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.
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