I had to stitch three pleats into the front of the hood before I could begin blocking the hat. Thank goodness for
the industrial sewing machines at college because my domestic wouldn't have coped with the thickness of this
wool.
A cloche style block was needed to make this hat, I soaked the hat in boiling water and blocked it the same way as the other's. This job required some muscles, it was kind of like stretching out a woolly jumper that has shrunk in the wash! Friction burnt hands ahoy!!
All it needed was a petersham ribbon on the inside and a satin ribbon on the outside, oh and the edge hemmed up by hand!
The 'Lily St Regis' Pillbox hat was next, I started off with a parissal cone hood and blocked it in the same way I had with the other's.
Once off the block, I hand stitched the millinery wire into the hem and folded the hem over it. I placed a lining inside and stab stitched it in place, I then used a bias binding to finish/hide the turned under hem.
I then made a thick pink check ribbon by stitching several thin ones together and attached some purple veiling on top of that, for the finishing touches.
The college didn't have a block for a bonnet, so for my 'Nanny MacPhee Wedding Bonnet', I made it completely from buckram, cutting out piece's and stitching them together.
I did this for the peak, covered the parts in ice wool and stitched the pieces together. The outside I covered in white satin and the inside in a lovely cerise satin.
I made a long neck tie, one side lime green and the other cerise and attached it. I also made my own bias binding for the edging. All the other trimmings are shop bought.
The 'Toot Sweet Hat'. I made a buckram base cap, but the rest of this hat was made of organza and ric-rac. I began cutting out two full circle's of organza and made one smaller. I hemmed up the outer edge and attached white ric-rac around this edge.
I gathered the inner circle and pulled it in tightly than attached it to the base cap.
Using wired organza ribbon, that I edged in ric-rac, I looped them around and stitched it into a bow.
All I had to do was stitch the lower flounce to the bow and there was the finished hat.
I loved the Millinery project, but it involved a lot of hand sewing, my hands were red raw and covered in pin pricks by the end of it. So be warned.....
|
No comments:
Post a Comment