Black Sequined Dress

Pattern/Technique: Mashup of the Fancy Tiger Fen top in size 20 & Helens Closet Dressing Robe Wrap Dress (tutorial link) in size XXL. See Lessons/notes for more details on toile process.

Modifications: Took Fancy Tiger Fen top in size 20. Extended side seams to add 11” of vertical length. Replaced back shoulder/neckline with Helens Closet Dressing Robe in size XXL. Replaced front shoulder/neckline with Helens Closet Dressing Robe in XXL and extended seam allowance cutouts to fold line to form a v-neck. Replaced Fen dolman sleeve with sleeves from Helens Closet Dressing Robe.

Materials: Main fabric: 2.5 yds (45” wide) black sequined fabric (purchased from Joann fabrics)

Lining fabric: 2.5 yds (45” wide) black rayon challis lining fabric (purchased from Fabric.com)

Added sew-in interfacing to neckline.

New skills: Working with sequined fabric

Lessons/Notes:

Toile 01

Approach: Used Helens Closet Dressing Robe Wrap Dress mod (tutorial link) and eyeballed the hem curve based on the tutorial illustrations.

Notes: I generally like the silhouette but wanted the neckline to be a little bit wider/deeper and was a concerned about whether the dress has enough fabric overlap to avoid wardrobe malfunctions.

Pinning: I pinned in the neckline to the desired shape and also pinned up the hem of the dress approximately 5 inches.

Toile 02

I really like the fit of the top of the Zadie Jumpsuit so I wanted to see what the neckline might look like if I used that instead of the tutorial approach.

Approach: Modified the neckline on the Helens Closet pattern front and back pieces by tracing over it using the front/back bodice pieces of the Zadie Jumpsuit (size 22) to get a wider V at the neckline. On the front pattern piece, I also extended the front wrap from the point (where the tie attaches) to get more fabric coverage in the front of the dress. Shortened the skirt length by 5 inches (at the lengthen/shorten line.

Notes: The new neckline caused something really weird to happen at the shoulder—there’s a lot more fabric bunching. The tie attachment point is also higher than I’d like (right under the bust in this toile vs. at the natural waist in the original Zadie) and I actually like the silhouette less than in Toile 01, so I’m going to continue refining Toile 01.

Toile 03

I was chatting about toile 01 with a friend and she had recently made a wrap dress with 6” overlap, and spent the whole day holding it closed (ugh). We got to talking about an A-line silhouette as an alternative. I realized I’d made a Fancy Tiger Fen top that had a good v-neck and fit over my hips well, so that became the basis for this toile. Interestingly the taper angle from the armscye to the hip is basically the same for the Fen and Dressing Robe, but the Fen has 1/2” additional width on the half pattern piece (1” for the full garment width) and I like that extra bit of ease.

Approach: I put on the Fen and determined I wanted ~11” of additional length at the side seam, in order to hit just above the knee. I also wanted a deeper v neck so I lowered the point by 2”. I liked the style of sleeve from toile 01, so I overlayed the armscye of the Dressing Robe on the Fen, aligning the side seams and the shoulder seam, then traced that. I also included the high-low hem from the Fen, by aligning the top pattern with the angled edge of the dress pattern, tracing the curve, and extending the line segment at the fold line. I used the Dressing Robe sleeve from toile 01 as is (and actually stole the sleeve from toile 02).

Notes: The A-line silhouette on this toile is excellent but I'm concerned that the width of the v-neck will cause structural issues once I move to the heavier sequined fabric—even with this light fabric I'm noticing the sleeves are pulling off my shoulders. I also notice that the fabric at the shoulder seems to be collapsing inward.

Toile 04

Approach: I took my tissue pattern from toile 03 and modified it to use the same shoulder width and neckline from the Dressing Robe back piece. For the v-neck in front I extended the seam allowance cutout down to the edge of the pattern piece.

Notes: The fit finally feels dialled in at the shoulder and hip. The neckline is a bit conservative-looking in this toile but I'm going to lose 1/2” seam allowance when I line it, which will lower the neckline point by 1 1/2”. I'm also going to stabilize the neckline since I'll be clipping the seam allowance when I do the lining. Will probably need to do sew in interfacing because fusible is going to be a no go for synthetic fabric.

