Guess what I did last night? I attended our local Flameworks Guild and learned how to make lampwork glass beads! It was a lot more challenging than I expected it to be, and a little bit scary, having fire and molten glass so close to my face; but I'm definitely hooked, and I can't wait til next time. Here are the beads I made last night:
Aren't they ridiculous? I guess they're not too terrible, for a first try. I may actually add the two burgundy/purple ones to my Viking necklaces. I actually don't like orange much, but the glass was free, and it was my first time - these are just first tries, they don't have to be fancy and wonderful (my skills so far don't remotely support fancy and wonderful anyway). Next time - in January - I'll bring a few supplies of my own, including some blue glass, so that I can work on something that will go with my existing necklaces and my wardrobe.
Yay! I can't wait to do this again!
06 December 2019
26 November 2019
Post-BAM
I managed to get a picture of me at the event, so you don't have to look at my outfits on hangers and try to imagine what I actually look like:
The weather at BAM was fairly all-inclusive, except that it wasn't hot. But it did rain off and on the entire first day, with a little storm that night; the next three days were chilly but beautiful, and the nights were coldcoldcoldcold. I think Friday night was 37ยบ. Yikes. I need to re-think my bedding situation, because I was NOT warm enough at night. An air mattress in that weather needs to be insulated with something, otherwise you're just lying on a giant ziploc bag of cold air.
Overall I had a ton of fun, though I didn't do a whole lot - mostly I stayed in camp and puttered around the house, cleaning and sewing and watching the family dog and the kids. I did take the bag of sari strips that I had left over around and gave a bunch away, then put the remainder of the bag into the swap meet that was going on on Saturday. (I still have half the quilt left to harvest, so there'll be another bag).
I attended the vigil of a good friend of mine who was recently made a Laurel, at which there was a spectacular bardic circle and an inflatable walking squid (if you've never seen a giant squid lounging around in a camp chair with a beer in one hand you've missed out, I can tell you); and I walked around shopping in the middle of the night and visiting various parties, which I hadn't gotten to do in years. So fun!
Well, I have to replace the trim on my brown dress, because it snapped and shredded itself at the event. I have another dress refit I need to start working on soon. I'm working on another Hedeby bag, and it's coming along VERY slowly.
Upcoming events are baronial Yule in December and Candlemas on the 2nd of February. I haven't quite decided yet, but I think I MIGHT be able to swing Gulf Wars in March. I don't know yet - a lot of pieces will have to fall into place perfectly for it to happen, so we'll see. For right now I'll focus on the brown dress and the refit, and we'll worry about war when we get closer to it.
For right now, my things are put away and my laundry's done, and I'm going to get through the next two days of ye olde day job before Thanksgiving and worry about all the rest after the holiday is over. I can taste the cheesecake already...
photo taken by my friend Simona |
The weather at BAM was fairly all-inclusive, except that it wasn't hot. But it did rain off and on the entire first day, with a little storm that night; the next three days were chilly but beautiful, and the nights were coldcoldcoldcold. I think Friday night was 37ยบ. Yikes. I need to re-think my bedding situation, because I was NOT warm enough at night. An air mattress in that weather needs to be insulated with something, otherwise you're just lying on a giant ziploc bag of cold air.
Overall I had a ton of fun, though I didn't do a whole lot - mostly I stayed in camp and puttered around the house, cleaning and sewing and watching the family dog and the kids. I did take the bag of sari strips that I had left over around and gave a bunch away, then put the remainder of the bag into the swap meet that was going on on Saturday. (I still have half the quilt left to harvest, so there'll be another bag).
I attended the vigil of a good friend of mine who was recently made a Laurel, at which there was a spectacular bardic circle and an inflatable walking squid (if you've never seen a giant squid lounging around in a camp chair with a beer in one hand you've missed out, I can tell you); and I walked around shopping in the middle of the night and visiting various parties, which I hadn't gotten to do in years. So fun!
So, What's Next?
Upcoming events are baronial Yule in December and Candlemas on the 2nd of February. I haven't quite decided yet, but I think I MIGHT be able to swing Gulf Wars in March. I don't know yet - a lot of pieces will have to fall into place perfectly for it to happen, so we'll see. For right now I'll focus on the brown dress and the refit, and we'll worry about war when we get closer to it.
For right now, my things are put away and my laundry's done, and I'm going to get through the next two days of ye olde day job before Thanksgiving and worry about all the rest after the holiday is over. I can taste the cheesecake already...
20 November 2019
A Case to Put It Into
The last thing I did over the weekend was fix up a small wooden box to use as a jewelry box for all my Viking jewelry. A lot of it is big and clunky (brass brooches, arm bands) and doesn't fit into the soft cloth jewelry pouch I've been using anymore.
So I purchased a $4 wooden box and some adhesive-backed felt sheets and made a new jewelry box:
I have to say, I'm loving the adhesive-backed felt sheets I found for this project. I never had any idea they CAME with adhesive backing - I've always used plain felt fabric or velveteen in boxes, and adhered them to the wood with messy spray adhesive. This was GREAT!
And I love my little box. It was such a ridiculously simple project, but I love it all the same. And there's room in there to grow my jewelry collection, too - more beads! Must collect all the beads.
Okay, so BAM starts tomorrow! See you fine folks on the flip side - and some of you I'll see there!
So I purchased a $4 wooden box and some adhesive-backed felt sheets and made a new jewelry box:
For right now all I had time to do was stain this box and clearcoat it, but I want to paint it one day - maybe a Jelling dragon design, or a Jormungandr (Midgard Serpent) - so I made sure to make this as smooth and clean as possible, so that painting on it will be easy when I get to it.
I have to say, I'm loving the adhesive-backed felt sheets I found for this project. I never had any idea they CAME with adhesive backing - I've always used plain felt fabric or velveteen in boxes, and adhered them to the wood with messy spray adhesive. This was GREAT!
