Showing posts with label 60s style. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 60s style. Show all posts

Sunday, September 20, 2020

Weekend Review: How to Make Clothes that Fit and Flatter

 

How to Make Clothes that Fit and Flatter:
Step-by-Step instructions for women who like to sew
by Adele Margolis
Garden City: Doubleday, c1969
296 p.

This week's review is another vintage sewing book but this one's a bit different. Rather than an overall guide to sewing, this book talks about fit and fit alterations. The title kinds of gives away the angle of the book, though -- that old question of "flattering", which in this case does indeed mean how to make yourself look thinner and taller, 

However, the fit information and the illustrations are top notch, and even if you aren't too keen on the obsession with thinness, you can use the techniques simply for fit purposes. The book opens with the statement that "fifty years ago, the fashionable American woman was size 16 going on size 18. Today she is size 12 going on size 10". Hmm. Fifty years after this book's publication we've returned to the 16 going on 18 normality, and completely reversed her maxim in this opening chapter that says "it is better to fit the clothes that you would like to wear than to make the clothes fit what you are". Today we know that sewing is the superpower that indeed allows us to make our clothes fit what we are today, and to love it! 

There are nine chapters, all focused on an area of size and fitting. The first chapter, as noted, is a bit egregious in its insistence that you must fit the youthful ideal, but it does include useful information on grading patterns. 

The second chapter deals with the visual -- colour, textures, design lines, proportion -- and is fairly useful as an investigation of how those elements affect the final garment. The third chapter is about flat pattern shaping; darts and control seams and how to manipulate them. The fourth examines how to take measurements and make basic adjustments to the pattern, truing it, where to add to it and so on. 

Chapter Five is the meat of things, a lengthy look at ease, draglines, seam and dart control changes, necklines and gaping, how to change a basic pattern to extend its use, allowing for fluctuating weight and so forth. Lots of information and delightful line drawings to illustrate it all (most of very thin women of course).

Chapter Six goes over how to make a basic pattern (or sloper) and how to create a dress form for yourself using this sloper; the seventh chapter is all about construction and how that plays a role in fitting a pattern to yourself.  Basting, underlinings, steaming, pressing, tailoring, trimming, blocking -- it all plays a role. 

In the eighth chapter, size appears again, since the topic is choosing patterns with an eye to fit. However, it also gives tons of examples of different kinds of style lines and what kind of fitting can be done with each. So you know if you choose a set in sleeve or a raglan sleeve, the fitting adjustments will be tackled differently. From sleeves to yokes, necklines to ease, each particular area of a pattern is looked at in terms of the way fitting techniques interact with the design lines.

The final chapter goes over the muslining process as well as adding in any general fitting tips that weren't covered earlier. 

So as you can see, this is full of useful information on fitting, from a very particular viewpoint. I really like Adele Margolis' detailed technical books but of course it is very 60s. The illustrations of the various styles are charmingly retro if you don't mind a very limited set of silhouettes. But there are also plentiful drawings of pattern pieces and alteration lines which are really helpful. Of course, modern fitting books have tons of photos which might suit you better in this area. But I enjoyed the sketches of the designs and the simplicity of the lines. 

Because this book is older, there are some design concepts that I haven't seen explained in newer books -- styles that are no longer en vogue, but are still intriguing to look at. If you can look past the 60s focus on youth and skinniness, this is an interesting read. 

Sunday, April 5, 2020

Weekend Review: Vivienne Colle's Make It Yourself Boutique

Vivienne Colle's Make It Yourself Boutique / Vivienne Colle
NY: Evans, c1967
255 p.
Open Library is an online resource that has many out of print and out of copyright books available to read. If you create a free account, you can also check out books that are older but not out of copyright, like this very 60s sewing book!

I checked out the Make It Yourself Boutique last week when Open Library had announced that they were forming an Emergency Library with many books available that are still in copyright -- this has caused quite a bit of upset as authors consider it pirating, as they don't get anything out of it. However, I've been using Open Library as an account holder for quite a long time in the regular manner, and still do. 


So I found this book and thought it sounded (and looked) fun -- that mod cover! It's a rather laissez-faire kind of sewing book by the owner of a fashionable boutique (and apparently in 1967 the word boutique was still new enough to need some explaining, as Colle does in the intro). She isn't a trained designer, just someone who sewed and worked as a seamstress for designers before leaving to start her own shop. And as she mentions frequently, she dressed Washington celebrities; I can only imagine these were their more casual wear. 

A reversible dolman top
The patterns are made only by measurements on flat fabric -- they are simple lines, like an a-line top or a popover, as a poncho would be made. Loose fitting, generic clothes are the theme here. The cover shows a very simple tabard style top that ties at the sides. 


And in one spot, she shows how to add bust darts; put the popover top on and pinch out appropriate darts, mark them and then sew them. It is pretty free wheeling! Tailoring and fit is definitely not a concern.


But it was a fun read, and really interesting to see the state of sewing books in this era. Clearly this is aimed at young women, both for the styles and for the addition of chapters on "bazaar items" -- things to make and sell, like piggy banks from bleach bottles, and adds some strange accessory patterns too. Take a look at this flower hat:


As sewists we are also encouraged to make a tape measure into a trendy belt:


Something intriguing about this book is that there is a section on upcycling -- from using men's shirts to make sleep wear for ladies, or using piano shawls and/or other household textiles to make long hostess gowns or tent dresses, Colle goes over the ways that she finds unusual fabrics and remakes them into stylish 60s outfits. (including sewing lace panels to pantalettes to make lace trousers to wear under tunics - hopefully that will stay in the 60s). I do like her practical advice on how to make the most of oddly shaped scavenged textiles though, and tips on evaluating their suitability and how to wash and prepare them. 

This was definitely worth looking through for its period flavour and entertaining voice -- the author is very confident of herself and her style. The inclusion of odd crafts seems funny, but so many of the craft books in this era did include things to sell -- lots of craft magazines did the same. 

If you're interested in checking out some of the retro sewing books on Open Library, it's easy to create an account and see what's there. Just search by dressmaking or fashion, and you'll get quite a return!