When bad things happen to good fabric – the leopard print dress of doom


One of the things that I thought about when I did my big blog rethink back at the start of the summer was that often, the makes that are disastrous are forgotten about, pushed into a corner and inevitably written off as best not to talk about them.

Yet, when you think about it, these are some of the best things to talk about. What went wrong, why did it go wrong and really, did it really look that bad (yes is the frequent answer….)?

So, with all of that in mind, welcome to the first in a new series of posts that explore those times something just goes so very wrong that the only thing left is to burn it / start over / hide in a corner, crying and drinking gin. Welcome to when bad things happen to good fabric…



Back before Christmas last year, I went fabric shopping in Dalston. It was all pretty exciting, but most exciting was the discovery of leopard print scuba. I saw it and in my head popped the perfect image of a leopard print wiggle dress, just the thing to wear for a New Year’s Eve party and, as luck would have it, that month’s Seamwork pattern was indeed a wiggle dress. A match made in heaven I thought.

I thought wrong, something that I discovered at 4pm on New Year’s Eve (yes, the same day I had planned to wear it). The fun was only just beginning….

What’s it supposed to be?

The Seamwork Ida dress: “a flattering, figure-hugging dress that hits just above your knee… [with] a boat-neck neckline, [and] shoulder gussets to keep the neckline in place”.

What is it actually?

The result of Cruella DeVille and Patsy from Ab Fab vomitting simultaneously.

Is it really that bad?

Yes.  The pattern placement, which I tried to think about careful has ended up looking weird. There’s gaps either sides of the bodice front which show off my bra. The neckline at the back gapes something rotten – I could genuinely fit a melon down there. As for that roll in the fabric at my stomach, I have no idea what caused it, but I think it might be the least flattering element of the dress. And that’s saying a lot.

Can you save it?

No. Or rather, not without taking it apart and starting all over. It needs additional fabric adding to the sides of the bust, a whole heap of fabric taking out at the centre back to get rid of that gaping, and I’ve no idea what doing to get rid of the weird roll at my stomach, but I think making it smaller? Maybe? It might also be better if, rather than scuba (hello thick fabric) it was made with a thinner jersey; certainly that might help with the rolling.

Did you learn anything?

I’d like to say “don’t decide to make something for New Year’s Eve and not try it on until the day of the party”, but, having realised the horror of this dress, I then went on to make another dress in the three hours I had before I went out. That dress was a lot more successful.

Maybe, don’t assume that scuba, although stretchy, will behave like jersey? Don’t make something without toile-ing it first? Don’t think that if you make a leopard print wiggle dress you’ll be transformed into a 50s bombshell the minute you put it on?

Can we see more pictures of how awful it is?

Sure, fill your boots.

Burn it or turn it (around)? 

BURN IT

x

One thought on “When bad things happen to good fabric – the leopard print dress of doom

  1. Great blog!
    I kept looking at this pattern and worrying about that sleeve and bodice edge, – thank you for confirming my instincts were spot on! You could get rid of the top part and do a high waisted skirt??

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