Mending coats

I’ve done a lot of coat mending this winter. First was a donation coat that came to the Sew-op via a member of the Co-op. It needed a new zipper and had one pinned to it. It sat there a little while before I took it home, put in the new zipper, secured a seam that was coming loose, removed a clear-plastic ID pocket that was fragmenting, repaired a torn pocket – and mended a small hole that I nipped into it when removing the old zipper. After a trip through the washing machine it went to the local shelter’s closet for someone to stay warm in.

I didn’t photograph it really, except for this:

zipper replacement basting

I tried the method of basting all the layers of the coat together prior to removing the zipper, so they stay put for installation of the new zipper. I had to do it twice because, unbeknownst to me, the lining was puffed up close to the zipper. You can see my stitching above the top piece of velcro. I didn’t have to baste both sides because the other had a seam line entirely inside the zipper.

When we were visiting my grandmother over Christmas, we went to a consignment store and a thrift store, and I bought a coat at each one. Vermont is definitely a place where a coat wardrobe sees use, and mine needed some upgrading. The first purchase was at the consignment store, where I found a nice long heavy coat… that needed some button help.

loose buttons fixed buttons

brown coat

Such is the way of secondhand wardrobes. By the way, looks notwithstanding, that coat is entirely synthetic.

We went to the thrift store second, and I found a nice corduroy jacket for spring and fall. It just needed a little snag fixed up.

red coat hole

I was pleased with how the repair came out, especially since I didn’t actually have matching thread.

fixed hole fixed hole interior

And there we are! A decent percentage of my coat wardrobe changed out – I donated two of my previous coats to make room for these.

FYDP Roundup 1

Starting strong with finishing my dang projects! I’ve decided the roundups are only going to contain projects I’ve already blogged or never will blog, so they don’t reference the future. This will necessitate a final roundup after the quarter ends, but that’s okay.

I took care of some low-hanging fruit this week.

  1. Two pairs of boxers for Matt that were done but for the waist and leg openings: finished sewing.
  2. Remnant earmarked for boxers: realized that because of snags, it was not quite enough fabric for boxers; decommissioned and put into the stash.
  3. A bra that rubbed my shoulder blade: trimmed the fabric sticking out past the stitching, and that seems to have fixed it.
  4. Two t-shirts and a sweatshirt waiting on possible refashioning: donated.
  5. A blanket I started crocheting and wasn’t very excited by (yarn choice or stitch pattern): frogged, yarn put away.
  6. A Swiffer Wet Jet pad I was Tunisian-crocheting, but wasn’t thrilled with and probably wasn’t going to use anyway: frogged, yarn put away.

Totals:

  1. Mending: 1
  2. Non-mend sewing: 2
  3. Elimination: 6

Embroidered denim shirt

My mother requested an embellished denim shirt for Christmas and sent a couple of photos for examples. She has one she likes, but it’s autumn colors and an autumn leaf design, and she wanted one that was both less season-specific and more “her” colors. I went to the store and picked up some fat quarters and embroidery floss, got home, realized I had no idea how to use the fabric on the shirt in a way that would be appealing, and decided to just embroider. A look through one of my embroidery stitch books brought me the feathered chain stitch and I set to work. Thanks to my husband for better photos than I could have managed with the lighting available!

shirt back shirt front
(as always, click to embiggen, but the real beauty shots are below)

Feathered chain is an awkward stitch because the needle points every which way throughout the making of it. Not an issue if you’re stitching up and down in separate motions, but I wanted to hide the stitch backs between fabric layers (and nearly succeeded) to minimize snagging possibilities, so I had to choose between constantly turning the work or pointing the needle in uncomfortable directions that were harder to control.

I would say it’s not my neatest work ever, but the truth is I’m not a particularly neat or careful embroiderer. Mom liked it, though, and that’s all that matters.

back close pocket close

Floss was DMC 333 (purple), 601 (pink), 3812 (teal), and 3845 (bright blue). I stitched with three strands, always two of one color and one of another to make my own sort of variegated floss. One side of the back is worked, outside-in, with two pink and one teal, one pink and two teal, two teal and one purple, and one teal and two purple, one eighth of the width of the back apiece. The opposite side is the same but with blue in place of teal, and the button placket is the same but with the pink at the center and purple at the ends. Since the motif in center back was mostly purple, I made the pocket stitching mostly pink.

placket close