"Tostada" hat complete!
So I went back and cut an inch off the ruffle for the "tostada" hat, as a friend called it. The proportions weren't right to me and proportions are pretty important in how "right" I feel something looks.
I re-hemmed it and sewed it back onto the hat then atached the flowers and took some more pictures this time in case it might be useful for someone else. I stitched the ruffle on quite a bit beyond the actual crown/brim join on the straw, creating the illusion of a much wider crown. The fabric is very, very stiff and holds a crease extremely well, such that I can use my fingers to "press" it into the shape I want and it just stays. Brilliant. Really everything I was hoping for in a fabric for this project.
I bought quite a few fabric roses from Mary not Martha, which is conveniently just a few miles from me. I'd bought some paper ones from Taylor of Dames a la Mode that worked very well for the crown/brim join but needed to add a few more as well as some large ones for inside the ruffle. Mary Not Martha isn't cheap but man, do they have flowers! I pawed through bin after bin of fabric roses, all top quality. I can't recommend them highly enough if you're in the LA area, but they're also on etsy.
Getting the roses to stand up in the ruffle was a bit of a chore as the crown is a typical very shallow bergere style. But I had the idea of creating a sort of wire stand for the flowers to elevate them, just some more wire wrapped around the end of the stems and bent into a sort of loop that I then stitched down to the crown. This is a bit delicate but I think the hat looks delicate and something sturdier wouldn't look right.
And so I'm done! Now to make the dress to go with it! ;)
I re-hemmed it and sewed it back onto the hat then atached the flowers and took some more pictures this time in case it might be useful for someone else. I stitched the ruffle on quite a bit beyond the actual crown/brim join on the straw, creating the illusion of a much wider crown. The fabric is very, very stiff and holds a crease extremely well, such that I can use my fingers to "press" it into the shape I want and it just stays. Brilliant. Really everything I was hoping for in a fabric for this project.
I bought quite a few fabric roses from Mary not Martha, which is conveniently just a few miles from me. I'd bought some paper ones from Taylor of Dames a la Mode that worked very well for the crown/brim join but needed to add a few more as well as some large ones for inside the ruffle. Mary Not Martha isn't cheap but man, do they have flowers! I pawed through bin after bin of fabric roses, all top quality. I can't recommend them highly enough if you're in the LA area, but they're also on etsy.
Getting the roses to stand up in the ruffle was a bit of a chore as the crown is a typical very shallow bergere style. But I had the idea of creating a sort of wire stand for the flowers to elevate them, just some more wire wrapped around the end of the stems and bent into a sort of loop that I then stitched down to the crown. This is a bit delicate but I think the hat looks delicate and something sturdier wouldn't look right.
And so I'm done! Now to make the dress to go with it! ;)
oh my that is A LOT of hat! Hahaa great job (:
ReplyDeleteThank you!
DeleteI love it!!!
ReplyDeleteI love those hats! Sadly they are a bit too late for most of the 18th century stuff I do. Lovely job!
ReplyDelete-Emily
Thank you! I know it's not what most Americans reenact but I really love the 1780s and 1790s, so many fun fashions.
Delete