Alternate title: Hey Look, I feel like I'm wearing a candywrapper!
My entire family is asleep, so this is what you get for photos of me wearing it.
Now
for the title: I recently (last week of September) visited my brother
living in Munich. And what do you do if you're in Munich for the last
two weeks of september? You go to Oktoberfest, of course! (Or flee the
city and rent out your apartment for hundreds of Euros to visitors. It's
crazy, really.)
But we went, I wore my store-bought Dirndl, and
we had a lot of fun. If you ever go, I really recommend the historical
Wiesn: you pay an entrance fee of 3€, but every ride inside is 1€, you
don't have any trouble finding a table inside the tents and they have
brass bands instead of electrical guitars. And a dancefloor! But as I
said, we did both, the historical and the modern Wiesn, and had a lot of
fun. Part of that fun for me was ogling all the girls/women in their
pretty dresses and wishing I had one for myself (my old dirndl is just
not that fancy - black cotton dress, black cotton blouse... I like it,
but I don't feel like a candy-wrapper ;) )
So, browsing reddit some day last week, I came across
Burda 7057,
and it was just perfect for what I had envisioned for myself. I got
really excited, bought and downloaded it on friday, left Munich for my
hometown and planned to go shopping for fabric on Saturday. You can
imagine my face when my mother reminded me that stores would be closed
on saturday - Day of German Unity, our national holiday. Damn. Also,
stores are always closed on Sunday, so that meant two days delay until I
could start! Luckily I recently bought a white cotton Ikea bedsheet to
use for fabric, so I could get started on the blouse. That part was
pretty straight forward, I ignored most of the instructions and
flatfelled all my seams. Just seemed neater this way, plus it goes so
much quicker when you do it by machine!
I didn't take any pictures, but I can show you my setup, because I think it's pretty neat:
That's
my mother's Pfaff sewing machine on my desk, my new tiny iron and
ironing surface on the fold-away workspace of my (currently out of
order) 1943 Singer sewing machine and my laptop for music and the
instructions.
On monday I could finally get the fabric. I found
some beautiful turqouise synthetic taffeta, but at 10€ per meter (and
this amazing shine!) I really didn't care about the fibre content.
Finding proper fabric for the apron was a bit trickier and took me some
time running around in the store, checking colours against each other,
but in the end I opted for some silver - well, to be honest, I forgot
what the fabric was called, but it's also synthetic. Add half a meter of
lining fabric (cotton), some fusible interfacing and several metres of
ribbon in two different widths, and you get 70€. Ouch. But then again, a
good dirndl generally costs 100-150€, so since I don't pay myself
hourly wages, I'm still coming out on top.
Not wanting to
tape/glue more than I had to, I only printed out the bodice pattern
pieces and just used squares and rectangles for the skirt and apron. I
used piping (my favourite!) on the bodice to set out the front panel
with the lacing and around the neck- and armholes, cutting bias strips
out of the silver apron fabric.
The lady at the shop must have given me a pretty strong interfacing, my lining was stiff as cardboard when I finished fusing!
While
I more or less followed the pattern instructions for the dress, I
didn't gather the skirt to fit the waist (which probably wouldnt have
worked anyway, seeing as I had 3m of skirt - I just never learn ;) ) but
pleated it. That's the way I've seen it on pretty much every dirndl at
the Wiesn, at last.
So
much pleating! Thank god for my new tiny iron. You can see the the
cardboard templates I cut out to make my job a little easier ;)
I
put in a pocket again, this time on my front right side so that it's
hidden under the apron. I wanted to make it accessible through one of
the pleats, messed up my calculations, had to fix the slit (very
crudely, I'm afraid) and redo the pocket where it belonged. It was a
stupid mistake and cost me some time to work around, but now it's not
even very visible without the apron - or can you find it?
My
only other mistake: I ignored the fact that this pattern is meant for
short people. They assume you're 168cm, but give you convenient lines on
which to lengthen yor pattern - which I didn't do, despite that fact
that at 175cm, I'm a lot taller than their average. Well, since I liked
the fit of the bodice in general (and went through a lot of work before
doublechecking the shoulders), I had to lengthen the shoulderstraps.
After I put in the lining. And piping. Suffice to say, that was some
more work that could have been avoided, but the join is barely visible
now unless you're looking for it, so I don't mind anymore ;)
A very unlikely perspective for anyone to look at me.
What
else? Oh yeah, I fixed the lacing hooks by machine, removing the
presser foot and keeping the hooks in place by hand because that was the
only way that worked, and I didn't break a single needle! Also it went
much quicker than by hand ;)
I know it's blurry, my phone doesn't like closeups.
The
apron was again pretty straight forward, I didn't even look at the
directions here, so I can't tell you if I technically followed them, but
I don't think I could have deviated much. I'm thinking of maybe putting
some trim on it, but I'll decide that tomorrow. In hindsight, it's
gathered into a pretty short strip (25cm), but I'm not sure if I'll ever
fix it. Just something to keep in mind for next time.
All
in all, sewing the dress took me about 10 hours over two days, and that
could have been shorter if I hadn't made it more complicated for myself
and hadn't made those mistakes. The blouse probably also took a couple
of hours, but I honestly don't remember already... :D
Anyway, I love my Candywrapper Dirndl and will wear it on friday to the Wasn (same as Oktoberfest, but in Stuttgart*)
See you there! :D
*please don't tell anyone from Stuttgart I said that, though. They might run me out of the city >.<