The blouse was slightly a-line raglan style with full length sleeves. The neckline and wrists were gathered. And the wrists slashed and bound with bias. The closures were a small button on elastic, nifty! There was a 2" slash at the centre front that was bound with bias. My favourite feature was the neckline which used a narrow faced neck as casing for a tie, which had great metal beads at the ends to stop the tie pulling through and also made the ties hang when done up.
Before I hacked it apart at the seams I took a moment to plan the process and it was worth it.
- Make some space - no one was allowed near enough to move/lose anything
- Set aside some time - the fewer sittings required, the less likely you are to lose or forget something
- Keep notes - how wide was the bias on the wrists? How long was it? How much was the neckline gathered in? How wide were the seam allowances? Where is the grain line?
- Mark pieces as they come off - was this the back or front?
- Look for symmetry - could the front and back be cut on the fold?
- Think about the reconstruction process - how will this all go together again?
Then came the moment of no return. I used small but sharp scissors to cut the seams apart. This was messy. Lots of little bits of thread.
The pieces were as follows:
I measured all the gathers before I pulled them out. I should also mention that the fabric had a stripe woven into it so grain line was easy. I measured all the seam allowances as well. I marked each piece (1 to 7) and then drew up diagrams of them with grain line, gathers, the slits, the seam allowances. Anything I could think of really. Any construction points (eg bind the neck slit before attaching the casing) were also noted.
Next steps: find some cool fabric and think about pattern placement.
The pieces were as follows:
- Front (gathered at the neck, cut on the fold with a 2" slit at centre bound with bias binding)
- Back also on fold and gathered at the neck
- Arms - not quite symmetric but gathered at both the neck and wrists - also bias binding on a 2" slit at the wrists
- Three interfaced casing neck pieces - one across the back and two for the front between the shoulders and the neck slit
- Pull ties to thread though the neck and tie together
I measured all the gathers before I pulled them out. I should also mention that the fabric had a stripe woven into it so grain line was easy. I measured all the seam allowances as well. I marked each piece (1 to 7) and then drew up diagrams of them with grain line, gathers, the slits, the seam allowances. Anything I could think of really. Any construction points (eg bind the neck slit before attaching the casing) were also noted.
Next steps: find some cool fabric and think about pattern placement.