One day I might be a perfect woman. I will be able to tidy and clean the house (thoroughly), cook tea in time for dinner, bake a cake, paint my toenails, do the gardening, make a dress and put a ribbon in my hair all in one day. But for the moment I am struggling, hence the scarcity of posts over the last week or so. It must be something to do with spring and the beautiful weather, but now that the equinox has happened, there might be more time (daylight) to perfect my perfect plan...

This picture is of Jimmy and I in Cuba a few years ago. I am wearing a dress that I made myself. It wasn't until our second trip to Cuba that I realised why the locals kept giving me strange looks. Between my black hair, brown eyes, Mediterranean blood, and handmade dress, they thought I was one of them "fraternising" with foreigners. I wondered why they kept speaking to me in Spanish and Mr M in German!! I still have this dress pattern, and have decided to make another, because it is my favourite summer dress and is extremely comfortable. Infact, the pattern envelope contains another, similar style, so I made that one first. Here it is:

It took alorra lorra concentration and consternation to finally realise that the reason it didn't fit up top at first was because the 'bust points' were in the wrong place. Once I figured that out and sorted the darts, it fitted like a dream. Hurrah!

Not only have I been busy in the sewing room/garden/allotment, having nearly killed ALL of my tomato seedlings by leaving them out in the greenhouse by accident, I have been busy learning how to be a fashion designer - which is how I figured out the bust point conundrum..

I have been on a Pattern Cutting course as previously mentioned and have been absolutely rivetted to my notes and the the techniques and tips gained from them and our lovely teacher June. It's been such fun! Did you know that the average body is 7 heads tall? And the average model is an '8 header', whereas fashion drawings depict bodies of 9 heads. In science, this is called "anthropometrics" where the human head is a modular factor of size. Fascinating isn't it? Here are some more:
The Arm is 3 heads long
Arm to shoulder is 3.5 heads
The hand is the same length as the distance from hairline to chin and half the width of the face.

The study of Anthropometrics came from the Renaissance where such questioning of human proportions was born. By the end of the 18th century the concept of clothes pattern systems became established, based on this system. It was the Guild of Military Tailors, in the laborious mass production of uniforms, who discovered that bodies of a certain height and weight have similar measurements. And so we have industry 'standards' which are used in fashion design and bulk manufacture. These standards have changed through the ages, as we have changed shape over the ages, and there are lots of basic standard measurements which go through several sizes, like distance from waist to upper hip is 20cm and radius of bust area from bust point is 8cm.

And so I have been making more blocks, and I now have a complete set for myself. I also have a set of quarter blocks. It's amazing how small these are - not much bigger than a Barbie!! These blocks help no end with altering commercial patterns to my shape, and drafting simple patterns of my own. Like this corset pattern - drawn from scratch, it's not yet perfect (or even remotely tight!) but there's nothing like making mistakes for learning.

But i don't think Vivienne Westwood need worry yet ...