And I love my little box. It was such a ridiculously simple project, but I love it all the same. And there's room in there to grow my jewelry collection, too - more beads! Must collect all the beads.
Okay, so BAM starts tomorrow! See you fine folks on the flip side - and some of you I'll see there!
19 November 2019
Jewelry Redo
• I removed the wood beads and the "rockier" stone beads (jasper, agate)
• I added more red glass beads and some clear ones
• Tried to keep only glass beads and glass look-alikes (like clear green fluorite)
• I graduated the beads so that the larger beads are in the center of each necklace and the smaller beads are towards the ends
• Instead of making one big necklace loop which is looped around my brooches, I made two distinct necklaces and affixed them to a pair of metal hoops which hang from my brooches like distributors.
Here's what it looked like before, when it was one big necklace:
BEFORE |
And here's what it looks like now, with the hoop distributors:
AFTER |
The necklace hangs longer, and the two strands lie more smoothly this way. I can also clip my little raven pendant off to one side instead of hanging it from the necklace itself. Not shown is a small pair of scissors and a large needle charm I put on a chain to hang from one of my brooches as well.
In the future I'd really like to bring in more cobalt blue glass, and more lampwork beads. In December I'll be attending my very first Flameworks Guild meeting, where I'll learn to make my very own glass lampwork beads! I'm so excited. I'm hoping to come away from that class with enough [blue] beads to replace the metal spacer beads I'm still using, but we'll see.
What's Next?
Yea, and a case to put it into...
18 November 2019
Adventures In Dyeing: A Dublin Hood
It's days until BAM and I'm spinning my wheels. I'm out of projects, and I needed something to do. I thought, I've only got the one Dublin hood, why not make another one? But the only scraps I had left that were big enough to get a hood out of were white. There's nothing wrong with white linen, but I wanted color. Boom: weekend project.
Fortunately, I also had some frozen blueberries, a pomegranate, and a large jar of hibiscus flower tea. That's right, no RIT dye for me this time - this is my very first foray into dyeing with natural materials. It's something that's fascinated me for years, but I've never had the time or the space to get into it. For this hood, though, I didn't need much space - only a pot on my stovetop - and I already had the materials.
I soaked the hood in vinegar, simmered the plant material in water for about 30 minutes, added 1 cup of salt as a fixative, and then simmered the dyebath with the hood in it for about an hour, then left the hood in the dyebath while the water cooled down.
Tada! I have no idea what color this is. Light red? Dark pink? Almost-magenta? Does it have purplish areas in it or not? If the color even? I can't tell - it's even in some lights, and in some others, not so much. I'm not terribly likely to wear this color, but this was a really fun experiment. I definitely want to learn more about plant dyeing when I get back from BAM.
AN UPDATE: I very rarely do this, but this one was weird. Two years later, in 2022, I pulled this raspberry-colored hood out of storage to get ready to go to an event, and it had faded to nearly white. I don't know what happened to the color - I didn't store it in sun or heat or any moisture or anything. It just faded, very badly. I have no idea why.
Looks gross; smells like SANGRIA mmm |
Fortunately, I also had some frozen blueberries, a pomegranate, and a large jar of hibiscus flower tea. That's right, no RIT dye for me this time - this is my very first foray into dyeing with natural materials. It's something that's fascinated me for years, but I've never had the time or the space to get into it. For this hood, though, I didn't need much space - only a pot on my stovetop - and I already had the materials.
I soaked the hood in vinegar, simmered the plant material in water for about 30 minutes, added 1 cup of salt as a fixative, and then simmered the dyebath with the hood in it for about an hour, then left the hood in the dyebath while the water cooled down.
Tada! I have no idea what color this is. Light red? Dark pink? Almost-magenta? Does it have purplish areas in it or not? If the color even? I can't tell - it's even in some lights, and in some others, not so much. I'm not terribly likely to wear this color, but this was a really fun experiment. I definitely want to learn more about plant dyeing when I get back from BAM.
AN UPDATE: I very rarely do this, but this one was weird. Two years later, in 2022, I pulled this raspberry-colored hood out of storage to get ready to go to an event, and it had faded to nearly white. I don't know what happened to the color - I didn't store it in sun or heat or any moisture or anything. It just faded, very badly. I have no idea why.
15 November 2019
The Sari Quilt
So I had this huge silk quilt. The front was made from dozens of pieces cut from the edge banding on silk saris from India. The border around the front was made from a deep purple dupioni silk. The backing was made from a royal purple rayon challis. It was GORGEOUS. It had been given to me by someone who'd received it as a gift many years before and didn't want it anymore. It was also something I was never, ever going to use - my cats would destroy it, and it was really hot.
After having kept it in storage for years, I looked more critically at the quilt: on closer inspection, the quilt was badly worn around the edges, some of the sari pieces were fraying, it was discolored in several places, there were bleach stains on the back, and the inside was lined with an open-cell polyurethane sheet which was crusty and starting to melt with age.
So I choked back my revulsion to destroying a beautiful piece of art, and cut all the sari silk and the dupioni free of the quilt so that it could be salvaged for other applications. Since we know that Viking apron dresses were often finished with trim made of strips of imported silk and other fine fabrics (Hilde Thunem's paper on apron dresses, see Inga Hagg references/biblio and Birka finds), I opted to use a few of the pieces from this quilt on my naked apron dresses and smocks:
Here's a bit of navy blue sari silk with pink and blue on the top edge of my brown linen/cotton dress. And yes, I picked out all that embroidery on the brown dress. It killed me - I'd just done it in September and I did a really good job, but it was incorrect for the dress and the time period and I just couldn't look at it anymore.
Here's a lovely gold and teal on the "bayou" blue smock sleeves. (Bonus cat).
.
Here's a bit of the same navy and gold with blue and pink that's on my brown dress, on the "bayou" blue apron dress.