Final Garment

  • To cut pattern pieces from sequined fabric: I flipped the sequined fabric on the wrong side, placed the pattern piece on it, and traced using a water soluble paint marker. For pattern pieces cut on the fold, I traced 1 side, flipped the pattern piece, then traced the other side. For the actual cutting I used a pair of regular kitchen scissors so I wouldn’t kill my fabric shears (the scissors I used are noticeably duller after cutting the dress body).

  • I trimmed the sequins from the seam allowances using a combination of wire clippers (I believe they’re usually used for cutting beading wire) to cut individual sequins, and scissors to cut rows of sequins. I will note that my sewing machine had no issue sewing through sequins (I used a Schact leather needle and it punched through them easily), but when I had to resew the lining to the outer dress neckline, I had to be really careful so that any previously perforated sequins weren’t visible. tl;dr while my sewing machine can handle sequins, I’m still going to remove them from seam allowances so that I don’t have to try to hide damaged sequins when I inevitably have to redo a seam.

  • I originally sewed the lining using a polyester lining fabric from Joann but soon realized that the low breathability/wicking of polyester is a really bad combo with heavy/non-breathable sequined fabric. After 1 attempted wear (sweat city) I replaced the lining with rayon challis. I machine sewed the lining at the neckline, then pulled it inside the garment and hand sewed the lining to the exterior at both sleeves. I didn’t attach the lining to the exterior at the bottom hem, instead I just folded over the exterior fabric to make a clean hem, and did a rolled hem on the lining. Had no issues with it being visible or hanging below the exterior fabric.

  • While the dress itself looks pretty awesome as-is, I used a black linen belt (purchased from Elizabeth Suzann) to give myself a more defined waist and add some extra flair.

What I'd do differently: I could probably futz around a bit more with the neckline shape, but honestly? Everything about this project feels like a well-earned victory.

Care: Hand wash, lay flat to dry.

Elodie Dress

Pattern/Technique: Elodie Wrap Dress by Closet Core Patterns, size 18 (from 14-30 size range)

Modifications: No pattern mods

Materials: Rayon Cotton Sateen Chambray (100% cotton): 3.75 yards (60” wide). Originally was going to make a Huon with this fabric but was concerned it would pill/snag if I wore it as a staple piece, so I decided the drape and luster would suit the Elodie beautifully.

New skills: Ladder stitch (used to hand sew the waistband facing on the interior of the dress)

Lessons: Cut rayon blends out on a flat surface with a rotary cutter (not scissors) and take care to make sure the grain line is straight. Fabric hanging over the edge of a cutting table will pull the grain line off straight.

I read a lot of resources on sewing with rayon. The actual process I used was a straight stitch plate with a straight stitch presser foot, 2.0mm stitch length, 80/12 microtex needle, and taking lots of care to not pull the fabric/ensuring gravity wasn't pulling the fabric off the edge of my sewing machine. While serging I set the differential feed to ~0.8-0.9 because I noticed the serged edge of my yardage puckered after hand washing. I used a silk organza press cloth to prevent shiny spots while ironing, and used my extra fine Little House pins to prevent holes/snags when pinning seams.

When rethreading a serger, make sure the thread is fully clasped in the tension disks before trying to fix tension issues (and getting frustrated because the tension isn't changing when you adjust the dial).

When sewing release pleats I inserted pins through the drawn pleat line, making sure the pin intersected the line on both sides of the fold. I found it easiest to put in the pin at the top of the release pleat line to get the fabric aligned, then inserted a second pin halfway between the top of the release pleat and the notch.

To reduce rippling on the sleeve hems, I followed CCP’s advice and stitched along the hem fold line before folding and ironing. There’s definitely still some rippling but I think the technique helped overall.

I attempted to avoid making the same mistake on the center front hems by using my rolled hem foot to sew a rolled hem instead of a standard folded hem. It’s definitely worth taking a few practice runs, but overall this worked really well. I thought I would need to take in some fabric at the back seam to compensate for this and get the front bodice & skirt to align, but I think the fabric is so slinky / prone to stretch out on bias cut pieces that the alignment didn’t end up being an issue.

What I'd do differently: While I think I executed a pretty decent finished product, I just don’t feel like this dress fits in with my personal style in its current incarnation. I think my next step will be trying to dye some swatches of my fabric (and if successful, overdye the entire garment). Because this is made from rayon, I want to use cool water dyes and according to this article fiber reactive dye is the thing to try.

Care: Hand wash, dry flat