wardrobe - Introduction to this Blog

As are many with a passion for collecting, I am limited by purse strings and space, although, to be strictly truthful it is the former rather than the latter, which has ever been my greater concern.

However, with a chance that we may move home in the near future and with the added impetus of being costumer on a new film project, I decided to set myself the challenge of freeing up at least part of my fabric, furnishings and clothing collection. Material and clothes are meant to move, hanging them up in a wardrobe or folding them up on a shelf assures they remain inanimate. It's time to open the wardrobe doors, loosen their bonds and let them escape. The fiat has gone forth for them to be shaken out and/or deconstructed, then re-fashioned to serve a purpose above and beyond being stared at and coveted by me.

From skirt to sleeves. The 'old woman' costume above uses one of my favourite skirts as a trompe l'oeil to create my take on a traditional Russian sarafan.

The Challenge - Unwrapping the Mummy

I started my collection of fabrics and clothes years ago when I had easy access to some of the great historic markets such as Brick Lane, Bath and Covent Garden. It was also at a time when the UK still had fabric shops a-plenty and the beginnings of cut price fashion such as the Monsoon Sale Shop and Next to Nothing. The main treasure trove though, for serious collectors, was to be found in the jumble sales, charity shops, auctions and the wonderful vintage (and older) clothing emporiums. Finding clothes has been for me a study in social history, just as collecting china would mean a visit to the Potteries, so vintage and 'old' clothes could be traced to the textile centres of the North and Midlands of England.


Above; contemporary lace collar, 1920's beaded and sequined lace and feathered aigrette, 1930's kid gloves, 1950's costume jewellery belt from a Dior frock, Victorian lace pillow case and Regency cut steel removable shoe buckles. It is interesting to note that in previous eras people valued and upcycled parts of their clothing. Collars and cuffs, for example, as these modern versions below, could be removed and laundered separately, thus endlessly re-fitted to the classic subfusc work clothes.


As someone who has always made clothes, starting as a small child outfitting dolls and working upwards, whenever I look to buy garments I generally turn them inside out, to see how they are made. Even when well-worn and mass-produced, these clothes are now great for upcycling as they are professionally sewn and often have generous seam allowances. I have also bought a few good quality clothes at knock-down prices because they needed mending, so part of my challenge will be to complete these projects too. Other items, such as woollens, where the fabric is worn beyond reuse and good only for rags and dusters, I have now been able to upcycle for fixings, such as beads and buttons.

I only bought/buy natural materials, except on the few occasions, where I have been particularly drawn to a print,  so again these have worn well and are suitable for reuse. Over the past 10 years I have purchased mainly organic fabrics, so with some of these, as they are plain and often in a raw state, I will be experimenting with natural dyes and appliqué. (Above modern linen print, 1930's embroidered crêpe de Chine, organic flannel, hand-painted 1920's silk peignoir. Below, from Birmingham rag market, full length of wedding sari and heavily decorated scarf.) 

In addition to dress fabrics,I have a great hoard of linen, lace and embroidery as well as a reasonable amount of offcuts from furnishing fabrics and curtain materials. 

Proving that there is nothing new under the sun, here is an intricate piece of framed embroidery work, which is in fact an upcycled centuries old kimono sleeve.

Here also another of my collection, not for upcycling but does need some attention, a trumpet banner, a little memento got up in gold thread couched work on a pink silk ground to celebrate a visit from Queen Victoria.

Some of my textiles, including these embroidered roses on this beautiful late Victorian wedding tea cosy, will provide inspiration for my costume work and in particular for my first project which I will now set out below.

The Golden Goblet - Five fairytale film costumes on a shoestring

Climb the Ivy like many other small independent film companies, has a limited budget for its début onto the film competition circuit. The entry date for the above film is the day before my birthday, May 30th and as the rehearsals proper are starting this month, I have already got to the point where I am sewing in the car. The costumes I have designed and am now in the process of making up, are as follows, the (aforementioned) old woman, the Faerie Queen, a young girl, a Magician/Jester and a doll. As this is a short film and as I have been given quite a free rein on the costumes, I have tried to imbue them with the personality and duality of the characters. Although I pretty much had the ideas forming when I read the script, I wanted some cultural references and also, what the heck, loved making another collection of, albeit digital, fabric and costume. To do this therefore I turned to Pinterest and created a board, which you can find here Inspiration for Costumes

In Conclusion

I will be using my collection of fabrics and clothing in a variety of projects over the coming months. These range from film costumes for both live actors/actresses and the stop motion kind, clothes, hats, shoes, accessories, soft furnishings and upholstery, (dolls' house and animation sets included) to techniques for repairing and refurbishing old textiles. So hopefully there is something for everyone, even the character below awaiting refurbishment.


With regard to the World of Haute Couture, I have three claims to a passing acquaintance with it. Vivienne Westwood once gave me a square of chocolate, when visiting a shop I was working in.  I was temp PA, for a day, to Zandra Rhodes.  We live within a stone's throw of the Villa des Rhumbs, childhood home of Christian Dior. That over with, we can now forget it and get on with the blog.


If you have enjoyed this piece and found it useful think about sharing it and also about joining this blog to be assured of new posts. Please also feel free to ask questions or make comments in the section below.

Find out more about Climb The Ivy Films here

All the very best,
Sue


 © 2015 Sue Cross