Liberty Carline Dress (BHL Anna / Simplicity 1873 hybrid)

Now, I've seen a fair few Liberty Carline print dresses on sewing blogs and, honestly, I have loved every single one. Being a Liberty print though, I had always assumed this fabric would be really expensive and out of my current budget. 

Not so! Minerva had it for £9.99 per metre, and so I used some of my birthday money to buy some. A good decision I think! It's a lovely quality cotton poplin, and the print is so vibrant. I love it.
 
When deciding what to make, I just could not get the Anna bodice out of my head. I think Roisin's beautiful version has stuck with me. I just think it's the most perfect match of pattern and fabric. So I decided to make an Anna bodice with the pleated skirt from Simplicity 1873. It all lined up pretty well - I just matched the bodice and skirt side seams first and only had to move a couple of the pleats slightly, but nothing too taxing or time consuming. 

A Thing to Shake the Heart dress (By Hand London's Anna bodice with Simplicity 1873 skirt in Liberty Carline poplin)
I only bought 2 metres of this beautiful stuff, so I didn't quite have enough to pattern match and I reeeeeally didn't have enough to make the hem facing I wanted. If Minerva had let me buy half metres I would've bought 2.5 (3 would've been way too much). So anyway I had to cut the hem facings on the cross grain (with one of them a little tiny bit off grain). It didn't seem to make a difference and I'm so glad I got to have my nice 3" hem facing! I just love them. Because the facing is a separate cut piece, it's weighty like a deep double fold hem but with no easing in required. What's not to love? 

My lovely hem facing, understitched to help it hang/sit nicely, and catch stitched in place
From the outside. Nice and neat and invisible!
I had intended to use an invisible zip for this dress, but for some reason I had it in my head that the background of this print is Ivory. It really isn't, it's a very yellowy cream colour, so the Ivory invisible zip I had bought looked ridiculous (yes I know it's just the zip pull on show really, but it still bothered me). Luckily I had an ordinary zip in cream in my stash, so I used that and put in a centred zip. 


I also did some more fit work on the Anna bodice, and I'm so glad I have finally fixed some pretty massive fit issues! When I made my earlier versions, I was much less experienced and, while I got so far with my fit work, I had a lot of neckline gaping that I really didn't know how to sort out at the time. I still wear two of my early Annas (here and here) but the neckline bugs me every time.
 
Really, what it boiled down to, was that I needed to raise the shoulder seams by a good 5/8". This is a standard adjustment for me, but I guess I didn't know that yet when I made my first version of the Anna back in the day! So once I had raised the shoulders, lengthened the bodice and redrawn the neckline, the back was perfect and at the front I only had a slight gape to contend with. So I split the wedge I needed to pinch out into two wedges along the front neckline, taped them down on my pattern piece and cut a toile. Imagine my delight when it was a goldilocks fit straight away (juuuuust right). 



Side view

I find it a bit comical how white my legs are in these pictures. I mean, I've got no problem with my skin colour, I quite like being pale! But there's pale and then there's almost whiter than the white wall behind me. Also spot the changing shoes! I wore the green flats with it all day but wanted to see which other shoes would go with it. Conclusion: I need some tan flats, preferably T bar. I'm all about the flats at the moment. 

I kept adding and removing the belt in these pictures too, just to be confusing! 

Anyway, I really love this dress. I wore it 
all day on Wednesday and blooming loved it. I felt all serene and swishy in it. And every new dress deserves to be danced around the living room in, right? 




Over and out x

9 comments :

  1. Ah so pretty! It really bugs me when companies don't let you buy half meters, 2.5m is the perfect amount. I've never used a hem facing and never really understood why you would so thanks for the explanation, the weight at the bottom would be good for a lot of floaty skirt dresses but without the easing in of a huge hem....hmmm will have to look at using this soon :) x

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    1. I totally agree! 2.5m is the perfect amount.

      I had never even thought of using a hem facing either before my last version of S1873, and it was kind of by accident. I really like a deep and weighty hem but I didn't want to shorten the skirt too much from the cut length and also I am not very good at easing in huge hems! I always end up with little tucks and folds! I found facing the hem really satisfying and easy. Hope you do too! xx

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  2. This is gorgeous!!! It looks fab with the green shoes, and I love the separate hem facing. I've just finished my Carline dress, and totally agree that the fabric is lovely.

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    1. Thanks Lynne! Can't wait to see your Carline dress. I wasn't quite prepared for how hard I would fall for the fabric! I might have to hunt out some of the red colour way. Thanks for the vote of confidence for the green shoes - I wasn't sure if they were a bit much but actually in the pictures I do like them with the dress. x

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  3. Beautiful. Nice match of the Anna bodice with that skirt ;o)

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    1. Thank you! I'm so glad the mix of the two patterns worked out! May make another of this combination... x

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  4. Beautiful! And I love it with the green shoes. Perfect summer outfit. I always love how happy you look in all your handmade pieces. Your joy for sewing and pretty dresses really shines through in your photographs.

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    1. Aw, Jo, that is such a lovely thing to say. Thank you! It's made my day. I'm glad my pictures capture the joy! xxxx

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  5. Just jacked off to these pics

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