Thinking about hats

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One of the things I’ve been thinking about recently is my hats, and where they’re going.

Before Christmas, they were really well-received at a local craft fair. Even the feedback from people who made sure to tell us that they were definitely not going to buy a hat was overwhelmingly positive! Buoyed by this result, after Christmas I signed myself up to go to a wedding fair, and made some more “weddingy” hats to display.

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I was really pleased with the designs I’d come up with, but it quickly transpired that they weren’t going to be anywhere near as well received as the cloches. Time to think again.

I think what I’d overlooked, in the mad rush to make plenty of stock for Christmas and the wedding fair, was that these hats were always supposed to be a means to an end – a stepping stone to learn the skills, so I could then move on to a different kind of hat. I became so bogged down in what I thought I could sell, that I forgot all about what I had originally been trying to create.

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I’ve learnt a lot from the hats I’ve made so far, and I’ve really enjoyed working with organic cotton lace and beautiful wool felt. These headbands, for example, will definitely be staying around. I’ve also realised that the reason I’ve been so quiet on the blog for so long is that I simply don’t feel comfortable writing a post whose sole purpose is to try and sell you something. Which, to be honest, is all I’ve been trying to do for the past year. I mean, yes, of course I need to sell the hats once I’ve made them, otherwise I’m just filling my work room with stuff! But I’d much rather share a thought or explain a process than just try to sell a hat.

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What I’d originally intended to make was a series of freeform hats like this, from handmade felt. I also wanted to use handmade felt to make traditionally-formed hats, such as my favourite cloche shape shown above. Unfortunately, the fibromyalgia’s been so bad this year that I haven’t had the strength required to make the quality and thickness of felt necessary for this type of hat.  However, at the Christmas craft fair I did have quite a long chat with a local felting expert who was quite critical of my pieces (at my request), and gave me quite a few tips for techniques and tools that I might find helpful.

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I have to admit that I have absolutely loved almost every single hat that I’ve made so far. The learning curve has been an enjoyable one, and the materials are extremely satisfying to work with. Just for now though, it’s time to take a little break, have a little think, and work out what to do next.

Rolled hem foot

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I love my Pfaff rolled hem foot very much.

Without it I couldn’t have hemmed Karen’s wedding dress without having some kind of a nervous breakdown.

Thanks are also due also to Gabrielle, whose rolled hem foot tutorial helped me to figure out the tricky business of getting the hem started.

The inside layers of the dress were done on the overlocker, as I didn’t fancy trying to do two more rolled hems on very fine jersey. I thought that might be pushing my luck a little bit.

But the dress is finished, I’m never hemming chiffon again (how many times have I said that now?), and I’ve got a week and a half to finish my own dress to wear to the wedding.  That just needs buttons… oh yes, and the hem.

Handmade Wedding – Part Two

Honeybee Stole
Photo © Jon Stockham

Nicola knitted Anne Hanson‘s Honeybee Stole for me. It took her the best part of a year, and matched my outfit perfectly. She even worked on it while she was in hospital, in labour with her daughter Gwen. Now that’s dedication!

Honeybee Stole
Photo © Jon Stockham

A close-up of Nicola’s Honeybee Stole. Isn’t it beautiful?

Cake
Photo © Tim Dawes

The cake was made by my Aunt, Helen Harrison. I sent her a photo of my flowers, and she reproduced them perfectly in icing. Amazing!

Cupcake Tower
Photo © Tim Dawes

Helen ended up making more than a hundred cupcakes! My cousins Jane and Georgina helped to make all of the little flowers to go on top of them all. The larger cake on the top was a traditional fruit cake, the cupcakes were a mixture of chocolate and plain sponge fairy cakes.

Party Bags
Photo © Jon Stockham

We had quite a lot of children at the wedding, so we asked Paul’s Mum to put together a party bag for each child. They went down really well – Paul’s cousins had set up a craft business worthy of Etsy by the end of the reception! They were making jewellery with lots of sparkly stickers, and having a great time. The little boys loved their cars and dinosaurs too.

Lego
Photo © Jon Stockham

This is an idea we stole from our friends Nicola and Ian. They put Lego on each table at their wedding, so we did the same. We managed to give away Paul’s entire childhood Lego collection, and people made some amazing collaborative creations!

