I went to look for my post about this outfit I made for J late last fall, but I realized that while I blogged about it for the (now inoperable) Sew the Show blog, I never wrote about it here!
Well, time to change that 🙂
I went to look for my post about this outfit I made for J late last fall, but I realized that while I blogged about it for the (now inoperable) Sew the Show blog, I never wrote about it here!
Well, time to change that 🙂
Wow, I have been such a lazy blogger lately! Â With no evening hours for photos and no good setup for inside photos, the fall/winter months are really challenging bloggy times for me. Â I hope you all will forgive me!
I did manage to make outfits for the kids when we had our last family photos taken in September (!), and here is the first one.
J, my tall, gangly 5 1/2-year-old is wearing a Helter Skelter Tee by Shwin Designs.
I wasn’t as productive as I had hoped during summer KCW, but I did manage to finish a couple of outfits for each kid. Here are J’s:
No new patterns or reviews here — when I sew for J, I pretty much stick to my TNT patterns anymore. He has fairly simple and predicable taste in clothes. Comfy t-shirts and tanks, loose, comfy pants or shorts … do you sense a theme?
And here I am with another Oliver + S pattern review! This time for my boys. Now, Oliver + S has a nice line up of little girl dresses, but their boy offerings are pretty weak. The Sketchbook Shirt and Shorts are one of the only Oliver + S boys patterns that has ever tempted me. I decided to give it a shot last month when I wanted to make J and Baby J some button-up shirts for Baby J’s 9-month photos.
I searched around quite a bit for a good little boy button-up shirt and finally settled on the Sketchbook shirt since (1) it looked like the classic style I was going for, and (2) Oliver + S patterns are usually put together quite nicely.
KCW Day 3 — it’s almost half over! Â A week sounds like a long time, but boy that goes fast, especially when you have a long list of “needs” to make during that time.
Last night I finished J’s first pair of summer Parsley Pants. Â I love this pattern. Â Perfect fit, easy sew, good-looking finished product. Â The Clean Slate Pants are my go-to if IÂ need traditional pockets and a zip fly, but when I want a quick pair of elastic waist pants, I inevitably reach for the Parsley Pants.
Goodness, how am I just now getting around to blogging the suit I made for J back in April?!? Time flies when you’re overwhelmed, I guess.
Anyhoo, J was the ring bearer in Leslie and Bob’s wedding and walked his little sister down the aisle. Â Naturally, he had to have a proper suit for the occasion!
Stop the presses!! She finally got around to taking pictures of something!
Granted, not one of the many things I’ve made myself over the last few months, but hey, it’s something!
Actually, I decided to get off my fanny and take pictures of this particular Berkshire Blazer (affiliate link) because Melissa is hosting a Berkshire Blazer sew along this month!
** Disclosure: This post contains Blank Slate Patterns affiliate links, but all opinions are 100% my own!
Yea!! I FINALLY made J a new pair of Big Island Board Shorts! I tested this pattern a couple of months ago when the Blank Slate Patterns Summer Vibe collection was released.
My failure to blog my original pair of BIBS (Big Island Board Shorts gets really long!) was not because I didn’t like the pattern. To the contrary, I think this is a great pattern, and J loved the first pair that I made him. He wore them so much that they were quite literally ripping at the seams.
No, my complaint about my first pair was the fabric. The recommended fabric for this pattern is polyester microfiber, or boardshort material. The problem that I ran into was that my local fabric shops don’t carry boardshort material, and because of the quick turnaround required for testing, the fabric I ordered wouldn’t arrive in time. So, I went with plan B and picked up some polyester nylon at Joann’s for that first pair.
The nylon was sufficient to make a pair of test shorts, and J loved that I had made them blue. But, in my opinion, the fabric was not great, and for that reason alone I wasn’t thrilled with that first pair.
These, however, are made from proper board short material from the Fabric Fairy. And dragons? I mean seriously, how awesome is that for a 4-year-old?
This pattern is an easy sew. The construction is straightforward, and the use of bias tape gives a nice, retro feel to it. I like that it uses a separate waistband, since that provides so many more options for modification.
Specifically, the modification that I made to these shorts — adding front pockets. J loves to carry things around in his pockets, and the BIBS as drafted include only a back patch pocket. That back pocket was almost completely useless for J in his first pair of BIBS, so this time I added the front pockets.
Adding front pockets is such an easy modification, particularly if you already have pocket pattern pieces that you like. For these, I used the pockets from the Clean Slate Shorts, and widened and deepened them by about an inch so that his cars won’t fall out of his pockets at school. Adding these did not impact the rest of the shorts construction at all.
The other modifications I made were on seam finishes. As I’ve mentioned before, J is really hard on the seams in his pants and shorts, so I’ve started reinforcing and doing nice finishes on his things. For these, I flat-felled the inseams, and then encased the crotch seam with bias tape. I also used bias tape to bind the pocket pouches. Isn’t the inside pretty?
I omitted the optional liner. J has about 4 pairs of swim trunks from last summer that still fit him, so I didn’t really anticipate him using these for swimming. And I didn’t feel like trying to make bias tape out of proper boardshort fabric, opting instead for storebought.
Pattern: Big Island Board Shorts by Blank Slate Patterns
Size: 4T.
Fit: Perfect. I guess it’s no mystery why I love Blank Slate for kid patterns — they fit my kids perfectly, with only minor changes to the length of the waist elastic.
Fabric: Chinese dragons boardshort fabric in the blue/black colorway from Fabric Fairy. For the binding, I used storebought bias tape in turquoise. It was almost a perfect match!
