However, instead of just fixing the body block and trying a final version, I decided to make everything a whole lot more complicated for myself. Surely, if the body block is correct, I can make something worth keeping. If I make something I actually want to keep, I might as well go all out and make a full dress, right? I didn't want to spend any money (per the norm), so I used all recycled materials I happened to have lying around, starting with our old duvet cover that had some stains and holes from the washing machine/dryer. It was striped, so I thought I would add even more layers of difficulty by making the design more interesting with alternating sections in different directions. Then I decided that the robe a la polonaise just wouldn't look right without some 18th century stays. Which I also didn't have.
So after a side-track into making some jerry-rigged stays out of two old army coats and coat hangers (gasp, I know! Remember, I wanted to do all this for free, right?), I also had to change the measurements to the new stay-based dimensions. Yeah, you're right, this is the worst possible way to check a body block. But now I have a lovely, not really historically accurate dress I can pass off as Martha Custis Washington. So it all worked out fine!
Hanging loosely on the dress form--I can't close the dress on the form since she's too stiff to put the stays on to get the right measurements. |