After getting addicted to Atelier on Netflix (it's in Japanese- the acting style is weird, but it got really addictive to read it and see such pretty fabrics...) I decided I wanted to learn to sew bras. Turns out it was a huge blogging trend like a year ago, so apparently I'm late to the game. But that meant Craftsy had a class for it (actually, now 3 of them! I've taken two...) and lots and lots of bloggers had reviewed a lot of patterns!
I settled on Watson from Cloth Habit. And I bought a kit from Tailor Made Shop on Etsy. Having someone else figure out exactly what supplies I needed made this easy!
And yesterday I made my very first bra! (My "dress form" is a bit fatter and a bit flatter than me, since it's a pillow- but you get the idea...)
You can see it isn't perfect. I need to get used to sewing to the very edge of the elastic so the fabric folds over nicely. I missed in a few places. I also used the wrong elastic for the straps, which then means I used the wrong one for the ribcage band. The straps were supposed to be a pretty patterned elastic, but it looked too thick, so I used a different one. So now the straps just look like elastic...
Another look- this was more successful than the matching bikini bottom, mostly because I learned just how little you need to stretch the elastic.
And my big mistake: I thought I did well with the seam allowance, but I must not have, because my band turned out much narrower than the hook and eye fittings. I might try to find single hook fittings and switch these out. But it's underwear, no one sees this! Except you guys- but y'all won't tell, right?
I have leftover fabric that I am trying to dye, and so far it looks like the fabric is taking the dye beautifully, so I will make a second one. I have elastic in my stash but will need to find all the notions. I might tear apart an old bra that doesn't fit to get the metal pieces, those don't go bad!
I had trouble with a few things on this. First- I broke two needles. The first one was because I was using my quarter inch foot, and well, you can't zig-zag with that. Oops. The second was when I was sewing the strap onto the bra, I hit a ring. Needles don't go through metal. The second was with my machine "eating" the fabric when starting new seams. I ended up using a "leader" like you do in quilting- a small piece of fabric that I stitched on, and then lined my new fabric up with it. That worked just fine.
One other lesson learned: when searching "Watson Bra" to look for tutorials or blog reviews, make sure to add "sewing". Otherwise you get photos of Emma Watson in a bikini.
After I make another of these, I'm going to eventually try underwire and foam cup bras. The only problem is the bras I wear are really cheap- and to make those will be really expensive... so it's kind of hard to justify- but man it's so much fun!
1 comment:
I will never be making a bra, so my favorite tip is about your Google-fu
Also, I never know what I'm supposed to do with old bras. If you want my hardware, they are yours.
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