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The Journey

01.16.2017 by Tracey //

Slouchy Skirt

So, let’s start at the beginning. No, not my beginning. And not THE Beginning. I’m talking about the origins of the fabric that I used to make this skirt. I stumbled on to something really special and the story is worth telling.

Slouchy Skirt

This skirt fabric is made by an Italian company called Gandini Tessuti Alta Moda. With a name like that, you know we’re talking luxury. You don’t even have to see the fabric to know it’s high end. Gandini has been around since 1925, but it was Susy Gandini who took over in 1961 who really brought the company to where it is now. When she began running the company, Gandini Fabrics became a “converter”, meaning they took raw fabric from mills around Lake Como and customized it. Using various finishing techniques, they changed color and texture which obviously alters how it looks but it also changes how it feels and how the fabric behaves.

Susy Gandini then sells the converted fabric to the best design houses in the world. Chanel, Valentino, and Dior are all clients. What’s left over can sometimes make its way to places like Mood or Mendel Goldberg.

Slouchy Skirt

When I was in Paris with Susan Khalje, we went fabric shopping at Janssens & Janssens (FYI, AMAZlNG!!).  While there, I’m having a grand time picking out my choices. I’m working with a lovely sales woman and she’s giving me the requisite “ooohs and aaahs” at the things that I’m bringing to the cutting table. Just as I’m starting to think that I’m finished shopping I spot a fabric that was almost too high for me to reach. I have to stretch for it and pull it out from under a stack of other bolts. When I take it to be cut, my charming sales woman, who has been all light and smiles, looks at me with an evaluating eye and says with dead seriousness, “You have good taste”. Up until that point, I think she was humoring the American. But something shifted when I presented her with the Gandini fabric, and without knowing it, I passed some sort of test. Can I tell you, I felt like I won something big! I came outta there, beaming with pride.

Slouchy Skirt

Now I wonder, if a fabric could have feelings, how it must have felt being put in my suitcase and brought to the southern United States. Not necessarily the most glamorous destination. Could it be that it had high hopes of being turned into something fabulous by Karl Lagerfeld? Or is it more that it had sat so long in the fabric store that it was just grateful to be bought like the damaged teddy bear, Corduroy? Whatever it’s feelings, it was mine now to hopefully not screw up.

Slouchy Skirt

Slouchy Skirt

Let me just say that to really appreciate this fabric, it has to be handled. The feel and the drape is not like anything I’ve ever (ever!) worked with. It’s simply extraordinary. I looked around for a pattern that matched what I had in my head but didn’t find anything, so I decided to drape it myself. My favorite way to dress is to play with contrasting elements and it seemed appropriate to me that with such a luxury fabric, it would be fun to make a casual and slouchy skirt.

It may have been adding insult to injury that I took the skirt to a mountain top farm in Colombia. Or maybe it’s just happy to be seeing the world. Who knows?! I tried getting the dogs, the cow, and the chickens to join me in one of the photographs but they wouldn’t come close. You can draw your own conclusions.

Pattern, Self-Draped Skirt with Pockets

Fabric, Gandini Silk Blend, Janssens and Janssens, Paris

Couture Details, Handsewn Pick-Stitch Zipper and Narrow Machine Hem

Photographs by Santiago Vanegas

Location, Colombia

(The information about Gandini came from The Mood Guide to Fabric and Fashion.  Also, I didn’t make the shirt I’m wearing. It’s a vintage linen top from my closet.)

Categories // Garments, Skirts Tags // Colombia, France, Gandini Fabric, Italy, Pleated Skirt

Mother’s Day

05.08.2016 by Tracey //

Car Wash Skirt

Car Wash Skirt

Car Wash Skirt

Car Wash Skirt

Car Wash Skirt

Car Wash Skirt

Car Wash Skirt by Tracey

Pattern, draped by Tracey

Fabric, Wool Tweed, B&J Fabrics

Lining, Silk Charmeuse, Susan Khalje Couture

Photography by Santiago Vanegas

At least once a day, I feel like Sisyphus.  If you need a refresher on mythology, Sisyphus was the guy who was doomed to push the boulder up the hill, only to see it roll back down again.  I think many moms feel just like that, some of the time.  When asked, “Hey, what did you do today?”.  I say, “Well, let me tell you, I pushed this boulder all the way to the top of the mountain.  And man!  Was it hard work!”.  To that, they reply, “Uh, you sure about that?  Is the boulder you are talking about the one sitting at the bottom of that hill?”.  Yep.  That’s the one.

That’s one of the reasons why I make my creative life a priority.  For the times, I’ve cleaned my butt off, but there are still dirty dishes in the sink, or all of the clean laundry seems to be spilling over the dirty clothes basket, or my son rips the toilet paper holder out of the wall (true), I need to be able to make progress somewhere.  So, I head to my tree house (which is what I call my sewing room), and get to work on a project.

The car wash skirt project threatened to topple my whole system because the progress I was making was about the slowest in my history of sewing.  Don’t get me wrong, I’ve got no problem with slow sewing, but this was like watching the grass grow!  My pace was so frustrating that it took a Herculean (mythology again!!) effort just to finish.  And after about 10 months, give or take, I finally did.  Phew!

This skirt is packed with couture details.  The wool tweed is quilted with the silk charmeuse lining.  The interior pieces were joined using a hand sewn fell stitch.  I put in a petersham ribbon waist band and the zipper was installed using a prick stitch sewn by hand.  Now that it’s completed, I’m thrilled with how it turned out and I’m already starting to forget all the time and force of will it took to get it done.  Just like child birth!  We moms are programmed to forget the pain.  And when I look at my gorgeous angels, I don’t think at all about the effort of bringing them into the world.  Or not much anyway.

Next week, I’m off to Baltimore for another couture sewing workshop with Susan Khalje.  I can’t wait!!  I’m busting out some lace I bought in Paris.  See you soon.

Categories // Garments, Skirts Tags // car wash skirt, couture sewing, hand sewing

Ikat Skirt

10.03.2015 by Tracey //

Ikat Skirt

Ikat Skirt

Santiago Vanegas Photography

Triple pocket of ikat skirt

Turquoise Lining on Ikat Skirt

Skirt made by Tracey

Pattern, Marfy 3094

Fabric, Ikat Cotton from Mood Fabrics

Photography by Santiago Vanegas

Making this skirt kept me up at night!  Those triple pockets gave me such a headache.  As many of you know, Marfy does not include instructions with their patterns.  They assume you know what you are doing.  Ha!  I did not know what the heck I was doing with this one.  I was obsessed with how to construct this skirt and more than any other project I’ve done, the choices I made early on, lead me to only one or sometimes no good choice at the end.  With every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction.  To say the least!!  I think I have just about every type of finishing on the inside of this thing.  Slowly but surely, it started to come together, and once I had the triple pockets all functioning as true pockets, I could sleep much better.  I took a lot of care with cutting the fabric.  I knew it would be close to impossible to match the design of the fabric exactly because there are so many asymmetrical pieces coming together and shifting grainlines, but I figured that I could at least preserve the turquoise and coral bands of color in a linear way.  And I’m proud of how it turned out.  Oh, yeah, and I also tweaked the design a bit.  The original design had a sharper angle on one side of the wrap.  I curved it to give it more of a tulip hem.

Enjoy your week, everyone.  See you next time.

Categories // Garments, Skirts Tags // Marfy 3094

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I'm on a journey to become a fashion designer but I've got some stuff to learn along the way.

Featherstitch Avenue is my creative journal where any artistic experiment is fair game.

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Images by ©Santiago Vanegas Photography, unless otherwise specified. All rights reserved.

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