Archive for October 2011

October 26, 2011

details: piping

I’ve been thinking a lot about piping this week. Not for any particular reason except that it somehow entered my mind that I’d like to add piping to the seam of the School Photo Dress. And when I did a quick search on the Oliver + S Flickr group I found this pretty one, already done. Isn’t it great? Since the print on this dress is large and rather busy, the piping is just a  subtle touch that breaks it up a bit so it isn’t completely overwhelming. Perfect.

(You can click on any of the images in this post to go through to the Flickr page for each photo where you’ll see whose lovely work each garment is.) If the fabric was a solid or a subtle print, you could also add piping to the vertical seams to emphasize the structure of the dress. It might be easier to eliminate the front pockets if you do this, however. I haven’t tried sewing them with piping.

Either way, I love the addition of  piping and thought I’d look around the Flickr group to see where you’ve been adding piping to your sewing. You’ve got lots of great ideas! Here are a few, just to show them off a bit. How about a Jump Rope Dress with piping at the collar and the pockets?

Or the Class Picnic Blouse with piping in the yoke seam?

This Class Picnic is great, too. I love the gingham and think the piping really shows off the yoke seam. (The monogram is a nice touch too, isn’t it?)

One of the great things about piping is that it’s great for boys and girls. Adding it to the edge of the Sailboat Pants emphasizes the nautical aspect of the pattern and shows off the construction of the pants as well.

And the Seashore Sundress is a perfect vehicle for piping, with all those seams that just beg for it. This version is subtle, and the rickrack is great addition as well. I like how you can see those little pockets a bit better with the piping, too.

This version is much brighter, with the piping at the edges instead of the seams. I love the combination of the two fabrics. They work really well for this dress!

And I’ll just sneak in one more example of piping here. This dress was inspired by Little Orphan Annie interpreted in a Puppet Show Dress. Love it. The piping at the cuffs is brilliant.

Beautiful work, all of you!

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October 21, 2011

project HOPE art homemade dress drive

Back in August, we were contacted by Kathy Barbro of an organization called Project HOPE Art. The group is devoted to providing ongoing assistance for victims of last year’s horrific earthquake in Haiti.

The group was kicking off a new project, a homemade dress drive for young girls living at an orphanage in Port-Au-Prince. Their goal was to sew and deliver 30 dresses to the orphanage, and Kathy wondered if they could use our free Popover Sundress pattern for the project.

Popover Sundress

We are always happy to have people sew from our patterns for charitable causes. We told Kathy that, of course, they could use the pattern. She put up a blog post, and we Tweeted a link to it.

Fast forward two months. Did 30 people sew and send in a Popover Sundress? Yes. And then another 30 did, and another 30, and another 30, and…. To date, Project HOPE Art has received 143 completed Popover Sundresses to deliver to Haiti!

Now Project HOPE Art is raising funds for an interesting new project in Haiti. Once the project is funded and goes forward, the dresses will be delivered by the people with the organization who travel to Haiti to facilitate the project. If you would like to find out more about the project and make a donation to help fund it, you can do so on the project’s Kickstarter page.

Thanks to all of you who have donated your time and talents to make these dresses. And thanks to Kathy for putting in all the legwork to make this wonderful project happen.

 

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sew it all tv

Last spring I had the pleasure of traveling to Colorado to film an episode of Sew It All TV with host Ellen March. Ellen was pregnant at the time, so she was interested in sewing a project for children. We had a great time making the bucket hat from Oliver + S Little Things to Sew. Here we are together on the set.

Bucket Hats on Sew It All TV

My segment of the show (episode 202)  is just starting to air on PBS stations in selected markets. (Thanks to @sewhappytosew on Twitter for letting us know that the show aired in Las Vegas last weekend.) If you want to catch the episode, check with your local PBS station to see if they carry the show and when it will air. Air dates will vary by market.

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October 20, 2011

join me in welcoming Tricia Waddell

Over the years I’ve done a few projects with Stitch magazine. That’s where our free Ruffled Halter pattern originally appeared, and most recently I filmed my two instructional videos with the team from Stitch. There are two reasons why it’s always a pleasure to work with Stitch: the quality of the product they produce is always so high, and working with Stitch‘s founding editor Tricia Waddell is always a great experience.

That’s why I’m especially pleased to announce that Tricia has recently joined the growing staff of Liesl and Co., the parent company of the Oliver + S and Lisette brands.

Tricia Waddell

Tricia will be leading development of an exciting new brand which we will launch next year. I also expect that you’ll see her blogging here occasionally and posting  in the discussion forums as well.

So please join me in giving her a warm welcome. As you get to know her here (if you don’t already), I’m sure you’ll come to like and respect her as much as I do.

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October 19, 2011

introducing cape ann

It’s finally time to introduce my newest fabric collection for Moda, Cape Ann!

I’m very excited to share these fabrics with you. Over the past few months you may have seen images of some of the prints, especially when we released our fall sewing patterns. But now that the fabrics are shipping to stores I can give you the whole treatment.

