Dressing Well is a Form of Good Manners

Fran Knit Top Sewing Pattern By Style Arc - Great basic layering piece with a point of difference

 

This is Style Arc pattern, Fran. With the weather chilling I need some tops to wear around the house. I like a stable knit, mostly cotton, 3/4 sleeves, comfortable. This raglan sleeve can often be a bit of bulk for those of us with sizeable "girls" but I am going to muslin it in a medium weight knit to see how it fits before I cut into the good fabric. Necklines are always a thing for me. I don't like a high crew or a low scoop, something that grazes the clavicle! Yes, I fully dress and do-up as my Mother would would have said, every day. The whole magilla, because that is me. Never one to venture in public torn and tattered clothing, unkempt hair, dirty shoes. No, I was not raised that way. And that brings me to.................

 Have you noticed how casual dressing has turned into sloppy dressing? This is not a new subject for me, we all know that, but my oh my! I recently ventured out to have lunch with a friend and stop for some groceries. Lunch, no problem...it is a private club. Now, everyone was casual but neat, cleaned, pressed and covered. 

Grocery stop, another thing all together. Bodies only partially covered and what was covered, nothing left for the imagination. Young women and men, older people as well. Pink feathered bedroom slippers! Really! What the heck happened? What brings me to my semi-annual rant? Well, one of the bloggers I follow, Sarah Gunn, is the epitome of dressing well. She is a lovely middle-aged woman, obviously one who cares about her appearance. In a recent post she used this phrase as a header,    Dressing well is a form of good manners.” TOM FORD 

That's it! That is where I have been going with all this angst all along. Respect not just for yourself but for those you meet as well. Sarah returned to garment sewing a few years ago because the cost of Ready-to-Wear was getting outrageous and the quality of the goods is poor. 

Now I am seeing a return and resurgence of Sewists who want to make their own clothes. A local fabric and sewing machine retailers has taken that interest and is now offering a video streaming class on how to make a basic t-shirt type dress. Free. Everything from a free downloadable pattern to assembly will be covered. Wonderful idea during a time of pandemic when people cannot attend in person classes. 

I have been sewing garments since age 9 but not much in recent years. You sort of loose the knack. So yes, I am taking the class too. I am using a different pattern though. I am not making the dress in the class but a tunic length top. 

  • So, I am pulling fabrics right now to audition for the top. One must take care with the weight, drape and stretch of an item like this.
  • I plan to serge all the seams and hem with coverstitch. 
  • Joann's is having a flannel sale, I want to pop in there in the next day or so to check out the quality before I make husbands lounge pants and tee's...high quality flannel is a must for these items. Between shrinkage and pilling, a poor quality will last 1 washing.....ask me how I know!
     

 Simplicity Pattern 1563 Misses' Men's and Teens' Lounge Wear

Style Arc Patterns are available on Amazon and on their website, HERE.

 

 



 

Comments

marly said…
My Italian aunt was horrified when she got on a plane thirty five years ago and found flip flops and shorts. When she was young, you wore gloves and dressed up for airline travel!! But then, both she and her sister addressed neighbors they had for decades as Mr and Mrs, never a first name. She said it was not respectful. Now they are wearing pajama bottoms.

I made my prom gowns and lots of clothes in my teens, no patience to do so now. But a simple pattern as you've shown in a soft fleece may be attempted. I have simple wrap jacket patterns also, but without a cutting area and sewing table, the frustration is worse.
celkalee said…
I have a friend from childhood who used to buy a new suit, shoes, bag etc. Take a plane from Pittsburgh to Cleveland or Columbus, turn around and come back. It was glamour to her! I would drive her to the airport, it took me longer to get there than it took her to get to her destination, I would wait, pick her up, turn around then come home. Sometimes we would have lunch in the airport deli. Good times.