And two extras:
A bit of gold and silver on the sleeves of my white smock. This fabric actually came from an old lightweight curtain panel I had in my stash, and I was really pleased with the way it looked on my white smock, It was this look that convinced me to try out some of the sari fabric on my clothes. (I'm NOT pleased with the zigzag stitch I used to put the trim on - I'll be picking that out and using a less obvious stitch as soon as I get back from BAM).
This isn't from the quilt either, but I did find a bit of trim in my stash that works with the color on my "bluebonnet" blue apron dress (the one I just made over in October). I really love the way it looks with the teal rayon ribbon at the top.
And finally, lest you think the orange cat (Rory Williams) is my only sewing friend, meet Rabi and Gypsy: two brothers who also like helping me with my sewing, usually by sleeping in my chair or sitting on my lap to keep me warm while I work.
What's Next?
Technically I'm out of stuff to do before BAM, but I do have a couple of small projects I'm playing with that might be done before I leave - I'll show you if I get them done, if not, I'll see you after the war!13 November 2019
Bayou Linen Dresses
I had 6 yards of linen in a shade of muted blue called "Bayou" which I absolutely adore - so much so that I've already got a Eura dress and a Skjoldehamn hood out of the same stuff. I forget why I originally bought this particular yardage, but I've had it for years and hadn't done anything with it, so I decided to use it to flesh out my Viking wardrobe a little bit more.
First I made a new Viking apron dress - almost the same pattern I always use (more on that in a sec), with thin loop straps. This one is full length instead of short, since I had enough fabric this time to make it long. (Nothing wrong with the shorter apron dresses; I just prefer mine longer).
It's also unadorned so far, since I didn't have anything to use as trim around the top of the dress. I'm hoping to find some nice trim at the event.
In an effort to be as frugal with my fabric as possible (because I wanted to get a second dress out of it), I went looking for more conservative cutting layouts online. And I discovered something: apparently the entire known world makes apron dresses with 3 panels and 3 gores! I've been making them with 4 panels and 4 gores. The heck? I honestly don't remember where I even got my pattern, but I think I figured out what happened:
This is the standard pattern that it seems everyone uses - both halves of this picture are identical, except for the colors. On the left is the three-panel pattern, on which the two smaller (blue) panels are meant to be seamed together to make a full third panel.
On the right is the interpretation of the pattern that I've been using, where the blue side panels are used separately as TWO side panels (blue and purple) - each a quarter of the dress, instead of being combined into a third of the dress.
Obviously, somebody read those side panels wrong. Was it my mistake, or was that how the pattern was drawn when it came to me? I really don't remember. It's just as likely to be either one, I guess. It really doesn't matter; both ways of patterning the dress are equally valid. I just thought this was neat. I kind of love being shown that I'm wrong or that I've been doing things slightly differently without knowing it, because it means I get to learn new stuff and try out new ways of doing things.
So, I tried the three-panel dress. I have to say, I really like the way the skirt lies with this method. It's less full, because there's one less gore to make up the skirt circumference, but it's a smoother lie, and it's still plenty swishy. The way I cut it uses a little less fabric than my four-panel method, too - which is what I'd wanted in the first place.
From the remaining 3y of linen I squeezed out a new smock. It's a plain rectangular-construction T-tunic with 4 gores like all of my smocks (inspired by the Birka and Haithabu reconstructions).This one has a wide, oval neckline (almost a boatneck but not quite as wide) finished with a narrow edge binding in the same fabric. The sleeves are a little extra long so that I can wear my new bracelets over the fabric.
True, I've got a Eura dress out of this same fabric, and I really don't need two smocks in the same color. But I hardly ever wear my Eura dress anymore, since it's too early to have been worn with the apron dresses we know and love (9th century, whereas the apron dresses are 10th-11th). So this isn't a second smock in the same color, it's a replacement for the Eura dress, which I think will be relegated to life as a nightgown, or maybe something to wear to the showers.
A. Destroying priceless heirlooms, you?
True, I've got a Eura dress out of this same fabric, and I really don't need two smocks in the same color. But I hardly ever wear my Eura dress anymore, since it's too early to have been worn with the apron dresses we know and love (9th century, whereas the apron dresses are 10th-11th). So this isn't a second smock in the same color, it's a replacement for the Eura dress, which I think will be relegated to life as a nightgown, or maybe something to wear to the showers.
What's Next?
Q. Whatcha doin', Mady?A. Destroying priceless heirlooms, you?
11 November 2019
Trimming My Viking Coat
Back in October 2015 I made this coat out of some remnants I had - burnt orange and royal blue linen, and a pair of gray cotton curtain panels from Ikea:
It's a great coat, and I love to wear it. The only problem is, I made the arms a little bit too short. I don't have any of these fabrics anymore, either, so I can't just pull off the blue cuffs and make new longer ones to match.
Instead I added a second cuff made of white faux fur, to extend the length of the sleeves overall. The cuffs are interlined with some scrap linen and an iron-on interfacing to help them keep their shape. So that the cuffs wouldn't look like add-ons, I also ran a 3" band of faux fur all the way around the neck and front, and the lower hem of the coat.
I have to admit, I tried to dye this fur brown at first, because I hated the white - it's just so bright and glowy! It kept coming out purple, though, no matter what dye I used. Can't walk around an SCA event with purple muppet fur trim! So the white is growing on me, I guess. I suppose I can pretend it's polar bear or something. What white fur would have been available to eastern Scanindavia in the 10th century? Fox? Rabbit? Weasel of some kind? I don't know. Certainly not purple muppet.
I'll be honest, I'm not happy with the way the sleeves look. The fur cuffs look overly bulky and unbalanced, and the width of the blue section on the sleeves now looks completely stupid alongside the equal width of the fur cuffs. But overall, I like the way the trim on the whole coat came out - it's warmer, it covers me better, and it's a bit longer on the hem. It's quite a bit heavier, too - I'd forgotten how much weight faux fur adds to a garment.