Cape Ann is inspired by the work of well-known illustrator Virginia Lee Burton. You’re probably most familiar with Ms. Burton’s work through her classic children’s books The Little House and Mike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel, which she both wrote and illustrated.

While I’ve always loved these books and her illustrations, it wasn’t actually her children’s books that inspired me to create this collection. Instead, a few years ago I found an article in a magazine about the Folly Cove Designers, which was a co-operative group of artisans in the Cape Ann area of Massachusetts that was founded and led by Ms. Burton. The artists in this group worked together to create hand-printed textiles which they sold themselves. The Folly Cove Designers grew out of  a renewed interest in the Arts and Crafts movement that began in England in the mid-1800s, and the group found inspiration in the environment of Cape Ann and its flora and fauna. They believed that their art should be both useful and creative.

Hey wait, are you sensing a theme here? Modern Workshop, my last collection, was inspired by the Wiener Werkstatte and its emphasis on hand-crafted homewares and other objects that were both useful and beautiful.  That concept of usefulness and quality seems to be striking a chord with my designs lately, hasn’t it? Must be my practical Midwest upbringing.

Anyway, back to the Cape Ann collection. I love Ms. Burton’s charming textile designs and illustrative work  and wanted to try something like this myself. So although I don’t think of myself as an illustrator, a few of my illustrations sneakily made their way into this collection. For example, this print is called Indian Summer, which is my version of a toile and features drawings of children playing. If you look closely, you’ll even see S and Bear! (She loves it that her favorite dress has a drawing of her on it.) My favorite drawing in this print is the boy and girl playing dress up. He’s wearing scuba flippers and she’s got butterfly wings and an over-sized hat. The images are sweet and a little quirky, to keep the feeling of the print a bit lighthearted.

 

The Virginia’s Closet print is taken more or less directly from my sketchbooks and includes many Oliver + S pattern designs. When we introduced Cape Ann at Quilt Market last spring (was it really that long ago?) I drew some of these clothing designs directly onto the chalkboard walls of our booth, just for the fun of it. (Sorry they’re a bit hard to see in the photograph below. Click on the image if you want to enlarge it.)

Like the Folly Cove designers, I was also inspired by a lot of the flora and fauna of our own neighborhood, right here in New York’s East Village. Last fall when I was designing this collection we walked by loads of chrysanthemums plants on our way to S’s school every day. Those autumn flowers inspired two chrysanthemum prints, Chrysanthemum Swirl and Starburst Mums. We also pass some gingko trees on our way to the library every weekend, and the fallen leaves inspired the Gingko Toss print. As far as the rest of the prints go, you know I like a good stripe. This one is reminiscent of a classic ticking stripe (but hand-drawn in this case, to give it a little charm and character). It is great for boys, too.

And of course the collection includes a polka dot. I’m a sucker for polka dots. You too? I think this one turned out really fun and versatile. I added a surprise along the selvedges of the polka dots. They’re little labels you can sew into your finished projects to personalize them a bit. I’ve been sewing them into samples, and they add a sweet little personalized detail to the clothing. S likes them because they’re soft and they help her to identify the back of her pants. They’d be a nice addition to anything you sew, really.

Here are the colorways and all the prints for the collection together:

The Cape Ann prints work nicely together for quilts as well as for apparel. Like the Folly Cove Designers, the fabrics are sort of a co-operative of designs, I guess? I’ll show you some quilts soon, but here are a few examples of Oliver + S patterns that combine multiple prints, just to show you what I mean. Nothing overpowering in these print combinations. Instead, they play nicely together. They’re a little like a well-behaved playdate where the parent doesn’t have to constantly intervene and can let the kids play nicely on their own. You know what I mean.

And there’s one more special aspect to this collection: all the prints are also available in a brushed cotton! This is a fabric that’s similar to flannel; it’s so soft and cozy. I think you’re really going to like it. Quilters have been telling me how much they prefer brushed cotton over flannel because it doesn’t pill and shrink like flannel. I wasn’t aware that you could tell that much of a different, but I just like it because it feels amazing.

So there you have it! Cape Ann starts shipping this week. Of course I started a Flickr group for it, and one of these days we’ll get around to adding buttons for Flickr groups to the sidebar here so you can easily find them.

I can’t wait to see what you make with these fabrics. I hope you’ll enjoy them!

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October 18, 2011

modern workshop final clearance

The next Oliver + S fabric collection, Cape Ann, begins shipping from Moda today. That means it’s time for us to close out the Modern Workshop fabric packs that we have in stock.

 

Modern Workshop Fabric Packs

So from now through October 31, 2011, we’re offering a 60% discount on our remaining Modern Workshop fabric packs. To receive the discount, use coupon code MW60 at checkout. Please note that supplies are limited on all items, and the discount is only available on remaining in-stock items.

You can view a short video of Liesl introducing the Modern Workshop line here. And stop back in the next few days for a complete preview of the new Cape Ann line.

Update: all items have now sold out.

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