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#simplicity patterns
forever70s · 3 months
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1970s Simplicity crochet fashions
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theamandacollection67 · 9 months
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Simplicity Pattern Book Magazine Summer 1950 Model Dorian Leigh
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timetravelingcourtney · 10 months
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We are getting super excited about the Barbie movie around here! I used Simplicity 8280 (one of the AG branded patterns) to make this dress with scraps I already had in the sewing cupboard. Of course, Caroline is playing Barbie for us today because that hair 🎀
Here’s the outfit I used for reference:
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craftmausoleum · 23 days
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"Great getaway: By sea". Simplicity Fashion Magazine, vol. 25, no. 3. Simplicity Pattern Co., F/W 1972.
"These will go shopping in St. Thomas, sightseeing in Montego, or luncheons and movies aboard ship, too."
"These will go from games to buffet lunches to adventures in port."
"For the captain's dinner, formal dress is required."
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akcvance · 2 months
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Simplicity 8701- I cut this out before I started the whole weight loss thing, so I already knew it was going to be too big, so I didn't follow the instructions at all. I got the legs together, threw a waistband on it and used elastic like the old lady I've become. No zippers or buttons for me! The length of the legs was outrageous, had to cut them down before hemming. The legs themselves are enormous. I love them.
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londontsukino · 9 months
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I don’t own a dress form, so some unaesthetic pics of the first successful dress I’ve sewn (including a liner!) and some sewing geekery under the cut.
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Fourth ever zipper installation and first invisible zipper. I misaligned the tops of the zipper, which resulted in a small gap at the top and the waist seams being slightly off, but I’m pretty happy with how it turned out (and no special zipper foot involved). And I don’t know where the buttonhole guide for the old Kenmore sewing machine is, so hand sewn buttonholes for me. I ordered a pack of covered button blanks to make matching fabric buttons.
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I hand gathered the waistline for the skirt, but the layers of fabric were so thick in places, that the Kenmore was like “wtf are you doing to me” and skipped stitches in multiple areas when it was time to attach the skirt to the bodice. I ended up doing a weird version of a backstitch by hand to reinforce the waist. And because I don’t care if the inside looks a little weird since no one will see it, I hand stitched bias tape to close up the raw edges.
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I used dress option A from Simplicity Pattern 9164, and modified it to include a side seam pocket, a skirt liner, and I didn’t use the included pattern for the skirt itself. Instead I just used the entire width of the fabric, one panel for the front and one for the back. Overall, this pattern was easy-ish to follow as a beginner, but one does have to read the directions pretty well. For background, this is the third rectangle/dirndl-style skirt I’ve done, so that wasn’t very difficult. I’ve attempted making a bodice before when I tried to make a collared shirt for my mom’s dog and one too-big 40s style dress, so I had a little bit of experience with that.
It might be me being a beginner at sewing, but the instructions for the collar were on the confusing side. What the instructions said vs the diagrams showed and what would make sense when actually sewing the collar didn’t match up. I ended up remaking the collar according to how I did it with the dog shirt and then following Simplicity’s directions to attach the collar to the neckline. The inside still looks a bit weird, and I’m going to veer a little from the pattern directions the next time I make this dress to see if it makes things easier because there was still some awkward hand sewing. Thankfully the sleeves included multiple points to match up with the armholes, so that made setting them a breeze compared to doing the collar.
There’s some weird sections but I’m very happy with how it turned out. I ordered a belt making kit, so once that arrives I’ll be making a matching belt using the leftover fabric I used for the collar and sleeve cuffs.
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professorpski · 2 years
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Simplifying Design in the Sixties: Simplicity 7677
This re-issued sewing pattern dates to the 1960s and is meant to meant to satisfy the desire for quick results: done in a Jiffy. Especially impatient girls and young women, one suspects from the pattern illustration which has very young women in low heels with their hair in a ponytail or an up-do with loose locks below. Both mini and lower hemline were included, and a bare majority of young women wore minis in the 1960s while most over-thirty women opted for a lower hemline. 
The pattern is “easy cut * easy sew” the front of the envelope tells us and there are only two main pattern pieces it assures us. But I am struck by how much sewing is still needed. Those two main pattern pieces have darts at the bust and the waistline to make its A-line shape. A zipper closes the back. Interfacing is called for, so facings for the neckline and the armholes must be included. And then straps must be cut out and attached. Plus the two dressier versions require hand-sewing to attach the trim along the strips.
One trim is daisies, a very common motif of the 1960s, and one that is childish or youthful, perfect for the teenage Baby Boomers, the other trim is rhinestones which would was more sophisticated. The dress fabrics recommended came in the everyday, washable cottons or the fancy silks like shantung, brocade, damask, or satin, so this was a flexible pattern for all its simplicity.
This pattern was clearly more simple than average dress before the 1960s which often had both a detailed bodice with collar, sleeves an cuffs, and a pieced skirt with pleats or godets. On the other hand, it is far more complicated than some easy patterns of the 1970s which dumbed down garment design to an amazing degree.
