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The future's bright - in fact, it's orange

As winter approached, I felt a need to inject some colour into my black and brown wardrobe.

green suede bootsOne day soon, I'll finish this blog...

As anyone who readz this blog may notice, I've been away for a while. In fact, it has been so long since I blogged that I'd actually forgotten my password when I came to log in a couple of months ago, when I first began writing this piece.

There were many reasons for not blogging, the main one being lack of time due to a serious work schedule, and the secondary one being a computer that died on me (a new pooter was required, which I now have). In fact, took me nearly two months to finish just this blog, as I kept getting interrupted by - oh dear - WORK. Thank God for it. The third reason is that my internet connection went down and a month later, I'm still on a temporary setup waiting for it to be fixed. One way or another, then, blogging has been very much on the back burner. 

Pink velvet coatHowever, the sudden temperature drop in November (from 25 degrees to -3 in 48 hours) made me think about clothes (and therefore about Second Cherry) as each evening for a couple of weeks, I lugged my winter things out of the wardrobe, tried them on and gave up in despair.

Why oh why, was everything I owned either brown or black, I wondered? I mean, I know I live a practical sort of life - more gumboots than party frocks - but there's no need to be quite so grimly practical about everything. I am so sick of khaki and washable and lint-free and rainproof...

floral cardiBack in the summer, I had a bit of a sea change and began to dress more like a girl, in strappy linen dresses, which was very nice. Several of them were floral, which was a new thing for me, and I wore them mainly with floral haoris - short kimono that come to hip length and are very loose and feminine. It was a style that gleaned a LOT of compliments, which gave me food for thought as the approaching menopause robs me of whatever girlish charms I once possessed (and there weren't that many to start with). These clothes were also much brighter than my normal beige and pale blue summer colourway, and I liked how cheerful that made me feel. 

So, I decided to go much bolder with colour this winter as well. To my usual winter palette of black, grey, brown and camel, I've added orange, red, green and pink with the intention of cheering myself up in Normandy's dull, grey weather. I focused mainly on long, thick cardigans like the Laura Ashley one above (I have enough sweaters to last a lifetime) and also on coats because it's fabulous on a filthy winter day to step out in something that zings. 

First up was a blue leather 1960s coat, closely followed by magenta coats in shocking pink (one mohair, one velvet). I also bought some turquoise suede boots and Aquascutum tweed coats in red, emerald green and blue (this is all, needless to say, off Ebay of course). Courtesy of Wetherall came a bright yellow duffle-weight wool, reversible to cream (99p), while from the US came a neon-bright orange coat that literally draws 'wow's of admiration when I wear it. I also got a pink and brown tweed coat from Next, a fabulously thick cream mohair coat from the 50s and thick wool cardigans in pink, magenta, electric blue and jade.

When the rain's tipping down and there are only five daylight hours a day, striding out in my new black silk coat with multicoloured stripes in silver, blue, red and pink, or my glowing red Jaegar wool swing coat should help to put some pep in my step. After all, in a very yin season, we all need a bit of yang. 

 

 

Make it yourself - the djallabah

A djallabah is an Arab garment that is simple to make, even for a beginner

djallabahA djallabah is a traditional Arab garment worn by both men and women, which sometimes has a hood, but in the west is usually worn without. 

One of the most useful garments ever invented for dry, desert climates, it also makes a perfect summer dress for lounging around, beachwear etc. We need not pretend that a djellabah is drop-dead sexy - it isn't - but it is wonderfully cool.

As a dress, you can make it from thin fabric as a pop-over for a bikini, or from a stiffer fabric to keep the sun out. This design is ankle-length, but you can make a shorter version if you like. Within reason, one size fits all - the armholes are loose and the cut allows for a wide range of bust sizes. In wool, it makes a good winter dress and in flannelette it makes a good nightgown.

Although a djallabah is a voluminous garment, this doesn't mean that it's hot - in fact the side panels cause the garment to stand out at the hem, creating a current of air that washes up from your feet and out through the neckline, keeping your whole body cool in a hot summer. 