I would say something cheeky like "I'm ready, bring it on, weather!" but I know better than to tempt Mother Nature like that. It's shaping up to be pretty cold at the event, and it might be rainy, too. I've got a coat I can actually wear, now, and a couple of good hoods to cover my head, and I've got lots of Secret Mundane Underthings (leggings, tall socks, long underwear) that I can wear under my clothes, so I should be okay in the cold.
Preparing for this event I always laugh at the crazy weather BAM gets. This time the highs should be in the 40s-50s. The last time I went, four years ago, it was 90ยบ during the day. The year before that it stormed the entire time and flooded out half the site. You just never know with this event.
It's a great coat, and I love to wear it. The only problem is, I made the arms a little bit too short. I don't have any of these fabrics anymore, either, so I can't just pull off the blue cuffs and make new longer ones to match.
Instead I added a second cuff made of white faux fur, to extend the length of the sleeves overall. The cuffs are interlined with some scrap linen and an iron-on interfacing to help them keep their shape. So that the cuffs wouldn't look like add-ons, I also ran a 3" band of faux fur all the way around the neck and front, and the lower hem of the coat.
(sorry for the terrible picture) |
I'll be honest, I'm not happy with the way the sleeves look. The fur cuffs look overly bulky and unbalanced, and the width of the blue section on the sleeves now looks completely stupid alongside the equal width of the fur cuffs. But overall, I like the way the trim on the whole coat came out - it's warmer, it covers me better, and it's a bit longer on the hem. It's quite a bit heavier, too - I'd forgotten how much weight faux fur adds to a garment.
I would say something cheeky like "I'm ready, bring it on, weather!" but I know better than to tempt Mother Nature like that. It's shaping up to be pretty cold at the event, and it might be rainy, too. I've got a coat I can actually wear, now, and a couple of good hoods to cover my head, and I've got lots of Secret Mundane Underthings (leggings, tall socks, long underwear) that I can wear under my clothes, so I should be okay in the cold.
Preparing for this event I always laugh at the crazy weather BAM gets. This time the highs should be in the 40s-50s. The last time I went, four years ago, it was 90ยบ during the day. The year before that it stormed the entire time and flooded out half the site. You just never know with this event.
What's next?
I have a pair of new blue dresses to show you, and a "new" apron dress pattern. More on that soon.08 November 2019
Button Pins
So far I've posted photos of my under dresses held together at the neckline with my new trefoil brooch. But I've read that Viking women probably used 1" round brooches to hold their necklines together (link). Since I wanted to use my trefoil brooch elsewhere, I decided to make myself a couple of little round brooches:
This was once one of a pair I made to hold my sleeves on when I was wearing 14th century stuff. I don't know where the other one has gone, but this one has been commandeered by my Viking wardrobe for now.
These pins are all made from 1" buttons. I clipped the loops on the back off with my wire cutters and then used a metal nail file to file the cut ends as smooth and flat as I could get them so that they wouldn't snag on my clothing. Then I attached a 1" pinback to the backs of the buttons with superglue. The pinbacks are a little too large; they stick out one side of the button, but that's okay.
Here's a silver one I made last night. These only take about 10 minutes to make, so I made two. I only glued buttons to my fingers three times, and I glued my finger to a spiral notebook just once. I'm getting better at adhesives!
Here's one I made out of a button that looks like an old Roman coin. Would the Vikings have used old coins as jewelry pieces? I have no idea - I suspect they probably would have traded them for the metal value, if they'd come across them. I just thought it looked neat.
There: two new, and one old, little round 1" brooches to hold the necklines of my smocks together. 10 minutes of work each for a little extra bling and function. Sweet.
This was once one of a pair I made to hold my sleeves on when I was wearing 14th century stuff. I don't know where the other one has gone, but this one has been commandeered by my Viking wardrobe for now.
These pins are all made from 1" buttons. I clipped the loops on the back off with my wire cutters and then used a metal nail file to file the cut ends as smooth and flat as I could get them so that they wouldn't snag on my clothing. Then I attached a 1" pinback to the backs of the buttons with superglue. The pinbacks are a little too large; they stick out one side of the button, but that's okay.
Here's a silver one I made last night. These only take about 10 minutes to make, so I made two. I only glued buttons to my fingers three times, and I glued my finger to a spiral notebook just once. I'm getting better at adhesives!
Here's one I made out of a button that looks like an old Roman coin. Would the Vikings have used old coins as jewelry pieces? I have no idea - I suspect they probably would have traded them for the metal value, if they'd come across them. I just thought it looked neat.
There: two new, and one old, little round 1" brooches to hold the necklines of my smocks together. 10 minutes of work each for a little extra bling and function. Sweet.
06 November 2019
Two Viking Smocks
I badly needed a couple of plain, neutral-colored underdresses, since most of mine are very strongly colored (red, black, dark blue) and don't go with my apron dresses - I've been struggling to make enough outfits for a longer event. So, since I was ordering blue fabric for the blue apron dress makeover, I went ahead and ordered some linen for a smock as well. I also recently purchased some off-white linen from Joann's (a friend gave me a gift certificate for my birthday). Now I have two new under smocks:
The first one is a plain T-tunic style smock with side and front/back gores. The sleeves are a little extra long so that I can wear my new bracelets over the fabric. The keyhole neckline is finished with a narrow edge binding in the same fabric. The color is "natural" from Fabric-Store.com. It's a medium weight linen, and maybe I should have ordered a light weight - it's a little heavier than I wanted an under-layer to be, and just the tiniest bit scratchy. That will wear out and the fabric will get smoother and more flexible as it's washed, though.
The second smock is nearly identical to the first one; the main difference is the fabric: the linen from Joann's is a 55/45% linen/rayon blend. It's lighter weight, a denser weave with a smoother finish, and a straighter drape. The pattern itself is the same: a T-tunic with 4 gores, extra-long sleeves, keyhole neckline. I used a neckline facing on this dress instead of an edge binding strip because I like how flat and smooth the faced neckline is. The edge binding is more period, I just like this better.
