Monday, September 28, 2009

For the boys (and warrior girls) .... the Gryphon Tabard

Gryphon Tabard

So far my projects have been pretty “girlie”, with the possible exception of the galaxy cape. I could have seen that going home with some young wizard – though in the end, it went home with a lovely young sorceress in training. But when I saw this crazy blue and gold skirt at the local thrift store, I immediately thought of knights and swordplay. It ended up being my first “boy” project, though I’m all for girls with swords – and boys in tutus for that matter, if that’s what they want to wear.

Celtic print

Anyway, back to the project. The original skirt was definitely homemade, though whoever made it did a nice job (unlike whoever put together the velvet skirt I used for the galaxy cape --uhhh). I took it apart and started lining up the pattern for the best fit on a small-sized tabard. I thought I might be able to squeeze two tabards from the one skirt, but alas – the pattern was too big and the old seams left too many holes that I had to work around. I’ll be using the skirt leftovers as heraldry on another tabard for certain – it’s too nice to waste.

matching patterns

I spent WAY too long deciding on a symbol to place on the front of the tabard. In the end, I settled on a griffin – a symbol of courage and strength in medieval heraldry. I love the look of the red griffin along with the red dagging on the hem and sleeves. The “chain mail” arms came from a great little piece of fabric I found in a remnant bin, and the braided trim is a leftover from another project. So with the exception of the red felt, every bit of this tabard is reused/recycled materials.

Gryphon close up

The “Gryphon tabard” is available at Nymbol’s Secret Garden on Whidbey Island in Langley, Washington. If you are interested in this tabard, or any other projects, you can contact me via email for more details. And I’m always happy to share what I know, so if you’re interested in more information on any of the techniques I’ve used, I’d love to hear from you.

Have fun today!
Melinda

Thursday, September 10, 2009

Galaxy Cape


Galaxy Cape
Originally uploaded by mc-s
Project update: I sent out the teaser a few weeks back about this sweet black velvet skirt I found hanging out in my local thrift store. Well, I’ve finally made some progress – behold the Galaxy cape! This is definitely kid-sized, though a smaller adult might be able pull it off, too.

The disassembly of this skirt nearly took as long as it did to make the new cape. It was very clear that it was a home-sewn project, and the person who made this thing really over-built it. I literally spent hours carefully ripping out yards and yards of zig-zag stitching so as not to damage the velvet. Try picking out tiny black stitches on black velvet sometime– it’s maddening!

Anyway, once I had a nice big piece of velvet, I was ready to rock. I sewed the star sequins in place first. If you’re ever making something that’s lined like this cape, that is definitely the way to go. Trying to sew them on after the fact without catching the lining would have been tedious and I don’t think it would have looked nearly as nice.

I was going to use red satin for the lining, but instead I choose butter yellow. I liked the way it glowed beneath the black, and also the beads I used to attach the sequins had a slight golden cast to them, so I liked picking that up in the lining. Looking at the finished product, I’m happy I didn’t use red. It would have looked more “Dracula” than “wizard”, which is what I was going for with this design. Though I do have another big piece of velvet left for another project --- hmmmm ….

Have fun today!
Melinda

Saturday, September 5, 2009

Anansi Girls? Spinning a cobweb tutu


I’m always inspired by other great artists, and one of my favorite writers is Neil Gaiman. I just finished reading his novel Anansi Boys this week, which is all about the spider god Anansi and his two sons, Fat Charlie and Spider. There also happens to be a bit of a spider invasion going on at our house, so I’ve had arachnids on the brain for a week or so now. The “final strand” in my cobweb tutu design came together when I was looking through my fabric remnant pile, and re-discovered some web-patterned netting from a goth-inspired Little Miss Muffet dress I made a few years ago. The pieces were in place – now to get sewing!

I choose black, eggplant and lavender tulle for this project. The web netting really needed a layer of something light in color underneath to show off the pattern – it was lost with just black beneath it.

Once the skirt was put together, I started adding sequins to the spider webbing for sparkle. That looked pretty good, but the star of the show was missing. I needed a spider, and the plastic ones you get at Halloween would not do. I had some faceted black buttons that came off a thrift-store project skirt, so I used one for the head. I found another fancy button for the body, and made the legs out of silver seed and bugle beads. I tried sewing them directly onto the netting, which was a BIG mistake. Thank goodness I tried it out first on a scrap first. I would have cried if I ruined all my hard work on that skirt on the last step like that.

Instead of sewing, I used some super fine-gauge wire to build the legs and wire the two buttons together. After a few misfires (it was my first crack at using beads and wire like that), I had a really good looking spider.

So there you have it – a cobweb tutu just in time for All Hallow’s Eve. It will be making its way north to Nymbol’s Secret Garden very soon!

Thursday, September 3, 2009

Grand Opening! Grand Opening!

My good friends, Bill and Sam Cass, are celebrating the birth of their new baby -- Nymbol's Secret Garden (they already have two beautiful and talented daughters to be proud of). The Cass clan is responsible for Rumpled Silks, really -- they asked if I would like to create some fairy fashions for their store/design studio, and that's how the whole thing started.

Anyway -- you should check it out if you're in the Whidbey Island/Seattle area. The Grand Opening is this Saturday, and I'm completely bummed out that I'm going to miss it. I hear that a real pirate queen will be there to lead the sing-a-long. It's absolutely worth the trip, and it's the only place to buy Rumpled Silks fashions! Check out the poster -- it does a better job of describing the whole vibe than I ever could: