Category Archives: smocking

Second Hand Roses

 

Lawnbinchefront

 

I’m really into recycling Rebecca’s dresses that have been packed away for 25+ years.  It’s amazing how timeless a smocked dress can be and how well they hold up.

Some, like Barbra Streisand,  may turn their noses up “second hand,” but neither Laurel nor I mind.

I had to drop the hem, as little girls’ skirts are longer now. Fortunately, when the dress was made, I followed the standard recommendation of putting in a 6″ hem so  I had a good 3″ to drop.

This basic yoke has a sash that ties in the back.  It is smocked to just above the waist and meets the back yoke at that same depth.  The sash snugs the dress up and feels more like a big girl dress.

The intriguing smocking plate is Chinese Chippendale by Barbie Beck, an almost ancient design.  If you blow up the photo, you will see how interesting the design is. Continue reading

Alastair’s Farm Suit

my hardworking husband (in the Florida shirt) taking a break with the carpenter

Things have been pretty hectic here in the mountains.  The repairs to our cabin turned out to be a lot more extensive and time consuming than expected.  We’ve had workers rebuilding a side deck and the back entrance,  as well putting in a French drain to stop the flooding of our storage units.

Personally,  I think it seems unpatriotic to put in foreign drain with our economy in such dire straits.  But Bob assures me that there is nothing French about it,  all the materials came from Lowe’s and  it really is a domestic drain.  Whatever.  At any rate,  I have not gotten as much smocking done as I had expected.

The little ready-to-smock Jon-Jon suit for Alastair is as done as it’s going to be until we get home.  The smocking is finished but the suit awaits some decorative stitching on the shirt collar and cuffs as well as button replacement.  I will probably remove the machine hem and finish it by hand.

I really thought I’d have one daygown smocked by now.  Every day I fix lunch for the workers, something I have always done when work crews are underfoot.  When our swimming pool was built, when the roof was replaced, when the pavers were laid, we’ve always provided lunch.

This time, the motivation is even greater.  The people in this area, and probably throughout the mountains,  seem to have an exceedingly  high standard of honesty and hard work.  Several years ago, we couldn’t find anyone to deliver firewood all the way up Seven Devils Mountain.  Finally, Bob responded to yet another firewood ad and was told again that they don’t deliver up here.

To get in and out of the cabin, we have to "walk the plank" or hike down the steep slope to the steps to the front deck. I live on the edge and "plank" to the back to check their progress. My new knee handled it pretty well.

We had the whole family up for the week and we all love a fire.  So Bob told the man that he would pay an extra $25 or $50 or  “whatever it takes” to get firewood.  The man drove from Boone, 20 miles away and then up to our cabin, unloaded the firewood and quietly asked for an extra $10 for the long  distance delivery.  Bob rounded up the cost of the firewood to include a nice tip and then handed the man $10 for delivery.  He was happy and so were we.

About 15 minutes later the man was at the back door.  Bob had given him a $100 bill instead of a $10.  He seemed offended by our surprise that he would go to the trouble to return.  “It just wouldn’t be right to keep it,” he stated simply.  He left with a genuine $10 bill.  Note: When we got home, Bob got new glasses.

The workmen who are here now are good Christian men who  give their best effort to the job.  My dear, handy hardworking husband works right along side of them.  It’s a pleasure to cook for these men and a share their lunch hour.  It makes me feel like a farm wife.

Tomorrow, I’m serving grilled Reuben sandwiches, fresh baby carrots and apple pie ala mode.  And, of course, sweet tea.  I’ll catch up on my smocking later.

Stitching in the Mountains

our cabin on Seven Devils Mountain in Banner Elk, NC

Bob and I are  at our mountain cabin in North Carolina, enjoying the cool air and relaxing a little.  I love this place, located between Boone and Banner Elk, in what is known as The High Country. The cabin is at 4500′ elevation, above the summer tourist bustle and the heat.

All afternoon I sat here, smocking and sipping sweet tea.

But there is always work to be done when we are here so we’ve done a little of that as well. And there is more to come.

This afternoon, I sat on the front deck and started on the ready-to-smock Jon-Jon for Alastair.  The combination of needlework and the tranquil setting left me feeling peaceful and serene. Bob was banging around replacing molding, cleaning out gutters  and hauling long-since forgotten storage bins from the utility rooms below the deck.  Even his noise seemed domestic and comforting.  Continue reading

Blue Flowers Daygown

Few projects are as satisfying as a baby daygown.  Even lavished with time consuming details and handwork, they are relatively quick.  You can use fine fabrics and short lengths of special trims from your stash that might be too small or too expensive for a larger garment.  And you can use things you have put away for something special and not feel guilty, because daygowns are special.

This smocked daygown was made for Laurel, before her May birth. The angel wing sleeve seemed to be appropriate for the summer heat that would blanket her infancy. The fabric is easy care Imperial batiste, chosen because of the non-stop demands on a new mother’s time and the fact that my daughter-in-law hates to iron.

The trim is a Swiss embroidery from Capitol Imports that I had put away many years ago.  The blue floral insertion was used on the front opening and the matching edge finishes the angel sleeve.