The instructions that follow are something I found on the internet years ago, and from them I've created several djallabahs over the years, including this blue one, pictured. My favourite, however, was made from an old white sheet.

The only tricky bit is the underarm gusset - this is easiest to sew by hand. You can then oversew by machine if you like, but I find it easier to just backstitch. You should also finish all the edges of the gusset piece before sewing it to the garment, as it's almost impossible to get to them afterwards. In fact, when sewing a djallabah, you might find it easier to finish ALL the edges by hand before assembling. 

If you don't have a machine, you can hand sew this garment together relatively quickly because it is nearly all straight lines, but do use pinking shears to finish the edges. This makes for a very lightweight and flexible garment. If you're going to hand-sew, invest in a beeswax block to rub the thread over - this makes hand-sewing 20 times easier. 

djallabahbodyThese are standard measurements for someone of medium build who is 5'6" in height and any adjustments can be made simply by modifying the front and back piece length and width, since the garment hangs from these. From the measurements given you will be able to develop the side seam pyramid-shaped inserts, gussets and the sleeves.

I myself am only 5"1", so I shortened all measures by about 2".

The side panels are sewn with the vertical edges together. The neck will be a 5 1/2" curve that is 3 1/2" deep in front and 1 1/2" deep in back. In the front there is a 6" vertical slit so you can slip the garment on over your head, and this will be faced with 2" of hemmed fabric all round. The facing is a mirror image of the neck and front slit areas, so there are no pattern pieces for it - just copy the main body pieces.

It is important, once this is seamed on to cut on the wrong side all curves and points nearly up to the stitching. When this is turned around, hand stitch close to the seam fold all round before hemming to the garment on the wrong side. This must be done slowly and carefully as it must be very strong - the garment hangs from the shoulder and neck areas. (In fact, it’s best to edge-stitch it down, and then topstitch it too, if you feel like it - this is often done as a decorative measure, but it structural too.)

djallabahsideUsing newspaper or brown wrapping paper measure out a piece equivalent to the front piece. Do the same for the 4" by 4" gusset, side panels and sleeve. If you are brave and measure carefully you can measure out the garment directly on the fabric.

The measurements are:
Front and Back pieces = 20 1/2" wide & 57" long (Cut one of each)


Sleeves (Cut 2) = Top 22", Wrist end 11", Side 20"


Side Panels (Cut 4) = Top 2 1/2", Bottom 13", Side 46"

Gussets (Cut 2) = 4" x 4".

When the side panels are cut, these will be sewn together to form a narrow pyramid which will be sewn lengthwise to the lower portion of the front and back panels. Leave a 3 1/2" unsewn portion between the sewn-together side panels.

Leave unsewn (at the shoulder end of the sleeve) another 3 1/2" portion. The points of the gusset will be fitted into these openings in the side panels and under the sleeve. The openings will be spread to contain the gussets on either side. You may wish to hand sew the gusset area before doing it up on a machine, if you have one.

djallabahsleeveThe side panelling and the gussets allow for fullness at the chest and movement for a wide variety of arm sizes. The sleeve itself is bugle-shaped, starting full but narrowing down to a narrow wrist opening. This bugle shape allows for changes in size of the wearer over time. The wrist may be reinforced with a band of material sewn onto it, then turned over to form an external facing.

Simple to sew, with all straight seams and no gathering or shaping darts, the djallabah is a great all-purpose robe. Importantly, it moves very well, and if you make it properly, it will give you years of wear.

 

How to recognise a quality garment - part three, finish

It's worth paying a little extra for quality finishes on garments - here's what to look for

There are three things you should look for in a quality garment - fabric, cut and a high standard of finish. In the last article in this series of three, I'll look at finish. 

Finish is where cheaper manufacturers really start to cut corners because every element of finish costs money - seam allowances, proper interfacing that enables collars, belts etc to keep their shape, seam finishes that enclose raw edges, correct pressing, and applied techniques such as beading or pickstitching. 

