Showing posts with label mail order. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mail order. Show all posts

Easter Dresses - a late post


OK, here are the dresses. The older one's was Simplicity 3329, no date, probably late 1950's or early 1960's. There is no reference to in on the internet to link a photo and I am not in a position to photograph it right now. The dress picture is actually copied from facebook from Easter. It goes into a v-backed neck and should have a bow at the CB which I left off. The little one's was a 1940's mail order pinafore style, not even sure where the pattern is at the moment. Both are from cotton voile pindotted swiss with broadcloth accents/binding. Both are fully lined. I completed the older one's over 3 days of working and the inside is barely finished off, as quickly as I could do it. She would only wear it once or twice anyways, so I decided not to waste much time on it. The little one's is better finished as she still wears dresses at the drop of the hat. These were fun to make, I wish I had more of the fabric for a top for me. It is so watercolor-pretty.

Sue Burnett 8191

I don't know why Blogger flipped the picture sideways, annoying thing. Anyway, as you can see this is a mail order unmarked pattern that was still 'in factory folds', have to love them when they come that way! I also love the hand addressed envelopes, not only did the mailing department have to find the right patterns from hand written orders but they had to hand address the envelopes.

I don't know what date this pattern is from but it was obviously from a time where notions were scarce as this is the finished shirt with the number of buttons called for. Far too gaping for my liking so I added a few more, luckily I inherited my Great Aunt's button collection (and recently my Grandmother's as well, I have enough buttons to last me until I'm a Grandmother!) and there were enough to add more, although the top button is a different shape (but exactly the same colour).

Sorry for the hanger shot, was the best I could do at the time!

And this is a close-up of the yoke and the collar, I adore the details on vintage patterns, modern ones just don't have the same style and flair! The fabric is a thin cotton.

You can check out what else I've been making at my blog. After hiding out for far too long my sewing mojo has returned home to a warm welcome!

Happy sewing!

Anna

Two Finished Projects


This is The Grey Sash Dress, made from Butterick 9029, from the 50s.





This is The Blue Tie Waist Shift Dress made from a Kate Marchbanks mail order pattern from 1967.

These were my first two vintage pattern creations. Read more at Modern Twist!

Jacki

Mail Order 1839

Here’s what I’ve been working on this week!


This sweet little cap blouse is from this mail order pattern “#1839″:


I must be getting old, because I can’t remember where I found this great little pattern! It’s a mail order pattern, and its without envelope so I have no idea its origin. There was an ebay auction of this pattern in another size with an envelope intact, and the return address was partially visible, showing “Idaho”. That’s all I’ve got as to pattern maker. :)

I love the lace-trimmed cap sleeve version, so that’s the view I chose to make. It was very easy to fit (the pattern was a bust 38). It needed a 3/4″ FBA, and some additional width at waist/hip.

I used lavender cotton eyelet, because it’s so fresh and summery and has a vintage feel. I also used cotton French laces, which would have been more readily available (and in domestic form most likely) during the 1940s.

I think this pattern probably dates to the later part of the 1940s because the skirt seems a bit full and long for early-mid 40s. If you’d like to see more pictures, I have a few more detail shots on my blog!

A Life in (Mail-Order) Patterns

Vintage Marian Martin Mail Order Pattern T 9096 Dress


Some vintage patterns come in pristine factory folds. Some come carefully cut and refolded, with handwritten hints at their former owners' tastes (such as: "very good skirt pattern for me" or "make in brown check"). And some come with a history.

Enter Mrs. D. I first met Mrs D. in a 23-piece eBay lot entitled simply "Vintage Sewing Patterns - LOT DEAL @LOOK@":



You will be getting all of these patterns. Each envelope has the pattern and pattern guide for cutting. I don't know if all of the patterns are complete, but this lady seem to keep them all together but not guaranteed.


I tore the tape off the box barehanded when it arrived, crossing my fingers that a reasonable number of the patterns would be cute and within a few grades of my bust size (and they were, but we'll get to that!) But as I gingerly opened each brittle mail-order envelope and photographed the contents, I felt as if I was traveling through time.

Most vintage lots I've acquired are random mixes of envelope patterns from the 40s to the 80s, with little clue as to who owned or used them. But thanks to the mailing address that appeared on every one of these pattern envelopes, I knew they were all ordered by one particular woman in Missouri as she sewed throughout her life.

The oldest patterns in her careful collection seemed to be from the late 40s or early 50s (most of the postmarks are undated, but I used this Cemetarian article for reference). For example, this gorgeous deep-V Marian Martin 9279 day dress with pocket detail: bust size 32, postage, 1 cent.

Vintage Marian Martin Mail Order Pattern 9279 Dress


The most recent ones are from 1990--I didn't even know mail-order patterns were still available then! The last one is a multi-size pattern, but from her 80s purchases I gather Mrs. D was sewing a bust size 42 at this point. And the postage had gone up to 18 cents.

