Friday, June 17, 2011

EASY Renaissance Overskirt




This lovely skirt is actually far more odd then it may look.  For one, it's one of the few sewing projects I have done entirely by hand.  Conveniently, it was so very easy that none was needed.  It also is made out of some unconventional materials.

The skirt fabric itself is actually a pair of cheap round tablecloths that I bought a few years ago on clearance after Christmas.  I think they cost me all of fifty cents a piece.  They are also a good part of why this project was so quick and simple.  Most of the work was already done.  I folded each of the tablecloths into quarters, and cut the pointed end.  I didn't have to worry to much about the waistband circumference, as the skirt isn't meant to come all the way together in front.  Instead, I cut the tablecloths so that they were the length I wanted, with one a few inches shorter than the other.  Once the waist was cut, I also cut a slit from the edge to the enter, to create the center front of the skirt where it opens.

The next step is the part that took the longest.  I sewed a quick basting stitch to the bottom layer and gathered the fabric to give the skirt some body.  The top layer was trickier, as I wanted it to be neat and pleated.  The pleats took a bit of time and a lot of pinning, but once they were set, the rest was a breeze.  For the less experienced or less patient seamstress, both layers could be basted together and gathered for a similar but slightly less polished look.

Confession time: I have a very bad habit of cutting corners when sewing is involved.  Sometimes it is okay, but other times it is very, very not.

Luckily for me, this was one of the good times.  I laid the top layer over the bottom layer, and pinned the waistband over them both.  To save time from cutting and ironing, I used blanket edging as the waistband.  It worked fantastically, and I highly recommend it.  A bit of careful sewing through the many layers of bunched fabric, and the waist was done.

For a finishing touch, I turned the front edges of the bottom layer and stitched them, then did the same with the top.  On the top layer I also pinned and stitched the lace trim on at the same time, again, to cut some corners and just do the one line of stitches.

I didn't have to hem anything, because the tablecloths were already finished around the bottom edges.

Start to finish, this skirt took about five hours, or one long afternoon.  Not bad, really.  Plus, with the cost of the trim and all, it was under fifteen dollars to make.  Given the extreme cost of some Renaissance garb, I got off really cheap on that account.  It pays to be able to whip up a few stitches!

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