Sunday, May 13, 2018

Gus at Gardener's Supply


Gus is all ready for summer, in a pair of pink cotton shorts, a white button-down shirt, canvas loafers, and a pair of sunglasses. For mother's day, my mom and I went down to Gardener's Supply Co. to look at all the wonderful plants in bloom. Gus came too, to have his picture taken. 

 



Tuesday, May 8, 2018

Summer Dresses for Nancy Drew & Her Crew: Free Pattern



I finally made some summer dresses for Nancy Drew, and her friends, Bess and George. When I was working on the designs, I spent some time pouring over the beautiful cover illustrations that have been a trade-mark of the classic Nancy Drew series, since it's beginning in 1930.

I noticed that the sleuthing trio are often dressed in primary colors, and that Nancy appears quite a few times in monochromatic dark blue, or bright yellow. Since my Nancy, Bess, and George dolls are inspired by the 1950s and early 1960s Nancy Drew illustrations, I decided to try my hand at some summery outfits, inspired by the shirt-dresses on Rudy Nappi covers.

Each miniature dress is actually a blouse, skirt, and detachable belt with a wire buckle. I took a picture of my pattern and uploaded it below, along with instructions. Enjoy!

Making a Nancy Drew inspired Shirt-dress:

Materials:

  • 1/4 yard of light cotton.
  • 1 yard of 1/8" ribbon for embellishments.
  • Seed beads for buttons
  • 6" of elastic cord
  • Snaps or hook-and-eye fasteners. 

Making the Blouse:

  • Sew the darts
  • Sew front and back pieces together along the sides and shoulders.
  • Sew the ends of each sleeve piece together, hem the bottoms, and sew the sleeves into the arm-holes (you could also leave the sleeves off, and hem the arm-holes for a more summery look).
  • Trim the sleeves and neckline with ribbon. To get different looks, you can stitch ribbon down the front of the blouse to make a faux button placket, add a ribbon bow to the neckline, or sew ribbon on in a sailor-collar design.
  • Stitch one or two seed-beads to the outside of each ribbon cuff, and add beads wherever else you would like buttons.
  • Hem the bottom and back edges of the blouse, and add fasteners to the back, for a snug fit.
 Scale: each square on the graph-paper should be 1/4"

Making the Skirt:

Since different Barbie molds can be slightly different heights, i think it's easiest to create a skirt by measuring from the doll's waist to where you want it to end (to the widest part of the calf, for a 1950s look). Then add 1/2" for the seam allowances. Cut a strip, that is that number long, and about 14-16" wide. 

The pieces that I used for the skirts in the picture measured about 4.5" long, and 16" wide.
  • Stitch the two short ends of the strip together.
  • Sew a 1/4" hem on the bottom edge. 
  • Fold over and sew 1/4" on the top edge, thread with elastic cord, and gather to fit doll's waist.   

Making the Belt:

  • To make a belt buckle, bend a piece of wire into a 1/8" squarish figure 8 shape (like the drawing above).
  • Glue one end of a length of ribbon around the center bar of the 8, and then thread the the end through the buckle.
  • Alternatively, you could fasten the belt, at the back, with a hook-and-eye fastener.