There are two types of finish - those that are connected with the construction of the garment, and those which are purely decorative. Construction finishes prolong the longevity of a garment - with poor finish here, your garment will simply fall apart. Decorative finishes are the little touches that are worth paying extra for - pretty buttons, beading etc. They aren't necessary to the solidity of the garment but they are often the little detail that makes it worth buying. 

Stitching

The most important aspect of finish in any garment is the stitching. If this is poorly executed, in the wrong thread etc, nothing will be able to rescue the piece. Some stitchng, such as top stitching, is meant to be visible and may even be executed in a contrast thread, but the majority of stitching in a garment is simply what holds it together. Whenever you're considering buying an item, turn it inside out and look at the stitching. Are there loose and hanging threads? Is anything ravelling?  Does the thread colour change partway down a seam? These are all very bad signs. Stitching should be clean and neat and except for when it's deliberately meant to be in contrast, should sink almost invisibly into the fabric. Usually the thread should be the same shade, or one shade darker, than the cloth.

Seams

Seams on a good garment should lie absolutely flat, with no puckering and rucking where the fabric pieces join together. One area to watch out for is bias-cut garments at low-end prices. Bias creates inherent stretch in the fabric, and you need to let the pieces hang for 24 hours or more in order to 'relax' before stitching, which many manufacturers neglect to do. If the fabric isn't fully relaxed, or isn't sewn with enough inherent stretch in the seam (usually accomplished with a slight zigzag stitch), a bias skirt will ruckle right along the seamlines, usually at either side of your thighs, right where you need it least. 

Certain seams are more complicated to sew and therefore only appear on quality garments. One is the French seam, where the seam is sewn inside out, then outside in, enclosing all raw edges. This obviously takes at least twice as long to sew as a simple seam, doubling the construction time. It's usually seen on women's dresses and skirts.  

Another complex seam is the flat fell seam, which most of us are familiar with from our jeans. From the outside, it looks like a double row of stitching, and the raw edges are contained inside it. This results in a seam that is a little bulky but very strong (the reason it's standard on the outer leg of your jeans, while the inner leg is usually simply serged). On a good shirt, such as those made by Hilditch and Key and other Jermyn Street makers, the majority of the seams on the garment are flat-felled, including the armscye (armhole), side body and under sleeve. On cheaper shirts, the seams are usually just simple seams with serging on the inside. Shirts get a lot of wear, so look out for ones with flat-felled seams. This doesn't apply to blouses, which are more lightweight than shirts in construction. 

Seam allowances

Quality garments tend to have larger seam allowances inside the garment (turn them inside out to have a look). You can particularly see this in vintage garments, where seam allowances are routinely as much as three-quarters of an inch whereas nowadays, on a chainstore garment, you're lucky to get even a quarter of an inch. Tight seam allowances of this nature considerably increase the strain on the garment, and if one of them 'goes', there's not enough fabric left for you effect a repair easily. 

Vintage garments also often have the seam allowance bound with bias binding or satin tape, to prevent fraying. Today, this is only seen in high-end assembly such as clothes by Ralph Lauren. The same applies to seam allowances that are 'pinked' with pinking shears, or oversewn by hand - all this handwork costs money.

Cheap garments usually have 'serged' edges inside, which has been sewn by a serger - a kind of sewing machine that cuts, sews the seam and binds the seam all in one step. The advent of the serger revolutionised clothing production, but it does result in a rough finish inside your clothes which many of us now take for granted. In order to cut steps, this type of seam is also rarely pressed open where it should be, such as on the long side seam of dresses and blouses, but to one side, resulting in bumps and rucks under the fabric. Again, this is something many of us are used to and don't realise is a sign of poor quality. 

