1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
|
Liliana Nightgown
=================
.. figure:: 0311-attached_sleeves.jpg
:align: center
This nightgown is named after my great-aunt who used to make nightgowns
with a crocheted yoke and a simple rectangular cotton body for the whole
extended family.
While it's not an historical pattern, it does bear a lot of resemblance
to the simplest type of late victorian and edwardian chemise, and it can
definitely be used as one.
Most of the time and skill required for this pattern is in the crocheted
yoke (for which at the moment there isn't a real pattern, but just the
shape required); the sewing part is based on simple rectangles, straight
seams and just a few pleats for shaping.
Materials
---------
Fabric
^^^^^^
* About 1 – 1.5 m double width (i.e. 140 - 160 cm wide) lightweight cotton
or linen fabric.
In the 1980s my great aunt used mostly cotton prints, but of course
white shirt linen is very confortable alternative (and since it's
underwear it doesn't have to be the nice dense kind, but lighter and
cheaper options are fine).
Yarn
^^^^
* One ball thin crochet cotton or linen yarn.
The yoke is worked in a lace stitch; for a fine linen one, especially if
used as a chemise, it can be something thin enough to be worked with a 1
– 1.5 mm hook, but my great aunt answer to that suggestion would have
been “make it yourself” and she used a relatively thicker yarn with a 2
– 2.5 mm hook.
Alternatively, you can use 0.25 m of lace fabric.
Notions
^^^^^^^
* sewing thread matching the yarn;
* sewing thread matching the fabric.
Yoke Pattern
------------
Measurements
^^^^^^^^^^^^
This pattern uses the :doc:`../../drafting_methods/aldrich/index`.
You need to take the following measurements:
``bust_circ`` (G04)
Bust circumference.
``waist_circ`` (G07)
Waist circumference.
``hip_circ`` (G09)
Hip circumference; this is not used in the yoke pattern, but will be
needed later when cutting the body of the nightgown.
``across_back_b`` (I08)
Width of the back from armscye to armscye.
``neck_circ`` (G02)
Circumference at the base of the neck.
``neck_back_to_waist_b`` (H19)
Vertical distance from neck to waist on the back.
the file :download:`../../drafting_methods/aldrich/aldrich.vit` is used by
default by the pattern file and has the list of needed measurements.
Pattern
^^^^^^^
Get the valentina file for the pattern,
:download:`liliana_nightgown_yoke.val`.
Fabric Pattern
--------------
After making the yoke, try it on and measure the distance from the end
of the yoke to where you want the nightgown to end, plus 2.5 cm for
sewing allowances.
.. tip:: A good length is around knee level (just above or just below):
for a longer garment a wider hem circumference than 160 cm is
recommended, which can be reached by adding triangular gores to the
sides.
The body of the nightgown is a rectangle as high as the distance
measured above and *at least* 20 cm wider than the ``hip_circ``
measurement, up to the full width of the fabric.
The sleeves are two rectangles 20 cm high ad as wide as the full length
of the armscyes of the yoke plus 2-4 cm.
Instructions
------------
Yoke
^^^^
.. figure:: 0101-yoke_back.jpg
:align: center
The back of the yoke: other than the meander band around the bottom
it's completely made of empty squares.
.. figure:: 0102-yoke_front.jpg
:align: center
The front of the yoke: after completing the meander band at the
bottom, the back has been used as a reference to center a design in
the middle of it.
Following the shape of the pattern, without the sewing allowances, make
the yoke twice in filet crochet, starting with a simple back and adding
a decorative pattern to the front.
Alternatively, use any other tecnique (knitting, bobbin lace, etc.) to
make two yokes (with no sewing allowances) or cut them in fabric with
sewing allowances.
Join the sides and shoulders of the two yokes in a way that is
appropriate for the tecnique used.
Cutting
^^^^^^^
Proceed with the measurements of the fabric pattern above and cut the
body and the two sleeves.
Sewing
^^^^^^
.. figure:: 0301-seam_alignment.jpg
:align: center
Using thread that matches the fabric, sew the lenght of the body
with a flat felled seam: wrong sides together align the one edge of the
fabric at 5 mm from the other edge and sew with 1 cm sewing allowance.
.. figure:: 0302-flat_felled_center_back.jpg
:align: center
Press, fold and press the wider allowance so that all raw edges are
covered and topstitch.
.. figure:: 0303-top_edge_hem.jpg
:align: center
Fold down the top edge of the fabric once 5 mm *towards the right side*,
sew about 2 mm from the fold.
Do the same to the sleeves: flat fell the sleeve in a short tube, and
fold down its top edge.
.. tip::
.. figure:: 0305-symmetical_sleeves.jpg
:align: center
Flat fell the seams of the two sleeves so that they are symmetrical,
and then attach them to the yoke with the fell facing towards the
back.
.. figure:: 0306-bottom_edge_hem.jpg
:align: center
Fold down the hem of the nightgown twice 1 cm and topstitch; if your
machine has a fancy stitch that visually resembles the yoke you can use
that in the thread that matches the yoke, otherwise use a simple
straight stitch in the thread that matches the fabric.
.. figure:: 0307-sleeve_hem.jpg
:align: center
Do the same to the hem of the sleeves.
.. figure:: 0308-pinned_front.jpg
:align: center
.. figure:: 0309-pinned_back.jpg
:align: center
Pin the body to the lower edge of the yoke, with the right side of the
body on the wrong side of the yoke, overlapping by 5 mm excluding any
scalloped edge of the yoke.
Start by aligning the center back with the flat felled seam, the the
center front with the opposite side of the body, and the quarter points
of the body on the front side of the yoke, about 2 cm from the sides;
distribute the excess fabric around the center front and back by making
pleats that face towards the center back.
Using thread that matches the yoke, topstitch with a narrow zig zag.
.. figure:: 0311-attached_sleeves.jpg
:align: center
Repeat the same to the sleeves, aligning the seam with the bottom of the
armscye and making a box pleat on the top of the shoulder.
Gallery
-------
.. figure:: ramie_nightgown_3_4.jpg
:align: center
The first version of the nightgown with the yoke worked with thicker
yarn and the body in white ramie.
|