Assam Tunic

Assam Tunic

Today I decided to take a day off from doing anything I “ought” to be doing (like packing the house ready for the move), or any kind of “useful” sewing (like more bloomers and summer tunics to wear in this ridiculous heat), and make something that had been nagging at the back of my brain for a few weeks.

This is a silk dupion tunic, with broderie anglais trim and bias tape edging, waiting to be dyed in the tea urn. The stitching is brown because it’s polyester and therefore won’t dye, so I wanted to use a colour that would tone in afterwards. (In future I’ll use cotton thread, but right now I’m using up the stash.)

Assam Tunic

The tunic is elasticated all the way around the waist, under the bust, and around the edges of the top. It wraps over at the back. The broderie anglais trim might be polyester, polycotton at best, so it’ll probably stay cream.

Assam Tunic

It has a fixed, ruffled halter neck, and wrapover back detail. The bias trim is polycotton, and won’t take the dye as well as the silk, so I chose a colour that would still look good with whatever dye it did take up.

Assam Tunic

First dip into the tea urn…

Assam Tunic

The tea itself had been brewing for about two hours. This photo was taken after about another two hours in the tea, and the fabric was already much darker than it looks in the photo! You can see that the trim is still very pale, but the bias binding tones in nicely. The machine embroidery on the trim represents the tea leaves in the dye. (Although I used bags in the urn, as they were left over and out of date.)

Assam tunic

Squeezed out of the tea, the bias trim has taken up the dye nicely, but the broderie anglais is still very pale. The white overlocking on the shoulders is unfortunately on the outside. I had a bit of a moment when applying the broderie anglais, so I made the executive decision that two little white seams on the back of the neck wouldn’t matter too much on an experimental piece.

Assam tunic

Rinsed until the water ran clear…

Assam tunic

Here it is dry, and just waiting for finishing touches. I hung it outside, in the shade so it wouldn’t get bleached by the sun, and it dried at record speed. (I suppose the heatwave has its uses.)

Assam tunic

I added gold ribbons at each side to fasten, and another one in the front for decoration.

Assam tunic

Ta-daa!

There is a little bit of a story behind this piece. The assam tea bags were bought specifically for a reunion with a long-lost friend, about three years ago. Said friend then always seemed to be too busy to come and visit me enough times to actually drink the tea, and we’ve since all but lost touch again. It wasn’t until I came to tidy the kitchen cupboards to sell the house, that I realised the teabags have actually been out of date for eighteen months. Rather than waste them, I thought I’d turn them into something pretty for myself.

Going to work in my nightie

Broderie anglais dress

Anybodywho follows me on Facebook will be aware that a) we’re having a heatwave in the UK, and b) I’m not enjoying it. (Please note: this may be an understatement.)

I’m really not cut out for existing in hot weather, never mind still having to go to work and actually Do Things on a daily basis. My current medication makes me light sensitive, which means I burn even more easily than usual, and my eyes hurt. I also overheat easily, which means I sweat a lot (lovely!), which means I’m now on my summer diet supplement of disgusting electrolyte drink sachets, as it’s physically impossible to drink enough fluids to replace what I’m losing in the heat. Not Fun.

So, in order to alleviate the horror of the summer just a little bit, I decided to make myself a couple of Emergency Dresses. They’re both from the same pattern, one I drafted a couple of years ago. I wear the black linen version all the time, so a white one seemed like a good idea.

White linen dress

The one at the top is white cotton broderie anglais, with multi-coloured embroidery. It’s lined down to the knees with plain white polycotton, and I’ll probably wear a pair of bloomers underneath too, to combat horrible sweaty legs. (Classy!) I am slightly concerned that it looks rather like a nightie, especially since I added some matching rainbow coloured broderie anglais trim to the bottom. (It has the cutest little stars on it! Not as awesome as the pears, but still pretty.) I might add some big patch pockets onto the front, to make it look more like a dress than a nightgown. But I think with a nice belt, it doesn’t look too much as though I’ve accidentally gone sleepwalking.

The plain white one is linen. You can’t really tell from this picture, but I definitely should have lined it. And I didn’t. The black one isn’t lined, and the linen is a thicker fabric than the broderie anglais, and of course doesn’t have holes all over it. However it is a looser weave, and the light does pass through it rather well. I think this one might end up as a layering dress rather than being worn on its own. Sadly that means it probably won’t come out of my wardrobe until the weather starts getting a bit colder again. (Can’t wait!) Unless of course, I decide to just wear it as a nightie, on the days when I’m too ill to do anything other than pootle gently around the house. A pretty lounging dress might be quite a nice thing to have, come to think of it.

Broderie Anglais Circle Skirt

Broderie Anglais Circle Skirt

I’ve been clearing out my fabric stash, and stumbled upon four metres of crinkle broderie anglais at the bottom of a pile. I bought this while I was working at a fabric shop, and had been sent to a different branch for the day. Black broderie anglais is a very rare beast, so I snapped up as much of it as I thought I could carry home on the train.

It’s been sitting in the stash ever since because the sewing machine I was using at the time would have made a dreadful mess of this crinkly fabric. Thankfully my trusty overlocker has no such problem, and I ran up this simple skirt in no time.

The spots of pink that you can see through the holes in the fabric are from my Giant Petticoat of Doom.

I have just over a metre of fabric left, and I’m planning to use it to make a matching top. I’m not a hundred percent certain about going out in an outfit made entirely from crinkly fabric, mind you. I don’t want to look as though I’ve been sleeping in it!