I could decorate the sleeve cuffs of either of these dresses with a thin strip of ribbon or woven trim; I haven't put much thought into it yet. I'll have to stare into my stash and see if anything inspires me.
The first one is a plain T-tunic style smock with side and front/back gores. The sleeves are a little extra long so that I can wear my new bracelets over the fabric. The keyhole neckline is finished with a narrow edge binding in the same fabric. The color is "natural" from Fabric-Store.com. It's a medium weight linen, and maybe I should have ordered a light weight - it's a little heavier than I wanted an under-layer to be, and just the tiniest bit scratchy. That will wear out and the fabric will get smoother and more flexible as it's washed, though.
The second smock is nearly identical to the first one; the main difference is the fabric: the linen from Joann's is a 55/45% linen/rayon blend. It's lighter weight, a denser weave with a smoother finish, and a straighter drape. The pattern itself is the same: a T-tunic with 4 gores, extra-long sleeves, keyhole neckline. I used a neckline facing on this dress instead of an edge binding strip because I like how flat and smooth the faced neckline is. The edge binding is more period, I just like this better.
I could decorate the sleeve cuffs of either of these dresses with a thin strip of ribbon or woven trim; I haven't put much thought into it yet. I'll have to stare into my stash and see if anything inspires me.
What's next?
I'm trimming out my coat with some new fake fur; but first: some new jewelry. Stay tuned.04 November 2019
Green Birka Bag
I love my brown Hedeby bag so much, but every time I use it I think it's just a bit too big. I don't need to keep a lot in it - just my phone, my vape, my site token, and whatever little bits of things that happen to me during the event. I figured I'd make a smaller one "someday"...until I realized I could make one now using scraps I already had.
The handles were my favorite part of this project. They're made out of a bamboo serving tray that my roommate was throwing away (modeled by Rory, above). I knocked the sides off the tray with a hammer, then cut the handles out of one of the long sides of the tray with my jigsaw. The bamboo was easy to cut and sand, but didn't take stain very well - the finish came out looking a little on the rustic side. (But the handles were free, so I'm not complaining). They're stained with a light coat of Walnut-colored stain and finished with two coats of Polyshades stain-and-seal in Espresso.
I attached the handles to the bag by sewing them on with thick, twisted embroidery floss, looped through the holes drilled across the bottom of the handles. I have my doubts about how well the floss will hold up to being scraped across the edges of those holes all the time, but we'll see.
The cord strap is a whipcord woven out of dark purple crochet thread - it's actually the drawstring out of a pair of pants I made years ago which have long since bit the dust. The cord is long enough for me to wear this bag as a cross-body bag.
The bag itself was made from a remnant of green linen that I had in my scrap pile. It's lined with a bit of an old, torn, rayon sarong in similar greens (the same sarong I used to make the trim on the black apron dress). I cut it to 8 x 9.5" with a 3/8" seam allowance included. The bag and lining were sewn separately, then hand-stitched together around the top.
The handles were my favorite part of this project. They're made out of a bamboo serving tray that my roommate was throwing away (modeled by Rory, above). I knocked the sides off the tray with a hammer, then cut the handles out of one of the long sides of the tray with my jigsaw. The bamboo was easy to cut and sand, but didn't take stain very well - the finish came out looking a little on the rustic side. (But the handles were free, so I'm not complaining). They're stained with a light coat of Walnut-colored stain and finished with two coats of Polyshades stain-and-seal in Espresso.
Inspiration: Birka handle, Swedish National Maritime Museum |
I attached the handles to the bag by sewing them on with thick, twisted embroidery floss, looped through the holes drilled across the bottom of the handles. I have my doubts about how well the floss will hold up to being scraped across the edges of those holes all the time, but we'll see.
The cord strap is a whipcord woven out of dark purple crochet thread - it's actually the drawstring out of a pair of pants I made years ago which have long since bit the dust. The cord is long enough for me to wear this bag as a cross-body bag.
Not bad for a free project, I think. I dig that every part of this project was basically salvaged from the trash. And it came out so cute! I love the way the colors in the fabrics and the wood work together. I can't wait to try this bag out at BAM - I'll bring it and my larger brown one with me and see which I like better, size-wise. This bag is the last pre-event project I had lined up, and I finished it last week with two and a half weeks to go. So...
What's Next?
I have a Viking coat that needs a bit of fixing up. I'll be back with that next.31 October 2019
Black Apron Dress: Another Makeover
After making over the blue apron dress, I decided to tackle my black one next. This just happened to be my apron dress with the most work to take out:
I hated all of the embroidery - I felt like I did a good job at the time, based on my meager skill level five years ago, but now all I can see are the flaws, and it all looks so amateurish now. The vine motif around the top of the dress (next to the ribbon) is period but is inappropriate for an apron dress. The other vine motif on the straps isn't even Scandinavian, it's English, and 13th century to boot.
The blue ribbon around the top of the dress IS a correct Viking device, but it's executed incorrectly and badly. There were two blue ribbons around the bottom of the dress, too; and the side seams were also all embroidered.
I took all that work out. All of it - I made the dress completely naked. I didn't track the hours it took me to remove it all, but I spent somewhere around 5 evenings carefully picking out all the stitching so as not to damage the fabric. Probably about 20 hours.
To replace the embroidery across the top, I opted for a trick we know the Vikings did use in their embellishment of the tops of apron dresses: stitching a strip of imported cloth, often silk, as trim around the top of the dress. In this case, my "silk trim" is a soft rayon strip cut from an old sarong. I considered layering it with a silk ribbon underneath or something like that, but I really just loved the way the sarong fabric looked with the black on its own. I fully intend to replace this strip with real silk if any real silk ever happens to me.
