Late 18th C Men's Jacket by TheLadyDetalle |
Late 18th C Men's Jacket - on the left |
Historical Sew Monthly MARCH challenge:
HSM by the Dreamstress |
The Challenge: Stashbusting - Make something using only fabric, patterns, trim and notions that you already have in the stash.
Fabric: Blue crushed velvet men's late 18th century jacket, purchased at Jomar in summer 2013 I believe. Blue linen from my mom's stash. Tan linen as leftover stash scraps.
Pattern: Drafted from scratch by tracing out a late 18th century jacket that a living history re-enactor friend of ours from RCHS loaned my husband for the 2nd Annual Francaise Dinner two years ago. I traced out pattern piece shapes on the actual finished jacket that we had borrowed, and re-made that in a muslin, before making the jacket in 2013.
Year: Late 18th Century
Notions: Trim. A nice gold trim that burns clean (cotton?) from Jomar that was in my stash for 9 months to a year, maybe more, can't recall precisely.
How historically accurate is it? Eh, so-so I guess. The jacket shape and drafted pattern are very accurate, but the fabric is only so-so, and I machined a lot of this jacket. The blue linen lining is decent, and the gold trim is similar to what you might have seen on a jacket at the time. It passes muster more on the three foot rule, then studiously close looks.
Hours to complete: Lots. I kept making silly errors because I was trying to sew tired. I had to set the sleeve cuffs twice. I had to re-do one of the sleeve linings as it didn't lay well. I hand sewed on all the gold trim.
First worn: My husband wore the re-make of his jacket for the first time at the 4th Annual Francaise Dinner on March 28, 2015!
Total cost: everything was from the stash, the linen scraps I used to add the pockets, the linen sleeve linings that I added, the gold trim from Jomar, so everything bought long ago and leftover bits and pieces. The Jomar trim was one of those 1/2 off .19 cents a yard, and I used a decent amount of yards.
Next up is April - War and Peace!