Another week, another bag prototype. This one is developed for my mum to take on holiday. She needs a bag that will suit her style, make her feel her things are secure and be spacious enough to allow her to carry all the stuff she needs: passport, make-up bag, moisturising cream, sun-cream, book, sunglasses, reading glasses, wallet, keys, diary, hairbrush, lots of little bits of paper, various random things, kitchen sink (stuff!).
My mum is considerably more girly than I am so I thought I'd try out a style for her that has a bit more curvyliciousness – hence the pleats/tucks. I'm not sure quite what to call these so I'm being a bit vague. Essentially they are darts, stitched at the edge but not along the length. Just enough to hold the shape. The look is much more organic than my usual style – I tend to be drawn to smooth lines and a bit of sculpting.
Since this is a prototype it's made from fabrics from the stash (bull denim and a little bit of ticking – I've not decided on the type of strap or fastener this style should have).
The pleats create a lot of depth and taking that into account creates a very long-looking pattern. It took a couple of attempts to get the proportions right but now I'm happy that the folds are making the right shapes and the overall scale is good.
I like the form/function meets decoration quality of the folds.
Something from the land of corsetry: flossing samples.
I've been playing with flossing shapes for the pewter corset. The bones on each side of the seams are cut to the same length and I want the flossing shape to work across both bones to create one pattern.
At the moment I'm liking the grey one in the middle for at the bottom and the one at the right/middle for at the top.
In practice I've sewn these starting with the short stitches and working toward the long, which I intend to change and sew from the other direction. That way the short stitches will be on top of the long lengths and will help to keep them secure and less likely to catch on anything.
Now I need to be brave enough to sew these onto the corset. Being nervous of ruining what you've already made is not how to progress!