Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Why Ms Iris! What A Lovely Bustle You Have!

Ms Iris came to me about a week ago. I had anticipated her coming, and had gotten all in readiness for her stay. We had met previously, so I had certain, shall we say, expectations of how our visit would go. Hmmm . . . little did I know. . .




Ms Iris is a lovely lady from Matthew Christopher's 2010 collection. She is quite charming, sweet and demure, yet sophisticated with elegance and wit.


When Ms Iris first enters the room, all eyes are drawn to her delicately framed decollete', where her petals frame her bodice. Her crisp ivory taffeta announces her arrival with a fresh swish of fabric.

 
One gets a sense that Ms Iris is the perfect lady.
Then, she turns around . . .



and we see her true personality.



Though still quite lovely, and very much a lady, we start to see a certain, well, vanity.




Her petals spread out around her, seemingly in an effort to swallow all within reach. Her stuborn-ness comes alive when I try to fashion her lovely petals into a bustle. She definitely needs taming, and we are now in a battle to see who will win.

Though I would never allow her to hear me say it, she is a bit . . . well, bottom heavy.
So, before I could attack her bustle, I knew she would need a little reinforcement. I added an extra panel of her silk taffeta to her 'underside', where the upper ribbons would be sewn. My goodness! What a stink she put up! You would have thought she'd never had anyone see her underskirts before!




First, I attached 3 heavy grosgrain ribbons to her petal center. She fought me every stitch of the way, until I had bloody fingers, broken needles, broken thread, and sweat dripping down my forehead. She had been hiding a good inch to 1 1/4" of thickness beneath her petal. But I won this first battle, with my trusty weapon - a needle nose pliers. Then, I attached 3 more of the ribbons at the back seam -


where they will hide under her 'secret' panel when her bustle is down.

Here are her ties done up -


and here, I have re-directed a couple of her petals to camouflage my dirty work, as she would call it.


Once this major battle was won, she seemed to calm down a bit and wasn't quite so obstinate about her make over.

She still needed pockets, which she fought me on for awhile, but again, I won. By the time I got to attaching her new buttons . . .


she seemed to have accepted the fact that no matter what I might do to her, she was still going to be the most beautiful lady in the room.

5 comments:

  1. Hi Candice! Wow, I hope your fingers are recovering okay...those ribbon attachments sound painful!

    I am also writing because I am awarding you the "Stylish Blogger" award! There's an award image you can post on your blog if you like, and also questions to answer if you do post about it (these are on my blog or I can email them to you, let me know). I got the award from a friend who is a blogger, and so I wanted to pass it along to someone who defines the word stylish!

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  2. Wow that is one beautiful dress. I love the bustle you put in.

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  3. Nice dress collection if you agree so can i try it.

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