The edge is 1″ wide, too wide, I decided, to be joined to either side of the insertion down the front.  It seemed as if  that much width and that many blue flowers it would just overwhelm the smocking and the dress and the baby.  Continue reading

Out of Retirement Pinafore

pinafore all

 

After a fabulous weekend with both of our son and daughter and their families, I started pulling out some of Rebecca’s dresses that have been packed away for Laurel. Sadly, many are already outgrown, as I missed the small window of opportunity to pull  them out for a second generation.  But this one is out of retirement.

 

It hurts to see the rippled yoke. I do a better job now.

It hurts to see the rippled yoke. I do a better job now.

 

The Little Sunday Dresses pinafore is just the right size for Laurel now.  Smocked with Ellen McCarn’s monogram, the skirt and shoulder ruffles are Swiss embroideries from Capitol Imports.  The bodice is Swiss batiste.

I had planned to pick out the monogram and re-smock it with Laurel’s initials. But the stitches are  just old enough (25 years) and the blue floss just dark enough that I’m afraid the color may have marked the fabric permanently. So I’m just going to leave it.

Continue reading

Pretty in Pink

Some time ago, Mildred Turner and I did a series of doll dressing schools around the country. Each student adopted a 20″ porcelain doll, made by my mother, and proceeded to spend 4 days making a wardrobe. Garments included an heirloom sewn dress–always Mildred’s assignment, a bishop dress and/or nightgown–my assignment, and undergarments, or “unmentionables” we called them.

Each doll came with a biography, much like the American Girls dolls, and the wardrobe reflected the lifestyle and time of the porcelain character. In Atlanta, we dressed Melanie, a 20th century Southern Belle. In North Carolina we dressed Millie Lavonia, modeled after Mildred Lavonia Medford Turner herself.

 

Another time it was a fictional mountain girl, Daisy Renee, named for country flowers and the daughter of Capitol Imports vice president. The Mary Elizabeth doll was my Glenwood home town gal, said to have lived the life of Miss Alice’s sister, circa 1915. Continue reading

Spring is Sprung

Every child is born a naturalist. His eyes are, by nature, open to the glories of the stars, the beauty of the flowers and the mystery of life. R. Search      

LRflowerscropBRITE          

 

After the coldest Florida winter in memory, spring weather is more than welcome.  The wildflowers are in full bloom, along with all the glories that come with the season.

 

Laurel loves flowers and hats and smocked dresses.

Laurel loves flowers and hats and smocked dresses.

 

Laurel is shown here in a sweet department store smocked dress that I bought for $4.  My friend, Judy Day, says it will be a cold day in***~~~insert “on the equator“~~~when her granddaughters will be wearing retail smocked dresses. I’m neither so proud nor so productive that I can pass up a bargain like this.  Continue reading

Strawberry Sundress

strawberrysundressBrite

With the sweet spring weather we have had these past few weeks, I have had sundresses on my mind.  I came across pictures of this little sundress that I made for Laurel the summer that she was two.

Many such sundresses had been made for my daughter Rebecca from that age on, from a pattern that my friend Mary Hale Hoffmann and I made up.  Smocking this garment brought back sweet memories of those days.

Our daughters were the same age and we smocked around the clock for them.  This pattern was so easy and economical that our girls wore them like school uniforms.

We used the armhole curve from Katina, a Children’s Corner sundress pattern with a narrow yoke.  We added the width of the yoke to the armhole curve and voila’ we were in business!

 

strawberrybloomersBrite

Continue reading

Day Grandchildren’s Easter Duds

 

Update:  In discussion with Judy, I was reminded that Jackson’s shorts were actually made from a man’s shirt.  After searching high and low for fabric to coordinate with the mint green dresses, Judy finally found a very pricey shirt that would do.  She whacked that shirt up for shorts which had to be lined, due to the light weight of the shirting.

I’ve always said that heirloom sewing is very expensive, either in terms of time or money.  Judy paid both ways for these beautifully coordinated Easter outfits!  She says she just did what a grandmother had to do.************************

A few years ago, Judy Day made these three beautiful, coordinated outfits for her grandchildren.  The girl cousins are the same age and Big Brother Jackson is the oldest of the three.

The mint Imperial batiste bishop dresses seem to project the essence of Spring. Ribbons woven through the smocking add shimmer, making the dresses even more classically elegant.  Tucks add another special detail to the skirts.

The sleeves are trimmed with tatting made by Judy’s grandmother–that would be the girls’ great-great grandmother.  What a special treasure for these girls!  Continue reading

Smocking Green–Recycling

Laurel fortifying herself before her expedition to pick flowers in the garden.

It seemed to me that an article on green would be appropriate for St.Patrick’s Day.  But this has nothing to do with Luck o’ the Irish, Leprechauns or cabbage and corned beef.   However, in some ways the topic is like the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow.

Those of us who sew and smock classic children’s clothing were green long before it was the color of a movement. I remember Kermit the Frog singing “It’s Not Easy being Green.”   But for us, it’s the easiest thing we can do.

This bishop dress was made 25 years ago for my daughter and worn long enough that the hem had to be let down for her. It still looks pretty good now that Laurel wears it. The pattern is timeless, the microcheck fabric and the Swiss edging are very good quality and the smocking looks like it will hold up for yet another generation.  The environmentalist mantra “Reduce~Re-use~Recycle” could have been composed by women of our ilk. Continue reading