In my previous introductory post, I mentioned that I had finally made a dress from a vintage 1940s pattern that I have had in my collection for years. Here is a photograph of the pattern which I made and the finished piece followed by a discussion of the difficulties of the process.
Photo of the pattern and the material used |
There is a list of "suggested notions" which include "buttons for bodice, 2 spools of thread, and a slide fastener or zipper." I looked at the picture on the package. Um, I can't quite figure out how buttons are only suggested on the garment, as they appeared to be a REQUIREMENT (excepting those who required easy access).
Additionally, the pattern has NO DESCRIPTION on the back, like I'm so used to seeing on modern patterns. I actually purchased all my fabric and notions wondering why the pattern didn't tell how much yardage to get for the contrast fabric at the waist. As it was to turn out when I read the instruction sheet, I was wrong for not assuming they didn't sell "belly dresses" in the 1940s.
I laid out all of my fabric in order to lay out the unprinted pattern pieces and hit obstacle Number 1:
Ahhh Precious Twister... either I let him in or he'll bang & scratch on the door till I go insane |
Pattern pieces with instructions |
The instructions on the other hand... omg. I actually came up with the perfect comparison. Remember the woman who sued McDonald's for spilling coffee on herself, won, and now they have to mark that "coffee is hot" on all their cups, and we were all like "DUH! Who doesn't know that?" Okay, this was like that, but in reverse. Because I imagine that everyone in the 40s would read these and go, "Okay, got it. No problem." I, on the other hand, looked at a lot of the steps and thought a big question mark over the head, "HUH?" Now I know why modern patterns have 4 pages of instructions versus 3/4 of a page like this. For instance:
Step 2: ...make bound buttonholes...
Step 8: fold over about 4 inches of fabric then... finish bound buttonholes.
Lesson: They didn't have a "one-step buttonhole" on their machines back then. Ugh. And buttonholes on seersucker? Kinda tough to rip out. :)
Part 2 with the final dress tomorrow!
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