Modifications: I added front pockets and omitted the back patch pockets on this pair since J loves his front pockets! This was really easy to do. I used the pocket pattern pieces from the Clean Slate Pants/Shorts and deepened them a bit so that J’s stuff is less likely to fall out.
Physical pattern: PDF pattern, but it’s not overly burdensome. There are only 4 main pattern pieces (5 if you include the optional liner), so it’s not that much to piece together.
Pros:
Cons:
Overall grade: A. Great pattern and it’s nice to have a boy swim trunk pattern in my stash.  Someday J’s behind will be big enough that he’ll need new swim trunks, and when that day hits, I’ll be ready!
And N was outside with us when we were taking pictures of these shorts, and her getup was just a hoot. Â I couldn’t resist a few pictures!
** Disclosure: This post contains Blank Slate Patterns affiliate links, but, I paid for the patterns used out of my own pocket, and all opinions are 100% my own!
I actually made these pants for the kids’ yearly photo shoot back in May, and then they didn’t get worn in the photos. Â Oh well, J really likes them and wore them quite a bit before the weather got ridiculously hot!
These are essentially a mash-up of the Made by Rae Parsley Pants, and the Blank Slate Patterns Coastal Cargos, hence the name Poastal Pants!
And J loves them! If they are clean and in his drawer, he wants to wear them. My kids are at ages now where they’re very picky about their clothes, so it’s always nice to stumble on something that they just love. These pants fit the bill nicely for J. They’re lightweight, super comfy, move really well, and he got to pick out the buttons! He also sat with me and handed me needles for much of the sewing process, and that always helps endear him to a handmade garment.
Every morning for over a week, J has asked me the same question, “Mommy, did you make me a new shirt?” And every morning my answer was, “No sweetie, not today.”
Well last night, I finally broke down and made the kid a shirt. When I showed him in the morning, he asked to put it on immediately, even before he got out of bed. And this coming from a kid who usually puts off getting dressed as long as he can — typically until about 10 minutes before he’s going to walk out the door for the day (which means I sometimes come home from work to find him still in his pajamas!).
J had requested a blue tank top, and selected gray for the trim when given a choice between gray and white. I used the Blank Tank pattern from the original Blank Slate Basics collection from Blank Slate Patterns (boy, that’s a lot of “blanks” in a single sentence!).
The crazy thing is, even though I was a tester for this pattern when it was released last summer, this is actually only the second Blank Tank I’ve made! You might think from that that I don’t like the pattern, which couldn’t be farther from the truth — I actually love it! It’s a quick sew (traced pattern pieces in a new size, cut fabric, and sewed the whole thing up with some added details not in the pattern in not quite 2 hours), and is super-comfy for an active little boy in the summer. And what kid doesn’t love a comfy, breathable knit tank top on a hot summer day?
The only thing I’m not particularly keen on in this pattern is the finish on the neck and arm openings. The pattern instructs you to simply turn the edges under 1/2″ and sew with a zigzag or double needle. While getting a top on and off, J always seems to pull at the neck and arm openings so much that the seams break when they’re finished in this way, which means I’d constantly be fixing it, or it wouldn’t get worn (again reinforcing my desire for a coverstitch machine so I have the ability to sew a stretchier seam!).
However, that was a really easy fix. Instead, I just used a gray contrast binding on the neck and arm openings that matched the gray pocket. Using a binding definitely takes longer since you’re adding a few more steps, but I also think it gives a more finished/polished look. I did use a zig zag stitch to attach the binding because I don’t trust my double needle to give enough stretch on knit items for J — he just pulls on them too much. I can’t tell you how many double-needle hems this kid has broken!
Not much more to say — J loves his new shirt! It’s always nice when the kids really love or appreciate the things I make for them. It doesn’t always happen at this age. I will make something that I think they’re going to love, and then they want nothing to do with it. Take N’s purple mouse Geranium dress — everything about that dress says “a two-old-girl will LOVE me!” Cute, swingy pattern, purple fabric, adorable animals all over it. And she’s only worn it once. She likes to look at it, but gives me an emphatic “no, no, no!” every time I try to put it on her.
Since there’s still a lot of summer left, I should probably make J a few more tanks. I have a great orange bamboo jersey knit sitting in my stash — I’m thinking an orange tank with a big tiger decal …
And since I’ve never done my full pattern review break-out on this pattern, here you go:
Pattern: Blank Tank by Blank Slate Patterns ($7.95 USD).
Size: 4T, with no size modifications.
Fit: Perfect fit for my skinny 4-year-old. He likes his tops a little loose, and this one gives him room to move and grow. J is 40th percentile for weight, and 60th percentile for height, and is very compact, to give you a reference.
Fabric: Blue organic medium-weight jersey from Near Sea Naturals. The contrast is a lightweight gray heather jersey from Girl Charlee.
Modifications: I added a contrast binding to the neck and arm openings, as indicated above. When cutting the fabric, I left the arm openings as-is, but cut the neck opening about 1/4 inch deeper than drafted to account for the fact that I wouldn’t be turning the raw edges under. That also raised the neckline just a bit since the pattern has a 1/2″ seam allowance at the neck. The result is more like a muscle tee, which I like.
Physical pattern: This is a PDF, but it’s not too cumbersome to piece together. Just 3 pattern pieces.
Pros:
Cons:
Overall grade: B+. I love this for a basic summer tank. The only reason I mark it down is because of the simpleness of the pattern compared to the price.