I also took apart the long, flat straps and made them into looped straps instead, which is correct for an apron dress based on loops we've found attached to brooches. I also like they way they function better: they're easier to use, and once they're affixed to the dress, don't require any adjustment. My straps came out a bit thicker than I wanted them, but that's okay - they look just fine and they work great.
There: all finished. The new design is simpler, but I like it much better than all that ridiculous embroidery I had going on before. I love that this dress is full length - I prefer a long apron dress.
And I really love the green and black (the color shows better in the previous picture, sorry). That came out better than I'd pictured. I have a ton of the green rayon sarong scraps left, too - I may use them to line a new Hedeby bag I've been thinking about making.
The blue ribbon around the top of the dress IS a correct Viking device, but it's executed incorrectly and badly. There were two blue ribbons around the bottom of the dress, too; and the side seams were also all embroidered.
I took all that work out. All of it - I made the dress completely naked. I didn't track the hours it took me to remove it all, but I spent somewhere around 5 evenings carefully picking out all the stitching so as not to damage the fabric. Probably about 20 hours.
To replace the embroidery across the top, I opted for a trick we know the Vikings did use in their embellishment of the tops of apron dresses: stitching a strip of imported cloth, often silk, as trim around the top of the dress. In this case, my "silk trim" is a soft rayon strip cut from an old sarong. I considered layering it with a silk ribbon underneath or something like that, but I really just loved the way the sarong fabric looked with the black on its own. I fully intend to replace this strip with real silk if any real silk ever happens to me.
I also took apart the long, flat straps and made them into looped straps instead, which is correct for an apron dress based on loops we've found attached to brooches. I also like they way they function better: they're easier to use, and once they're affixed to the dress, don't require any adjustment. My straps came out a bit thicker than I wanted them, but that's okay - they look just fine and they work great.
There: all finished. The new design is simpler, but I like it much better than all that ridiculous embroidery I had going on before. I love that this dress is full length - I prefer a long apron dress.
And I really love the green and black (the color shows better in the previous picture, sorry). That came out better than I'd pictured. I have a ton of the green rayon sarong scraps left, too - I may use them to line a new Hedeby bag I've been thinking about making.
What's Next?
I may play with the bag I just mentioned a bit; I'm also working on some new cuffs for my Viking coat and a new underdress.28 October 2019
A Makeover: Blue Split-Front Apron Dress
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In 2015 when I was in the process of spiffing up my entire Viking wardrobe, I created this dress:
In 2015 when I was in the process of spiffing up my entire Viking wardrobe, I created this dress:
Isn't it neat? It's wrong in so many ways. I did a really good job based on my knowledge at the time; it's just that that knowledge was incomplete, and based mostly on what I saw other people doing instead of on actual solid research. And so we had this dress: split down the front, which is incorrect for the accepted understanding of how apron dresses work; the wrong type of straps - flat straps, not loops; embroidered to the eyeteeth, and apron dresses weren't covered in decorative embroidery; and with a front trim band and skirt guarding in a contrasting color, which was an idea I copied from someone but has no basis in historical anything.
So, I decided to tear this dress apart and make it over completely into something that is actually correct and which I can wear to events without looking like a bad example. So, to start with, I removed all the embroidery, the straps, and the orange trim.
I also removed both of the remaining blue front panels - they were too narrow to simply sew closed into a single front piece - it made the dress way too small, and it would have placed a seam directly down the front of the dress, which would have looked horrible. I needed to create a whole new front panel to insert into the dress. Thankfully, Fabric-store.com still sells the same exact color (Bluebonnet), so I was able to order a single yard so that I could make a new front panel.
Once I'd closed the dress with the new front panel, I also cut a new top facing to replace the one I'd removed in the front. Then I removed the embroidery from the flat straps and took them apart, and made two new loop straps out of them, as well as front loops. After that all I had left to do construction-wise was to hem the whole dress, since I'd removed the skirt guarding from the bottom, leaving a raw edge.
To finish the dress, instead of all that incorrect embroidery I opted for a trick we know the Vikings used on their apron dresses: I stitched a length of blue ribbon around the top of the dress. In period this would be a strip of silk fabric or ribbon, or a tablet-woven band.
In my case, it's a rayon faux-silk seam binding ribbon, and it looks perfect at the top of the dress. It's almost exactly the color of the fabric, just a bit darker. It is awfully plain, especially since it's supposed to be simulating "fine imported silk"; I may replace it with something a little fancier at some point in the future if I come across anything that will work. For now, I like it just fine.
In my case, it's a rayon faux-silk seam binding ribbon, and it looks perfect at the top of the dress. It's almost exactly the color of the fabric, just a bit darker. It is awfully plain, especially since it's supposed to be simulating "fine imported silk"; I may replace it with something a little fancier at some point in the future if I come across anything that will work. For now, I like it just fine.
So there's a piece of fantasy made over into something with a little more fact woven in. The best part is that now I have a "new" dress I can wear, for only about $11 (the cost of a new front panel). I needed an extra outfit to wear to BAM in a few weeks, and this goes a long way to fixing that hole in my wardrobe.
What's Next?
Now that this dress is fixed, the question is, do I launch into a quest to re-do all of my apron dresses to make them more correct, or do I leave the rest alone? I hate to take out all the work on the orange and brown dresses just yet - I did a really great job on both of them and I love the way they look. My black dress, however, is covered with some very amateurish needle work and is glaringly incorrect, so I think I will make that one over next.
21 October 2019
Awesome Viking Bling
Valkyrfelt was AMAZING. Bjornsborg really knows how to throw an event. There were so many neat things to do and to learn, there was music everywhere and games to play, the food was fantastic, and I had SO much FUN. I went to a workshop where I made a pair of matched Viking arm bands in a period design copied from a piece found in the Cuerdale Hoard:
I got to use hammers and an anvil! |
So there's some awesome Viking bling to add to my wardrobe (And the British Museum has a free online PDF book on the Cuerdale Hoard, check it out).
