Sewing Project: Florals For a Rainy Day
In recent months, I’ve really been trying to break out of my sewing comfort zone. I love florals and neutrals, anything with ease and elastic, especially a flowy dress. I’ve lately made a lot of bright colors from new patterns and silhouettes that have challenged me, so when I got my hands on some of the floral cotton faille, I felt like I could breathe again after a pasta dinner in tight pants.
This week has been very rainy (in Tampa, FL, you’ve got at least a 50% chance every day that you’ll see rain in the hottest months), and what better activity could I do than sit inside near a window and listen to the rain as I make myself a billowy floral dress?
This was my first time sewing with cotton faille, and I was surprised at its structure while still offering a really soft hand feel and light drape. It’s structured enough to create something fun like a fitted pair of wide leg trousers but still pleasant enough to be on a baby’s skin as a woven dress.
There’s something that feels so classy about a cream and blue floral, and it always draws me in; but this one has butterflies too, which solely contributed to an “add to cart” moment, knowing that my toddler would have a hay day counting the butterflies on our matching dresses.
Now, back to my sewing comfort zone talk. If you go in my closet and look for the most concentrated area of “me mades”, it without a doubt would be my long dresses. I have two little girls, a 3 year old and a recently turned one year old, so my ability to accomplish much sewing during the day can be limited, especially on a rainy day where we’re mostly confined to inside. When I sat down to make these dresses, I knew that I wanted easy, happy projects that we could dance in together while it was still raining. A rainy day craft project, if you will. I got quite lucky, because both my girls loved taking turns on my lap while we sewed up our dresses together!
I chose to go with the By Hand London shirred dress tutorial, which is one I’ve made on many occasions before – namely for baby showers and for pregnancy announcements. It’s a simple tutorial with a big payout – a shirred dress that requires no additional notions, making it easy to slip in and out of, dance in, nap in, and whatever else your heart desires to do in comfort and style simultaneously.
Both my daughters are on the go from the moment they wake up until it’s time for them to protest bedtime. They both love a good dress-up opportunity (I wonder where they get that from!), so I opted for some easy self drafted dresses with tie straps at the top and an elastic band top.
Arguably the best part, other than the gorgeous hand feel of this cotton faille, was the laughter of my toddler as she “helped” me finish her sister’s dress as we got ready to have our cookies and tea for our living room dance party. I’ve always loved rainy days, but they’re even better with good company and cute matching dresses.
4 Comments
Alisha Cooke
Kelsey, Super cute! Love the shirring and as always I love mother/daughter matching. 🙂
Rachel Quihuis
I have to give the Faille fabric a try. It looks quite stiff on the website pictures, but if the babies don’t get fuzzy wearing it ,Ii should try it. And yes i do like the sleeves. how did you make them.
BEAUTIFUL dresses!
Fleur! Wingren-fleur
Kelsey, lovely work and lovely pictures!
Will you please steer me to where/how you knew to modify the shirred top pattern by adding those sleeves to your dress? I’m a very beginner sewist and need all the clarity I can get as far as patterns and directions.
If you created them yourself, perhaps you’d be willing to make a tutorial for all of us admiring your design sense?!
Thank you!
Greta Johnson
The beautiful pictures with you and your two girls make me long for kids on my lap again.
The dresses are just lovely. Thanks for sharing.
Greta Johnson