Linings

Quality garments are more often lined than equivalent garments at lower price points, and more of the garment will be lined (a full lining for a jacket, for instance, rather than a half-lining that only covers the shoulders). Linings are important because they help a garment to keep its shape and reduce strain on all seams, as well as protecting the outer shell from sweat and skin oils, and providing some slip when one garment goes on over another. Linings are particularly crucial in tailored garments such as jackets and coats - here, look for full linings, and slippery linings to sleeves, in particular. Burberry's coats, for instance, have a cotton lining to the body but a very silky sleeve lining that enables you to get the coat on and off very easily over a wool jacket.

Trousers that are lined to at least the knee will not bag and sag at the knee like unlined trousers, while quality dresses from companies such as Jaegar are usually lined throughout to keep their shape, though this does also introduce a greater formality that you may not be comfortable with. Skirts that are lined, at least at the back, will not 'seat' with wear as easily as unlined skirts, nor will they cling and grip onto your tights. Look for lined skirts for work if you're office-based.

If you can't afford garments with full linings, consider wearing a full slip underneath instead - this produces many of the same effects of slip and hang. 

Linings should be as good a quality as possible, made from thick, sturdy, antistatic fabrics with a lot of slip, and at the hem on coats, they should be attached with bar tacks - long threads of stitching, spaced at intervals, allowing the lining to move independently of the outer garment without pulling on the hem. Jacket linings should either be loose at the bottom or sewn in but with a little slack - this is usually pressed into place with a little horizontal pleat.

Also look out for garments with an extra, zip-out or button-out lining. This is most often seen in coats and jackets and extends a garment from one or two seasons to three or four - my Burberry polocoat can be worn pretty much all year round because of its zip-out wool lining. 

Relining a quality coat is expensive, but can give it an extra 10 years of life, so if you see a good quality designer coat on sale with a torn lining, this is an option worth considering. 

Stay tape

Stay tapes are are put into stretch garments in order to stop them stretching where it's not desireable, for instance at the shoulder of a cardigan. Quality knitwear is where you're most likely to see some sort of stay tape - cashmere and merino cardigans, for instance, usually have grosgrain ribbon tape behind both the buttons and the buttonholes to prevent distortion, plus cotton tape at the shoulders to prevent the shoulder from distorting. You can also find stay tape at lower price points, though, including good quality t-shirts, which often have non-stretch tape sewn in along the shoulder seam between the neck and the sleeve - this is a good sign that the tee won't gape and bag after a few washes. 

These days, you don't normally see stay tape anywhere else, but couture dresses have stay tapes at the waist in order to take the weight of the skirt, which seriously increases the comfort of the garment. You climb into the skirt and do up the stay tapes, then pull on the bodice section and fasten it separately - the skirt then effectively hangs from your waist and not from your shoulders. 

Hems

Hems on quality garments are deeper than on cheaper ones, and they may be bound with bias binding or another finish in order to keep their shape. They should also be finished invisibly, with no stitching visible on the outside. This is accomplished in modern clothing manufacture by using 'blind hem stitch', which catches the hem to the garment only at intervals. This is an area where you can really see the difference between low- and high-end manufacture. In the former, the hem is often just turned up and sewn in place, with a row of stitching fully visible (as is standard on jeans - one reason that shortening your jeans can make them look slightly odd) but often no account is taken of how the fabric will stretch or if the hem turnup is longer than the skirt piece it's being attached to. This results in puckering and folding all the way along the hemline. One way to improve the look of any cheap skirt or trousers is to invisibly resew the hems by hand.

Facings

A facing is a piece of fabric used to finish the raw edges of a garment at open areas, such as the neckline, armhole, and front and back plackets or opening. On a quality garment, facings are usually deep and sometimes finished by hand: they may also be attached to a lining or half-lining. On a cheap garment there are fewer facings and at areas such as the neck or armhole, the fabric may simply be turned over and stitched down instead. Facings are important because they provide structural support to the garment as well as a clean finish, so they are worth looking out for. 