I got even more bling, too - this awesome brass brooch was my site token! I was surprised to see such nice tokens for an event. I think these came from a site called Wish, but I'm not sure. I think some people had trouble with the pins falling off, but mine is pretty solidly made. I plan to use it to close my coat.
So in the run-up to the event, I've got several things to do:
I got even more bling, too - this awesome brass brooch was my site token! I was surprised to see such nice tokens for an event. I think these came from a site called Wish, but I'm not sure. I think some people had trouble with the pins falling off, but mine is pretty solidly made. I plan to use it to close my coat.
So, What's Next?
BAM is coming up in November - Bordermarch Autumn Melees, now called War of the Rams. It's a five-day war event out in east Texas, and I haven't been in something like four years. I've missed camping so much; I really didn't want to come back this weekend, and I already can't wait to go to BAM.So in the run-up to the event, I've got several things to do:
- I'm making over an old blue apron dress that needed a little help, just waiting on some extra fabric to come in the mail
- Making a new under dress from scratch
- Adding faux fur cuffs and trim to my Viking coat (because the sleeves aren't long enough), and
- Making over my black apron dress as well
So I've got a full plate for the next month/three weeks! I hope I can get it all done in time. I'm still working on those couch cushions for a friend of mine, too, so I've got a LOT of sewing to do.
See you again soon!
gratuitous cat bawls |
15 October 2019
Viking Bead Jewelry
This is my Viking jewelry as it was in February at Candlemas:
There's so much wrong with this picture; but we won't go into that right now. See the red beaded string with the modern silver raven pendant on it? I ADORE that pendant, and I don't care how modern it is, it will always be a part of my Viking wardrobe. I love ravens, and I have little blue Viking ravens embroidered on three pieces of clothing, and a big knotwork raven tattoo'd on my back. My ravens stay with me.
Those red beads, on the other hand, are too smooth and uniform to pass with Viking jewelry. The other night I made a small string of random beads - wood, glass, carnelian, and quartz; just whatever I had on hand - and hung my raven pendant from it. It goes with my boob necklace better, and goes with the color schemes I usually wear when I wear Viking:
Incidentally, you should check out this blog. It's a research blog, to complement the research the author is doing into Viking beads and ancient settlements. It's fantastic, scholarly and clearly-written, and the pictures are really large and clear. I learned so much about Viking beads reading through the whole thing. My one regret, after reading it, is that I don't have any cobalt blue beads or any fancy glass ones. That can be fixed!
Anyway, this was just a little last-minute project I did because I'm impatient for this weekend. See you on the flip side!
There's so much wrong with this picture; but we won't go into that right now. See the red beaded string with the modern silver raven pendant on it? I ADORE that pendant, and I don't care how modern it is, it will always be a part of my Viking wardrobe. I love ravens, and I have little blue Viking ravens embroidered on three pieces of clothing, and a big knotwork raven tattoo'd on my back. My ravens stay with me.
Those red beads, on the other hand, are too smooth and uniform to pass with Viking jewelry. The other night I made a small string of random beads - wood, glass, carnelian, and quartz; just whatever I had on hand - and hung my raven pendant from it. It goes with my boob necklace better, and goes with the color schemes I usually wear when I wear Viking:
Incidentally, you should check out this blog. It's a research blog, to complement the research the author is doing into Viking beads and ancient settlements. It's fantastic, scholarly and clearly-written, and the pictures are really large and clear. I learned so much about Viking beads reading through the whole thing. My one regret, after reading it, is that I don't have any cobalt blue beads or any fancy glass ones. That can be fixed!
Anyway, this was just a little last-minute project I did because I'm impatient for this weekend. See you on the flip side!
14 October 2019
Parasol Refit
This is my parasol. It started life as that same ubiquitous white parasol that's sold at wars and which everyone has - you might have one yourself.
Well, mine suffered a terrible fate: as so many people do, I tried to paint mine, but I messed it up very badly.
So I took it apart and made a pattern from it, and used that to make what you see above. I made the wide ends of each piece wider and longer, long enough to hang down like little awnings. I regret not having a source for the design; I saw it somewhere on someone's Italian renaissance costuming page but never could find it again. Those little awnings sure are great for keeping the sun out of your face, though.
However, by now this cover was six years old. The heavy cotton fabric (originally a RITVA curtain panel from Ikea) was badly stained by spills and some wet leather that got dropped on top of it. Seams were coming apart. Edges were frayed. The hem had come undone on most of the awning edges. The ribbon that tied it closed was positively shredded. This thing's been through a lot.
The first thing I needed was new fabric. It had to be lightweight, washable, light colored, strong enough to withstand the pressure it would be under when opened, and maybe something I could paint eventually. I ended up using a white cotton bedsheet that I had sitting around.
I removed one of the triangular panels from the old cover and used it as a template to cut out eight new ones. Then I sewed them all together at the sides, leaving the last side seam open, hemmed the top opening and the bottom edge, then closed up the last side seam. The cover attaches to the frame by pushing the small center opening over the crown of the umbrella, then stretching the seams down to the buttons on the ends of the spokes and tacking them in place around the spoke buttons with sturdy button thread. Done!
Tada! All done. I really like the cotton sheet fabric - it's SO lightweight! This thing feels practically weightless compared to the heavy cotton curtain fabric that was on it before.
After I attached the cover to the frame, the whole thing got a heavy coat of Camp Dry spray to waterproof it. I use that stuff on everything, it does a great job. Great timing, too - it's supposed to rain at the event!
So What's Next?
Valkyrfelt is this weekend! I'm so excited! The weather should be cool and somewhat rainy - just right for camping on a beautiful little forested island in the middle of nowhere. I can't wait.
Rory helps mama with the sewing. |
07 October 2019
A Heraldic Chest
In 2014, when I made this chest for my friend Simona, I made one for myself, too. I didn't stain or finish it - it came in very handy at events, but it was always unfinished. Eventually I painted it plain black. I've always wanted to do something cool with it, but I never got around to it.