This dress comes in modern sizes and can be found at your local fabric store or here online: https://simplicity.com/simplicity/s9594
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chellywoodauthor · 1 year
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Doll overalls and/or coveralls -- how hard are they to sew? #VintagePatterns #DollClothesPatterns
Doll overalls and/or coveralls — how hard are they to sew? #VintagePatterns #DollClothesPatterns
Please visit ChellyWood.com for free printable PDF sewing patterns and tutorial videos for making doll clothes to fit dolls of many shapes and all different sizes. Are you old enough to remember Kenner’s Dusty and Skye dolls? The Simplicity 7737 doll clothes pattern shown just below was one I owned back in the 1970’s and ’80’s. The patterns loosely fit Barbie, but they fit Dusty and Skye really…
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qplourde · 9 months
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Beachwear for a Rainy Day
When you're having a rainy summer, it's time to make some clothes to get ready for the next beach day. I was excited to get out and show off my #Simplicity2414 pants and my #EucalyptDress at #SalisburyBeach last weekend.
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stevietheghostie · 11 months
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Such a lovely little dress!
Original: Simplicity 4724 | Vintage Sewing Patterns | Fandom
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palephx · 1 year
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Seriously, do NOT fucking test my patience, this way. I've been in a great mood for months. I don't even understand it.
The old me never died. Now, it's far easier to say IDGAF. Don't be a casualty of your own passive-aggression.
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jamie-photo · 9 months
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craftmausoleum · 26 days
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Simplicity Fashion Magazine, vol. 25, no. 3. Simplicity Pattern Co., F/W 1972.
Featuring advertisements from J. Wiss & Sons; Lily Thread; La Mode [buttons]; Lansing Company; Conso; Sears; Star [American Thread Company]; and Pellon.
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akcvance · 2 months
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Simplicity 8065. A pretty easy pattern, but the over shirt thing is a little weird. From what I could tell in the directions, the over shirt part doesn't close in the back, so I decided to tack it down. Anyway, since it is a dress for my daughter, she chose the fabric. Not sure how it fits yet, but she'll be home from school soon.
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londontsukino · 9 months
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Finished another dress that caused so many problems that I was beyond frustrated (and bleeding) at times.
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More pics and nerdy sewing stuff under the cut.
After lucking out and buying the last 2.5 meters of this fabric that I’ve had my eye on for a couple months, I thought this project would go relatively smoothly since I had done the same pattern with the travel dress. Nope! I cut black lining for the skirt and since the fabric was a bit of a loser weave, I thought I’d try doing an underlining for the top. I cut the back bodice piece with the black fabric, but when I started cutting the pieces for the front bodice, I realized I didn’t change the pattern piece and was cutting another back bodice. It was a little too late to salvage it, so I ended up using the rest of the lining from the travel dress to make a new back bodice liner and lining for the front. Hence why the skirt and bodice linings in the top right pic are two different colors. Oh, and I had misaligned the skirt lining when I was cutting it and had to cut off about an inch of fabric to get everything even. So having to redo the bodice lining was annoying, but it got worse when I tried doing the collar. I ended up sewing the front really weird, thought trimming the extra fabric and then turning things right side out would help, but it didn’t. I ended up unstitching the collar, repositioning and basting it, and then resewing it. At least this time it was okay. I hoped that was going to be the last of my problems, but when I was at the sewing machine, I caught the tip of a pin on the first layer of skin on my left index finger, jerked, and made things so much worse. 🤦🏻‍♀️ Thank goodness for bandaids. And at least that was the last major issue I had, but geez.
Anyway, on to the nerdy stuff.
I tried doing a French seam for the skirt and used bias tape just on the bottom of the bodice to see if I prefer that over putting bias tape over everything like the previous travel dress. I don’t know if I noticed a huge difference when I wore each dress, so I’m not sure which method I’ll do when making another dress in the future. And then fabric covered buttons using scrap fashion fabric, and more hand sewn buttonholes. They looked a little neater than my first attempt at them, so yay for that.
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I had to find a tutorial for getting the waist seams to match on either side of the zipper because eyeballing it wasn’t working at all. It’s not 100% lined up, but it’s way better than the half inch difference I had when I was basting it the first time around. And I tried a new way to gather the skirt, which I rather like. For the skirt, instead of using one long thread for the entire waist line, I broke up the waist into four sections and gathered each one separately. It might be more fussy to do it like this, but I didn’t have to worry about a knot forming or thread breaking and having to redo the entire skirt, and I feel like I was able to distribute the gathers a lot more evenly (and a lot quicker too).
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professorpski · 1 year
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Variations on the Date Dress in the 1950s: Simplicity 9738
At first glance, the green and the red-orange versions of this dress from the 1950s seem identical. Both create the hour-glass silhouette which was so popular during the decade. Both use princess seams to shape the fitted bodice and waistline and then flare to a long and wide hemline, over 2 yards in diameter. Both have ties at at shoulders to hold the dress up and both can be worn with the the little bolero jacket with cut-on 3/4 sleeves, with a small, rounded collar.
But the green version offers the slightest bit more coverage. See how instead of the notched front alone at the top center of the bodice, a little strip of contrast fabric runs along the top of the front and back underneath the notch. It is such a small change, and yet for a woman who felt self-conscious about how the notch might expose more than she liked, it would make a difference.
The designer imagine this dress in a range of woven fabrics. So cottons, linens, even rayons, which strike me as having too much drape were recommended. So, cottons and lines are perfect for a summer dress that was not too fancy. But then, you might also use fancier silks, including taffeta which has a stiffness which works well for a flared skirt. The jacket could match, of course, but it could also be dressier and warmer in brocade or velvet which are much thicker. 
You can find it at your local fabric store or here: https://simplicity.com/simplicity/s9738
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