Vintage Mail Order Pattern 4209


Here's what I learned about "this lady":

  • She probably had a daughter or two. There are four 1950s girls patterns in the collection, and I am so keeping the below two for when Cartoonist Baby gets old enough. The first one, Mail Order 3863, is from 1954 or earlier--I was able to date it by the newspaper comic strip pages she used to trace the bolero pattern. I think the second, Mail Order 9276, could make a fun modern party dress, with that lovely notched neckline and sash.

    Vintage American Weekly Mail Order Pattern 3863 Girl's Dress


    Vintage Mail Order Printed Pattern 9276 Girl's Dress


  • She was probably on the shorter side. Many of the patterns in the lot are "half-size" patterns, meant for women 5'3" and under. That said, none of the misses' patterns seem to have been shortened for a smaller torso, so perhaps she either traced them, or never actually sewed them up. And I see no signs of any FBAs, but perhaps she was busty as well, as suggested by her note on the below Mail Order 1447 shirtwaist pattern from 1963: "cut shirt bigger." LOVE the tab details on the shoulder yoke, but I'm too tall for this one.

    Vintage Mail Order Pattern 1447


  • She loved a trim button-front shirtwaist day dress, with pockets if possible. (Witness the Marian Martin 9096 at the top of this post). From her 50s and 60s orders, you'd almost think no other style of dress existed:

    Mail Order (Anne Adams) 4750, from 1958. Wouldn't this be great made up in perpendicular stripes as illustrated?

    Vintage Anne Adams Printed Pattern 4750


    Mail Order 9213. Check out the gored skirt with partial yoke and those cute cuffs (collar optional):

    Vintage Mail Order Printed Pattern 9213 Dress


    Mail Order 4874, with its collar and pleats, is a more dressy variation on this theme--I imagine this in a polka-dot silk, especially with those gloves and bag. Though she could just as easily have done it in a cotton.

    Vintage Mail Order Printed Pattern 4874 Dress


    It wasn't just her--the shirtwaist seems to be a staple of the mail-order pattern business, as evidenced by this pink tissue poster (enlarged version here) in one of the envelopes featuring "Pattern Hits of the Month--Voted Tops by Our Fashion Council for Style, Sewing Ease, Flattery."

    Vintage Mail Order Printed Pattern 4540 Poster


  • ...At least until the mid-1960s, when things got a little looser. Mrs. D had gone up a bit in bust size, and was trying out less fitted styles. Here's 8349, from 1964:

    Vintage Mail Order Pattern 8349


    And 9066, from 1963. It's not even belted!

    Vintage Mail Order Pattern 9066


    By the 70s and 80s, she was in bust sizes 40 or 42, and had gotten into relaxed jumpers (4785) and culottes (9069). I wonder if she made this tank in a polka dot and wore with sunglasses?

    Vintage Mail Order Pattern 9069


    It's not 50s style, but it is belted and pocketed:

    Vintage Mail Order Pattern 4785


  • She made at least occasional forays into embroidery and crochet. Or not--the transfers on the three apron and embroidery patterns are unused, and I can't tell if she ever made the very 70s owl crochet pattern:

    Vintage Mail Order Embroidery Transfer Pattern 7032

    Mail Order Crochet Pattern Design 595



    By 1983, she was quite relaxed!

    Vintage Mail Order 9459



Of course, there's much more I don't know about her, such as:


  • Did she also sew with envelope patterns? There was one mixed in--a 1950s Simplicity envelope pattern for a girls dress--but the pattern was so shredded that I could barely see the illustration. Perhaps she stored those separately.
  • Did she ever wear pants? Evening dresses? Blouses? Suits? Perhaps she bought those ready-to-wear, but her mail-order sewing preference seems to have been strongly in the day-dress camp.


So there you have it! A life in mail order patterns! I've made a Flickr gallery so you can see the whole collection and I've been entering all the patterns into the Vintage Pattern Wiki (here's one, for example). I'm keeping all the non-half-size shirtwaists, but as soon as I set up an Etsy shop I'll be selling all the larger sizes, half sizes, and styles that don't quite suit me, like this "Patt-o-Rama 8356" (too bulky in the bust area for me):

Vintage Mail Order "Patt-O-Rama" Pattern 8356.


Crossposted to my blog, of course!

Marian Martin 9359: Take II

All right--I posted earlier this month with the first version of this dress.

This is the second version. The shoulder yoke piece was altered to make the neckline fit better and the waist ties were moved up a little (I'm pear-shaped: Slightly high waists look a whole lot better on me). That seems to have totally fixed the fit. I did not put shoulder pads in it, although I think it holds a crisp 1940's shoulder line pretty well without them. I also altered the pockets to have straight, slanted tops instead of sweetheart tops.

The fabric is rust-colored Moda with cream and black simplified floral and large black rick-rack trim. The trim came out particularly well.

I still adore this dress, but I'm forcing myself to move on to others since I have a pretty good collection waiting to be sewn up.

Marian Martin 9359


I'm new here. I've been lurking and reading for months and finally said to myself, "Hey, you sew--why don't you actually join??" I've only been sewing a few years and, except for the basics show me by my mother, am largely trial-and-error self-taught. I particularly like 1920's though 1940's housedresses.