However, I finally painted it! It's an adaptation of my device:
I painted one half of each side of the box white with 3 coats of Killz primer; then painted the red parts with red artists actylics and acrylic craft paint. I used artists' acrylics for the green leaves. I coated the entire box with polyurethane to seal the paint. While the hardware was off the box, I also sprayed the handles with primer and then a metallic gold spray paint, to spruce them up since they were looking a bit tarnished and gross.
I'm not sure exactly how to use it, though. I used to use it at big events to pack and store all of my underthings and accessories - braies and bras, socks, headgear, and jewelry. On the other hand, my feast basket recently died and I'm thinking this chest might make a great little feast box. I'm not sure yet.
However, I finally painted it! It's an adaptation of my device:
I painted one half of each side of the box white with 3 coats of Killz primer; then painted the red parts with red artists actylics and acrylic craft paint. I used artists' acrylics for the green leaves. I coated the entire box with polyurethane to seal the paint. While the hardware was off the box, I also sprayed the handles with primer and then a metallic gold spray paint, to spruce them up since they were looking a bit tarnished and gross.
I'm not sure exactly how to use it, though. I used to use it at big events to pack and store all of my underthings and accessories - braies and bras, socks, headgear, and jewelry. On the other hand, my feast basket recently died and I'm thinking this chest might make a great little feast box. I'm not sure yet.
What's Next?
I still need to fix or replace the back of the blue chair I re-covered a few weeks ago. I may also make a new cover for my old parasol this week, if I have time. And, of course, Valkyrfelt is coming up - not this weekend, but next, and I'm planning and scheming like mad because I'm nervous as hell about camping for the first time in nearly three years.
03 October 2019
About A Bag II: Hedeby Bag Refit
When the handle of my Hedeby bag broke at its first event, someone told me that back in the day, people wouldn't necessarily replace things when they broke, but repair them instead, in order to save resources and time and work - he cited several examples of repaired and patched wooden items that he'd seen in his studies. The bag would have a story, he said, a life of its own, and he assured me I'd get A&S brownie points if I made period-appropriate repairs.
What I really wanted to do was replace the handles entirely, and do a better job at creating them in the first place. Sadly, my efforts failed, and the new wood I was working with didn't survive the creation process - and I couldn't afford to get new wood to try a second replacement.
So: repairs it is! I don't know anything about period repair techniques, but I did the best I could with what I had:
The first step was to un-tape the broken handle and use a solvent (WD40) on a cotton swab to get the sticky residue off the wood.
By the way, you can click on these pics to make them bigger, to see detail.
Then I used a small paintbrush to apply a thin layer of wood glue to the broken edges, and pushed them back together again. I used clamps to hold it together while it dried, with scrap wood blocks to help keep even pressure on the cracks.
Next I made a tiny little scrap of wood to use at a patch, which I glued over the crack. The patch is about 1.5" long x 1/2" wide x 2mm thick. I'm hoping this will help hold the crack together.
I used a cotton swab to stain the patch to match the rest of handle and to fill in around the broken edges (Minwax's Jacobean, to match the original stain); and also to apply a tiny bit of polyurethane over the areas to seal them.
There! Two bag handles, ready to be pressed into service once more. (The repaired handle is in the front; you can see the original repairs to left side of the rear handle).
All that was left was to sew the handles back onto the bag. I used embroidery floss to whip stitch the handles onto the bag, which is how I affixed them the first time.The repaired handle is in the back here.
I'm nervous about the strength of this repair - I've never done a repair like this, and the wood is so thin and weak to begin with, I just don't know if it'll hold or not. I mean, it should: the original repair to the side of the other handle has held up just fine. The way the bag opens puts a little pressure on the center of the front handle, but that one's held up just fine over the years - and I put the broken one in the back. The broken handle broke because of a sharp blow, which, with any luck, won't happen again. Anyway, it's finished, and we'll see how it works at the upcoming event.
What I really wanted to do was replace the handles entirely, and do a better job at creating them in the first place. Sadly, my efforts failed, and the new wood I was working with didn't survive the creation process - and I couldn't afford to get new wood to try a second replacement.
So: repairs it is! I don't know anything about period repair techniques, but I did the best I could with what I had:
The first step was to un-tape the broken handle and use a solvent (WD40) on a cotton swab to get the sticky residue off the wood.
By the way, you can click on these pics to make them bigger, to see detail.
Then I used a small paintbrush to apply a thin layer of wood glue to the broken edges, and pushed them back together again. I used clamps to hold it together while it dried, with scrap wood blocks to help keep even pressure on the cracks.
Next I made a tiny little scrap of wood to use at a patch, which I glued over the crack. The patch is about 1.5" long x 1/2" wide x 2mm thick. I'm hoping this will help hold the crack together.
I used a cotton swab to stain the patch to match the rest of handle and to fill in around the broken edges (Minwax's Jacobean, to match the original stain); and also to apply a tiny bit of polyurethane over the areas to seal them.
There! Two bag handles, ready to be pressed into service once more. (The repaired handle is in the front; you can see the original repairs to left side of the rear handle).
All that was left was to sew the handles back onto the bag. I used embroidery floss to whip stitch the handles onto the bag, which is how I affixed them the first time.The repaired handle is in the back here.
I'm nervous about the strength of this repair - I've never done a repair like this, and the wood is so thin and weak to begin with, I just don't know if it'll hold or not. I mean, it should: the original repair to the side of the other handle has held up just fine. The way the bag opens puts a little pressure on the center of the front handle, but that one's held up just fine over the years - and I put the broken one in the back. The broken handle broke because of a sharp blow, which, with any luck, won't happen again. Anyway, it's finished, and we'll see how it works at the upcoming event.
Have I mentioned that I ADORE this bag? Hearts. |
What's Next?
At the moment I'm painting a wooden chest, and I have a parasol I'd like to recover soon, too.
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