Spending all summer teaching kids different crafts had made me kinda miss the whole thing myself, so when a lady from my church had asked me to teach her daughter how to sew it gave me an urge to make a couple of things for myself. I'd had this chevron cotton fabric for a while and so I decided to take a stab at making myself a skirt.
One thing I will say is that sewing is not like riding a bike. You don't just remember everything you've been taught as soon as you jump back in-- or at least I don't. This skirt probably took me three weeks to complete! Partially because with working as a nanny there are a lot of weekends, afternoons and evenings spent not at home. Not that I mind it, but it does mean you have to stick to more portable hobbies and leave the sewing machine at home. So whenever I got the chance, I'd spend an hour or so relearning how to put in a gathering stitch, or sew a buttonhole, and ask myself why I don't do this more often so that I have better practice. But I will say that despite the small frustrations it was really fun and made me want to make a few more, so that might be my hobby of choice for the autumn. And I taught myself (semi-successfully) how to put in a zipper, and hem my own skirt, two things I'd never done before.


I had remembered to add a seam allowance to the length of the skirt, but not to the waistband. My original plan was to have a two inch waist band which meant that I would need five inches so that I could fold it over, two inches in front, two inches in back, and have a half an inch on both sides for seam allowance. Unfortunately I only cut two inches, which meant that it ended up a little less than an inch in height once it was attached to the skirt. I hadn't done sewing math in a long time, and completely forgot to ass for seam allowance!

Still I pressed on. The first thing I stitched was the two panels for the skirt. I sewed them together leaving about five or six inches at the top on one side to add a zipper and then started my gathering stitch at the waist, making a line along the edge of the fabric and then pulling the thread to gather the fabric.
This was when I realized I didn't make my waistband wide enough and in order for me to add it o I was going to have to add extra fabric, or cut a new waistband from the skirt's length. It was also lie two in the morning when I got to this point and so I went to bed and left it to be planned out another day.
And then I got busy, and the skirt sat for a few days until I figured out something to do. It wasn't my first choice but I decided to go ahead and sew two strips of fabric together as a way of making the waistband taller. Then two more in the same way, and attaching all four together to make the waistband wider. It all seemed like so many extra steps, but gave me a much clearer way to fix the mess I had made and a couple Do's and Don't's for the next time! Because it had been so long since I had done this, and I was doing all of it from memory instead of from a pattern or tutorial, I made a ton of mistakes, but I think this was ultimately a lesson on persistence. I've worn this skirt so much since I finished it, and it bothers me that it practically took me a month to finish, when it was really quite simple, and I was just adding extra steps for myself that I didn't need to do! Don't you just hate it when you're basically standing in your own way to accomplish something?



With a fresh perspective on the situation I forged ahead. I attached the waistband to the skirt, and was happily surprised that when I tried on the skirt it wasn't too big, or too small but actually fit my waist pretty well.








All in all I think it came out really well. There were a lot of mistakes along the way, but I really love this skirt and I know I'll get a lot of use out of it!

No comments:
Post a Comment