To my great good fortune, friends of mine are expecting a baby in January. There is apparently a 90% chance that this baby is a girl, and today I am going to my friends' baby shower. I indulged myself.
I started with Burda Style 02-2016, which has a wide selection of patterns for new babies.
First up were these overall type rompers,02-2016-141 A . I adore the ruffles that you can see both front and back. This is an unusual to me constrution of a little pair of panties/nappy covers, with an attached full front making the overall. I can see that this is practical for keeping the garment up at the waist, but frankly, it seems a little wasteful of material and construction time - why not just extend the front directly from the pants and rely on the elasticised back for fitting? Despite this quibble, I like the pattern and think that the rompers will be quite practical.
As I used a poplin fabric, which
does not have a lot of body, I made a half lining for the overall bib,
extending to just below the front waistband.
Burda has you attach the straps with buttons to the back elastic waistband. I thought this would be problematic, elastic being thick and stretchy and hard to hand-sew through, so instead copied something I'd seen in RTW baby clothes.
This back loop is sewn to the body of the panties, and also attached just above the elastic, and the straps button to themselves. I put in several buttonholes, hoping that this adjustablility will increase the wearing life of the garment as babies tend to grow length wise more rapidly that width wise.
The reversible bonnet 02-1026-146 was a very quick addition, and I have only changed it by using little pleats instead of gathers. This outfit is Burda size 62 cm, which is apparently for about a 3 month old baby. I thought that I would give this outfit with a purchased plain white short sleeved onsie to extend the life of the garment into the slightly cooler Autumn temperatures. I am not interested in sewing plain white knit onsies. There is a lack of frill and ornament and sewing pleasure in the construction of such admittedly useful garments.
My friends are from Sri Lanka, and I used some (remnant) fabric from a hand woven sari that they had bought me for the ruffles and one side of the reversible bonnet . This sentimental nod to the baby's heritage appealed to me so much that I made the baby another outfit from another section of the same sari.
This little dress is number 02-2016-143, scaled down to size 52 cm (Newborn, per Burda), and I've left off the sleeves because a January baby in the Antipodean Subtropics does not need sleeves - or clothes at all really :). I've made a nappy cover from the romper pattern 141. I suspect that the baby will wear the nappy covers more often than she wears the dress.
The contrast, which I used for the turn back pocket lining, the turn back facing and for the bias binding for the armscyes, is from some scraps of a Liberty Tana lawn.
I couldn't stop when I saw that I could squeeze out another outfit from the rest of the Liberty remnant.
This little dress is number 02-2016-144, with added angel ruffles instead of a sleeve, and a superfluous embroidered pocket for my entertainment. I left off the Peter Pan collar, and instead used a contrasting bias binding to finish the neck line.
In my imagination, if the baby does something messy at either end and only manages to dirty one part of the outfit, half of the other outfit can be swapped in. Capsule sewing for babies is my new hobby
On reflection, I think my enthusiasm let to excess sewing. I decided just to give my friend the 2 dress, 2 panties capsule set today. I will leave the overalls until the baby arrives. I might do some boy-baby sewing as well, just in case.....
For completeness, here is the beautiful baby wearing her overalls, aged 2 months - they are a little big for her yet
3 comments:
Lovely to 'see' you Karen. I love the notion of a capsule outfit for a 3month old! My favourite is the little green outfit. It's so cute and a really gorgeous colour! No baby pink or blue here!
So much cuteness! I'm always surprised how long it takes to make baby clothes, so am impressed with your output.
Yes, it is riduculous that such a tiny piece of clothing takes such a long time, but I enjoyed every minute!
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