I'm working on a different dress right now, but the last two have been Marian Martin 9359, which is undated but probably dates from 1948-1951-ish. The pattern illustration is pictured above.

This is the first version. Pardon the decapitation--I was suffering from a particularly bad hair day and there was no reason to publicize it.

The pattern went together ridiculously easily. It's a pre-cut, unprinted pattern but I didn't miss the pattern markings and found that, as long as I cut carefully and paid attention to the prescribed seam allowance, everything went together perfectly. (I'm notoriously haphazard about following pattern markings anyway; printed patterns are mostly wasted on me.)

Oddly, the front shoulder yoke piece is too long along the inside [neck-side] edge. I expected it to be too long along the outside edge because I left out the shoulder pads (wore them in the Eighties and will never wear them again). However, the shoulders fit fine: It was the upper bodice that was too big. I solved this by folding a wedge in that pattern piece, taking up about an inch along the inside edge, then tracing and re-cutting it.

I made the second version of the dress using the new yoke piece and taking a little out of the center front panel (the pattern, according to body measurements, was a little big overall, but it only really mattered in the front bodice). Very simple, and the results fit beautifully, though I don't have a picture yet of the second dress.

The fabric for the first dress is a 1930's-inspired navy/red/tan geometric stylized flower print. The fabric for the second dress is rust with cream and black flowers and black rick-rack trim.

Anyway, I love the pattern and had to force myself to switch to a different one for the next dress so I don't get stuck in a rut.

Patt-O-Rama va-va-va-voom!
























Strange assortment of pictures of my latest project, finished in the nick of time for the Pattern Review vintage pattern contest... full details are at my review here... make sure you vote to support your retro-sewin' partners in crime!

There are some splendid things in this round of battle. My vote's going to this one which is just stunning.

Nice work, Kellie R!
























Picnic Dress

I promised a success story, and here it is: Anne Adams 4523


The dress, including obligatory "nosy cat" photo:


Close up of the applique detail on the hem:


This is a very clever pattern. It slips over the head, and the shape comes from the ties. The pattern calls for buttons at the straps, but it would be very easy to skip the buttons and make the straps continuous. The pockets are nice and deep, and set into the seams. The one place I struggled in the sewing was the gathers over the bust. It turned out, trying to make the gathers meet the corners of the front panel without sticking out required more pinning than I usually do.

The dress went together fairly quickly (it took about three evenings start to finish, not including the applique). The one dumb thing I did was, as I was trimming the bottom of the skirt to even it, I cut the ends of the ties off. D'oh! The ties weren't long enough without the ends, so I sewed them back on with heavy "cross stitches," as if I had intended to do that. Problem solved!

-LibrariAnon (formerly Peregrine)

Vintage Apron Pattern


For Mother's Day, I made this apron up for my mom. The pattern was given to me by my grandmother, who found it amongst her stored stuff. You can see that a mouse has chewed on the priceless heirloom a bit. When Grandma gave me the pattern, my mom strongly hinted she'd like one, so here I am (for once) obliging her wishes.

It was my first time to sew with an unprinted pattern, and it wasn't as hard as I'd feared, although sometimes the notches and little holes in the pattern didn't line up like they were supposed to, and the instructions were very...sparse.

I followed the pattern except I cut a few inches off of the straps to make it (hopefully) fit my mom better, who is both shorter and a little heavier than I am, but not quite the "large" that the pattern is sized for.

I also did not follow the pattern instructions regarding the bias tape that finishes the edges, because they called for hand-sewing the bias tape. Not in your wildest dreams am I hand-sewing that much bias tape on. I did make the bias tape myself, out of the black and white gingham, since I wasn't going to make a special 20-mile trip just to buy bias tape. I wish it showed up better. Gingham bias tape is really cute!

I also just finished a baby quilt (not remotely vintage) for my new nephew , and pictures are here on my blog if you are interested. Just scroll through the apron stuff.

Mail Order Shirt

I have replaced the photos as there seemed to be a problem viewing them, hope they work now!



I got this pattern a while back from Mom's Patterns (link on the sidebar), I have no idea what year it is as I didn't make a note when I bought it and they didn't seem to put the year on the postmark and it's not on the printed pattern instructions.

The pattern includes a short sleeve version of the top shirt and a long sleeve version of the bottom shirt. The pattern was uncut which is always lovely but kind of sad that the person who originally owned it never made it up, I always wonder why that was (perhaps they were just a hopeless pattern collector like me!).

This is my version from fabric found in my local fabric shop that just had to be used for this pattern.



This shirt went together incredibly easily, even the front neck pieces which have facings on them, something like that on a modern pattern is always a real pain to get to lie flat but this fit first time around.

I'll definitely be making this shirt again, perhaps in a more floaty fabric next time so that the sleeves drape a tiny bit better.

I will do my dress soon, it is another mail order pattern and has yet more gathers, considering the fact that I don't like sewing gathers I seem to be wanting to wear them all the time for some reason!

Anna
finally waking up