I saw this Persnickety dress and instantly fell in love. I did not love the price, especially for a brand I’ve never ordered from. I had no idea about fit or quality so I wasn’t going to risk it. The pattern looked pretty simple, though, so I decided to take a go at it myself.
What I really loved about this dress is how the tone on tone and the simple styling are perked up by good texture. The wide bands with pintucks and large chunky buttons help the simple style really shine through without making it boring.
First off, I had to look up tutorials on pintucking. Turns out, it’s pretty simple. You just measure, fold, press, and sew as close to the edge as you can. There are special feet you can get to help keep everything straight (which would have been very handy for me since my pintucks had a tendency to wander).
I tried the double needle technique but, for the life of me, I couldn’t get it to work. I imagine it’s the same reason I can’t get my brother machine to shirr. I’m afraid to adjust my bobbin tension because I know I won’t get it back to the factory setting. So, until I buy a new bobbin case, I’m stuck pintucking the old fashioned way.
This burdastyle tutorial was very informative. Yeah, it’s labor intensive, but it’s worth it. In fact, I plan on more pintucked projects in the future. In fact, I found it rather fun 🙂
The whole thing is sewn with osnaburge. It had good visual texture and was thin enough to show the pintucks nicely. I had to dye the skirt section to make it darker, using rit dye.I threw a buttonhole on the back so that I could get the skirt off and on and buttonholes on the front for the straps, sewed on my pockets and did a dance. My knockoff was complete.
It turns out it doesn’t fit too well, though. It’s about a size too big, but she’ll grow into it 🙂
I couldn’t find the right buttons so I made my own from shrink plastic. I used this tutorial.
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