Interfacing 

Interfacing is an extra layer of fabric that lies between the outer garment and the facing. It's often not visible because it's completely enclosed - this will certainly be the case in something like a lined jacket or coat. Sometimes you can see it, for example if you turn back the front facings of a button-down dress or a blouse. Enclosed between the two layers of fabric will be another layer - that's the interfacing.

On vintage garments and high-end garments, interfacing is usually a woven fabric that is sewn in - it might be a thin layer of cotton batiste, or silk organza, for instance, and it provides a gentle level of support for the garment where it's needed most. One area where you might notice this is in vintage tailoring, which is remarkably soft and pliable compared with modern tailoring - even the shoulder pads are built up layer by layer from woven fabrics and scrim. 

On high-street garments today, however, almost all interfacing is 'fused', that is, it's a thin synthetic fabric, usually either white or grey, looking a bit like garden fleece, that is sticky on one side, and is ironed onto one of the pattern pieces before assembly. Just like sewn-in interfacing, it provides a little more body and stability to garment edges. The problem with fused interfacing is that the glue may wash off after a while, at which point the interfacing may begin to disintegrate. Sometimes you can even turn the garment inside out and pull the interfacing out in long strips. If it hasn't been applied properly in the first place, the fabric fused to it may be puckered and wrinkled. There is no fix for this, so if you find an article with this problem, put it back. 

Another common problem with interfacing is when the wrong weight has been used - either too stiff or not stiff enough.  This is usually what makes some jackets or coats uncomfortably stiff to wear and you can't fix it without entirely taking the garment apart.  My advice, if you find a coat or jacket too stiff in the fronts or the shoulderpads, is not to buy it - don't expect to wear it in. 

Buttons

Buttons may be crucial to the construction of a garment, and they may also be decorative. Always look for good quality buttons - mother of pearl rather than plastic on blouses and light jackets, horn rather than plastic on jackets and coats (you can test if it's horn by gripping it between your teeth - horn has less slip and feels a bit warmer, but it's something you have to have some experience with).

Check that buttons are sewn on properly by giving them a good tug and twist, especially on coats and jackets. The middle button on a jacket takes the most strain.

Coat buttons should either have a shank (a metal loop at the back of the button - standard on metal buttons such as traditional blazer buttons) or should be sewn on in a way that creates a thread shank, where the thread is wrapped around itself to make a little stalk. The button should also be backed with a little button inside the coat or jacket so that when the button gets pulled, it doesn't rip right out through the fabric (I can't tell you how many times I've done this while leaning over a supermarket trolley...). 

Duffle coats and other coats based on them have toggles instead of buttons, so that you can do them up with cold fingers. Look out for real horn and proper leather loops and strenthenings, which will last longer than vinyl ones. 

Changing the buttons is a simple, quick way to update or improve the look of any garment. 

Buttonholes

On cheap garments, buttonholes are usually straight slits, edged with thread, and many people today are only familiar with this type. On quality tailoring, however, buttonholes are often 'bound' - that is, no stitching is visible at all and the hole looks like a little tight-lipped mouth. Where they're not bound, they're often 'keyhole' shaped, with a larger section at one end for the button to slot into, and entirely sewn with very strong button thread.

Look out for good buttonholes on jackets and coats, where they get the most wear - it's not so crucial on lighter weight garments, though it does result in a very pretty finish.

Zips

Zips on quality skirts and dresses are usually invisible, and the slit in the garment where the zip is inserted is not outlined by stitching. In lower-end clothing, however, the slit is usually outlined by stitching on either side, as this is an easier zip to sew. In sturdier clothing, and where the zip is part of a fly, the stitching is more visible. In some types of clothing the zip itself may even be a design feature, as on a biker jacket.

Check that all zips function on any garment you're buying and that the slider slides easily and the teeth lock together properly. Be wary of very lightweight plastic zips, especially the type that have no teeth at all - these usually go wrong very quickly and you can end up paying more to repair the garment than the garment is worth.

