Showing posts with label blue. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blue. Show all posts

Saturday, December 17, 2016

Refashioning: Old Lady Pants into Skinny Pants

Updating a pair of pants is pretty easy, but there are some important things you need to look for first.

I really liked the color of these Kathy Ireland (remember that brand from the 90s?) blue velvet pants that were on the Goodwill dollar rack. Velvet is having a moment right now. The legs were way too roomy, but notice how the legs are straight--not flared. That's the first thing to look for.



I put a pair of my favorite skinny pants over them. You can see all the extra fabric along the insides of the legs. If you are wanting to do this project, you can't do it with flare pants. I mean, you can, but you will have to take fabric off both sides of each leg (because flare pants flare out both sides), and that is really hard unless you have another specific situation....Which I shall explain in the next picture.



Okay, see how the inner seam here is just a regular seam with no top-stitching? Let me show you an example of top-stitching in the next picture...



Here is an example of a pair of pants with top-stitching. It's a "flat feld" seam to be exact. Anyways, in order to fix flare pants with flat feld seams (which most of them have, at least in the inner seam), you would have to take all the seam work out--which is at least three rows of stitching per seam. Why all the trouble? Because the top half of flare pants are generally pretty form fitting and you would ostensibly be fixing only from the knee down on both sides. It would look super awkward to sew a normal seam into a flat feld one. You'd get a weird bend in the seams on either sides of your knees. Anyways, that's way too much work, and when I saw the afore-mentioned blue velvet ones, I knew that they wouldn't take much work to fix!



Okay, another thing to be mindful of: the back of the leg is a bigger pattern piece than the front. You can see where my fingers are pointing. On either side of the leg, see how you can see extra fabric creeping up from behind? That is because most people have more dimension on the back sides of their bodies than the front. (If you didn't, you'd look weird.) Anyways, I have seen these "Make Skinny Pants from Your Old Pants" blog posts before, and they don't take into account the percentages of back panel to front panel, and they end up making the front panels too slim and the backs too large. This is because as a pattern is graded (made bigger or smaller), the grader deals with percentages, not just making the shape bigger. Anyways, if I flattened the inner seam and cut the inner seam portion away as a 2 dimensional object, the back panel would be end up being much larger than the percentages you see here, and it would look super "Amateur Hour" when I finished.



So here is how I compensated. I pulled the crotch up!



Then, I laid the red pants on top as a guide for pinning.





I sewed along the pins.




When I tried them on, I realized that the leg on the right side of the screen was tighter than the left. You can especially see between the two pins that it's tighter. What I should have done was to pin one leg, sew it and test it, and then cut both legs to the same measurement before sewing the other leg. That would have saved time. No matter. It's a learning experience!



So what I did was to cut the seam down on the good leg.



Then, I matched up both legs, one on top of each other.



And then cut the bottom leg to match the top one.



You can see here how "off" my sewing was! By almost 1/2 an inch!



I sewed up the second leg. . .



And took out the tighter of the two seams.



I had a ton of fuzzies now, so I took some packing tape and rubbed them all off.



Matching legs.




Below you can see the pants before and after. 



The End!!!












Wednesday, July 29, 2015

Refashioning: Altering and Dying a Jean Jacket

So, I am part of this fashion facebook board and on it I have a faux arch-nemesis, Susan, who challenges me to different fashion battles. This past time it was thrifted polka dots. She wants to do a jean one, but I told her I was still in search of the perfect jean jacket. That Thursday, I found this on the dollar rack. It's way too big and the wrong color, but. . .it was so great! I had to pay a dollar for it. 



See how long the cuffs are?



Using a jacket that fits me as a guide, I cut away the inner part of the arms and the side seams and stitched them up.




I would have stopped there, but. . .as you can see this blue is washing me out. 

I was not finished.



Okay, so this part is for all you people that I tell about RIT dye and who act all scandalized like, "You do WHAT in your washing machine????" It's really okay, guys. It's made to work in your washing machine, and it's actually a lot less messy than trying to do it in your tub or in a plastic bin!

All you do is start your machine on a small load with hot water. Let the water fill up and don't close the top--to keep the agitation at bay. Pour in a cup of salt (for cotton blends) and a bottle of RIT dye and then add your article(s) of clothing (up to two pounds). (Last week, I dyed six pairs of jeans that were starting to fade using two bottles of dye and two cups of salt. Just fyi.) You can stir it with a big stick if you want, but just make sure your clothing is submerged and wait 30 minutes before you close the lid and start the cycle. The washer does literally the rest of the work. After the washer is done, put your clothes in the dryer and run an empty cycle with bleach through your washer.



I put a blanket over the top of my machine to keep any of the dye water from splashing out. (We have an old machine. Can you tell?) I also did this during the bleaching step.





This is after the bleaching step. See? Nothing to worry about. I think it's actually cleaner than it was before I dyed anything. Just make sure to bleach RIGHT AFTER the dying step so the dye doesn't have time to set.



So now it's the color I wanted, but the buttons were still a little wrong. I like pewter, but I don't look that great in it.




Enter: Silver fingernail polish.




The buttons on the right have been painted. See the difference?



Okay, almost done. The last thing that was bugging me was that the shoulders were too broad. Fortunately, I had some "for real" 80s shoulder pads in my inventory for just such an occasion.




I hand stitched them in.



Okay so....I am from Ohio, but my husband is from South Carolina....Is it just me or do you hear the "Gettysburg" soundtrack in your head when you see this too? Anyways, I like it. It looks like it could be a museum piece. 
(And in lieu of the SC "Rebel Flag" conspiracies lately, I can make a "Daughters of the Union" statement! Haha!)












The finale: Proof that "Dressing Your Truth" works. I snap into focus when I am wearing certain colors.


The End!!







Saturday, July 25, 2015

Oil Dying - When Other Oil Stain Removal Methods Don't Work


So, remember when I blogged about how coconut oil is the best thing for your hair ever? Well, it is. . .however if you try to put it in your hair after getting dressed, it can stain your clothes. See pics below. 




I was particularly mad about this shirt because it's Ralph Lauren, and I hadn't even gotten the chance to wear it yet!!! Grrr...




The culprit:






So, I tried many things to get the stains out. I tried rubbing Oxy into the stains, letting them sit, and then washing them and hanging them to dry. Didn't work. I tried lemon juice and vinegar too. Nothing worked. Those pictures above are actually taken AFTER all of these mentioned methods, so you can see for yourself that they didn't work. I was going to donate the ruined clothes to Goodwill, but I was super mad because I wear those blue pants all the time. . .



Then, I got the idea, "If you can't beat 'em, join 'em." 




I took my half used jar of coconut oil, some boiling water and a plastic tub and went to work.

First, I put the boiling water and oil into the tub and stirred it up till the oil was all melted.




Then, I added my shirt and pants and kneaded them and flipped and kneaded and flipped until they were fully saturated.



I waited a few minutes and then wrung them out as much as I could and threw them into the wash (on cold).



I hung both to dry. . .and I'm pleased to say that the pants look GREAT! I feel like the color is actually even more vibrant than before and the stains are completely gone.





However. . .the green shirt was completely ruined. The original stains were still there, and all I had accomplished was making new ones...





Oh well. You win some, you lose some! At least the pants were saved!




The End!