Carved Pumpkin
Photo © Jon Stockham

Because the wedding was on Hallowe’en, my friend Heather and her two boys carved us a beautiful little pumpkin! It had a heart on one side, and our initials on the other.

Mr & Mrs Smith
Photo © Elaine Harrison

My Mum knitted this adorable little bride and groom from a pattern in Simply Knitting magazine. She customised them perfectly to match our outfits. Mum was becoming increasingly agitated when I kept changing my mind about what I was going to wear – and now I know why!

We liked them so much that they came on our honeymoon with us, and had an adventure of their own.

I have to say that we were absolutely thrilled to bits with everybody’s kindness and willingness to be involved. Almost everybody took pictures, and we haven’t seen them all yet, so there’s still more to look forward to! My brother-in-law Tim took hundreds of photos, and even made us a little video. We also received some beautiful hand made gifts, including an amigurumi skeleton bride and groom, and a fabulous quilt.

We had the best day, and many aspects of it were all the more special for having been made for us by our friends and family.

Handmade Wedding – Part One

Paul and I got married on Hallowe’en, which was absolutely ages ago, and whilst I showed you the honeymoon pictures, I haven’t yet posted any pictures of the wedding itself!

Because most wedding photos are of people you don’t know, I decided to concentrate on showing you the things that we made ourselves, or that our friends made for us. That turned out to be an extremely long post, so I’m splitting it into two parts. Today’s is everything that we made ourselves, and tomorrow’s will be about all the beautiful things that were made especially for us.

Stationery

The artwork for all of our wedding stationery, designed by Paul. There were plans for another picture of us in our wedding outfits, but we didn’t have time to make that happen!

Portal Cufflinks
Photo © Jon Stockham

Paul and Bob wore matching Portal cufflinks, bought from The Clay Collection on Etsy.

Buttonholes and Hankies
Photo © Jon Stockham

The buttonholes are made from silk violets and paper roses, with a few sparkly bits thrown in for good measure. The leaves came from the original bunch of violets, and the silver holder is a filigree corset-lace aglet. They’re held on by magnets, so nobody had to poke holes in their clothes with a pin. I also made the handkerchiefs, although they were a bit small and kept disappearing down inside the men’s pockets!

Bouquet
Photo © Jon Stockham

Silk and paper flowers, courtesy of Hobby Craft. Two bunches of silk violets and a lot of paper roses were reassembled into a bouquet. It’s simply held together with an elastic band, underneath the ribbon! The sparkly silver bee is a hair clip, but I didn’t manage to grow my hair long enough to wear it.

Favours
Photo © Jon Stockham

My parents went on a mission to IKEA to buy us a boxload of these little glasses. We filled them up with old-fashioned boiled sweets, from our local independent sweet shop.

Favours
Photo © Jon Stockham

We wrapped each glass in a piece of tulle, and tied it with a ribbon. They’re labelled using Moo mini cards, with the name on one side and the picture of us on the other.

Veil
Photo © Jon Stockham

I didn’t make the flowery feathery fascinator, but I did make the veil. Two yards of tulle, folded along the grain, and gathered onto a hair comb in the middle. Simple!

Coat
Photo © Jon Stockham

This was a bit of a last-minute addition! I’d been planning to make my dress from the purple fabric, and then I ended up buying a dress instead. I had a sudden crisis where I decided that I MUST have a train if I wanted to look like a bride, so I made myself a very long coat. I also added matching silk-covered buttons to the shoes.

We’re laughing because we’d just turned round and seen my Uncle Steve, wearing a bright pink wig!

We laughed pretty much all day, to be honest.

Honeymoon photos!

Juvenile Siberian Eagle Owl
These are the photos from Centre Parcs – mostly of owls.
I’m quite pleased with these, although I missed a lot of great shots of the owls by being much too slow!

London Zoo
These are the photos from London – mostly of the aquarium and the zoo.
Sadly a lot of these are either out of focus, or focussed in slightly the wrong place. I’m going to blame the poor light conditions, the fact that most of them were taken through glass, water or mesh, and the fact that I’ve never really worked out how to make the most of the 200mm lens.

Mr & Mrs Smith Go On Honeymoon
These are the honeymoon photos of a certain Mr & Mrs Smith – who travelled with us wherever we went.
My Mum knitted these little figures for us, and we thought they deserved a little holiday of their own!