Zippers on outwear should have a hole in the toggle big enough to get your finger through and/or a fabric pull, to enable you to zip up in a hurry with cold fingers.

Turn the garment inside out and feel around the base of the zipper slider - it should be properly secured to the garment. If it is hanging loose, stitch it down, and also consider snipping off the reinforced plastic glued section, which can be very irritating to the skin.

Pockets

All pockets on a garment should be fit for their purpose and if they're visible, they should add to the design of the garment. Quality coats and outerwear jackets should have pockets deep enough to put your hands in for warmth. Fur coats usually have velvet pocket bags, while quality wool coats have moleskin - very warm and soft. Pockets come in for a lot of wear and tear and their fabric needs to be tough - don't buy garments where the pockets are flimsy.

Many low-end garments lack pockets altogether because they add extra steps to the manufacture, and where they do appear, they tend to be in-seam (in line with the seams) or patch pockets, added on afterwards, with or without a flap. There is nothing wrong with either design, but it is only on quality clothes that you will you see designs such as welt pockets, where the edge of the pocket is bound in a similar way to a bound buttonhole.

Always look out for interesting pockets, which add a pretty construction twist to an otherwise plain garment.

Applied finishes

Applied techniques such as sequinning, tambour-work or beading are purely decorative rather than inherent to the construction of a garment, and they still generally have to be done by hand. Either you pay a high price for this, or at the low-end, you are almost certainly exploiting child labour somewhere in the developing world, as was seen recently with companies such as Primark.

Applied stitching is a kind of halfway house because it is decorative but may also have the purpose of strengthening the garment, as you might see in collars and cuffs that are top-stitched, or the edge of a jacket which is pickstitched (it looks like a row of running stitches).

Look out for details such as this, especially any work that has obviously been done by hand.

When buying an item with applied sequins or beading, give them a good tug to make sure nothing is loose.

 

In brief - finishing details to look out for

Hems - flat, invisibly stitched, bound on the inside edge with tape. 

Stitching - even, invisible, no runs or loose threads.

Seams - French seams, flat fell seams, no rough edges inside, flat. 

Seam allowances - generous, permitting you to let the garment out at a future date. 

Facings - deep as possible, not skimpy. In dress bodices, look for facings that cover the whole bodice.

Buttons - quality button. On coats, sturdy buttons that have been sewn on by hand and are backed by another, smaller button. 

Buttonholes - bound buttonholes or keyhole buttonholes rather than straight buttonholes. 

Pockets - pockets that are part of the overall design, welt pockets, bound pocket, velvet or moleskin pockets

Applied details - fine embroidery, quality beading, sewn-in sequins. 

Stay tape - on shoulder seams of stretch garments and the front edges of cardigans to prevent distortion. 

Linings - the more the merrier. In trousers, linings to the knee, in skirts linings at least to the back. In coats and jackets, full linings including silky sleeve linings. Extra linings for coats and jackets to extend the season of the garment.

 

 

Classic clothes part 5 - blouses and tops

Classic clothes are the backbone of your wardrobe - here's what to look for in tops.

Tops are generally among the cheaper items in your wardrobe so they're actually a good way to ring the changes in fashion, but nevertheless there are designs for tops that recur again and again

Classic clothes part 1 - coats

Classic clothes are the backbone of your wardrobe

There are types of clothes, and themes, that keep recurring in fashion, and garments that keep making a reappearance with only slight alterations. If you have at least a few of them in your wardrobe, they make great staples around which you can ring contemporary changes so that you always look current.

Classic clothes part 2 - jackets

Clothes that don't date are the backbone of your wardrobe. Here's what to look for in jackets.

Cassic jackets are all based originally on menswear.

Classic clothes part 3 - skirts

Classic clothes are the backbone of your wardrobe - here's what to look for in skirts.

Skirts come in all shapes and styles, but there are certain skirt styles that don't date easily, so if you have three or four of these in your wardrobe in usable neutrals, you should get endless wear out of them.