I realise that I haven’t shown you any photos of the wedding yet. We haven’t had the pictures back from the official photographer, and we’re waiting for those before we compile an online album. There are quite a few pictures starting to show up on Facebook, and I do have photos of everything that Paul and I made ourselves, so we should have something to show you very soon.

Do me a favour?

We spent most of yesterday putting together the wedding favours.

My parents very kindly made a trip to IKEA for us, to buy the glasses. I set about cutting dozens of squares of dress net and lengths of ribbon, and Paul designed the MOO mini cards that we’ve used as name tags. We bought the sweets locally, from Strange Sweets in the Harris Arcade. Because we bought so many (nine kilos!), Lisa gave us a really good deal!

Once we had all of the bits and pieces ready and waiting, it only took a couple of hours to put them all together. Paul and I put on plastic gloves and divided all the sweets into the glasses. Then Paul held the net squares in place while I tied on the name tags.

Now they’re all boxed up, complete with a table plan, and ready to be taken over to the wedding venue this afternoon.

I think that’s the very last thing that we actually had to make. Now we just have a million other things to organise before the weekend…

Buttonholes

I haven’t been showing you very many of my wedding plans on here, but this is a little something I thought other people might be interested in. They’re not quite finished yet, but these are the basis of the buttonholes that our families and Best Man are going to wear on the day. The pink and purple ones are for the men, and the cream and peach are for the ladies.

All of the flowers came from Hobby Craft. The roses are paper, with wire stems. The fabric violets came as part of a big posy which I dismantled. I’ll be using the large leaves from the posy to go behind each of the buttonholes. The silver and gold holders are actually filigree aglets for corset laces, bought from Vena Cava.

The large leaves are currently being pressed underneath a pile of books, waiting for the glue to dry. I’ve attached a magnet to the back of each large leaf, and glued on a smaller leaf to cover it. That way there’s no need for pins – the back of the magnet simply goes underneath a lapel or inside a dress, and holds the buttonhole into place.

Once the glue is dry, the leaves will be held very simply by twisting around the wire stems from the flowers. Then I can trim the stems, crimp the top of the aglets, and they’re done!

Laura’s beaded wedding bag

Laura's beaded wedding bag

I don’t like showing other people’s wedding things in their entirety before the wedding, so this is just a little snapshot of Laura’s beaded wedding bag.

The ivory silk dupion was already beaded and embroidered. I removed some of the clear beads, and replaced them with red ones. You can also see the pretty flower shaped iridescent button, there in the bottom right hand corner.

Laura and Rob are getting married in September.

Congratulations!

Nicola’s Wedding Dress

Nicola & Ian's Wedding

Nicola’s wedding dress started life as Vogue 2903, an original 1957 pattern. We made surprisingly few changes to accommodate the fact that the Nicola was six months pregnant!

I had to do a full bust adjustment, and let out the waist a tiny bit at all of the seams. The main change we made was to add lacing up the back, just in case of sudden growth.

We also decided at the last minute that sleeves were entirely over-rated, and left them off. I bound the armholes with matching bias tape.

The silk is a very fine and lightweight dupion from Fine Fabrics of Harrogate. (Hi Sandra!)
It’s made by James Brindley, and the colours are “Forest” and “Ocean”.

The silk was beautiful to work with. I had to keep replacing the needle in my machine, as the silk blunted it very quickly, but other than that I had no problems at all.

There was no matching ribbon on the face of the planet for lacing up the back of the dress, so I made about a mile of bias tape, and rolled the ends like shoelaces so it would be easy to thread through the eyelets.

Oh, and I also made shoelaces for the bride, five ties for the groom and groomsmen, and eight brooches for the ladies… and I did it all in just eight days!

I do like the Internet.

Yesterday, Mamfa popped by specifically to leave a comment that she’d seen a pair of Those Shoes in a size 5, in a shop in Leeds.

Mamfa doesn’t know me, she saw my post via the friends list of a community that we both visit. But she had some useful information, and took the time to leave a comment and pass it on. Wasn’t that kind?

Further investigation reveals that the shoes are now back on the Schuh website, and that my local branch apparently has a couple of pairs in stock.

Hopefully Liz and I will have our wedding shoes after all. 🙂

While I’m on the subject of awesome shoes (when am I not?), you could do worse than to check out Em & Sprout’s Etsy store.

Are they not the most adorable shoes you’ve ever seen? So cute!