I thank you all for your valuable insight in the matter of buttons. The too-big brown button wins the informal poll, with the black glass one in second place. I will now disclose that I like the big brown button but my husband voted for the glass. I've decided to hedge my bets. One of the problems with the big one is that the button hole would be ginormous. So I'm going to use a big snap for the real closure, and the button on the outside for camouflage. Then, I can change it up if I don't like it or find something I like better.
But today's subject is luscious, slightly lanolin-y wooliness. In the matter of internal padding, I'm experimenting.
In a tailored jacket, no matter how sleek and natural the shoulder line, I think SOME padding is beneficial. This need not add bulk - even a single layer of needle-punched batting will support the shoulder area and create a smoother line (I have bony shoulders). I also like to use a fleece sleeve head. I do not buy these internal padding alternatives - I make the patterns from my jacket pattern. The general approach is illustrated here.
My Vogue 2770 jacket calls for 1/2" shoulder pads (it's a 2003 pattern), and I knew from the muslin that it did need actual shoulder pads. I have a plastic tub filled with the darned things, but I really prefer making my own.
For this jacket, I'm using a cotton quilt batting called "Warm & Natural" for the base layer of padding. It is very thin and supple. I made the pattern piece for the padding from the jacket pieces, eliminating all seams and seam allowances (this process is illustrated here). The resulting piece looks like this (neck edge and front extensions are at the top):
The neck edge will be hand sewn to the neck/collar seam on the inside, and the front edge is tacked to the dart which extends down from the neck point. The armscye edges are sewn invisibly along the armscye edge, again by hand.

My great innovation for this jacket is that I used luscious 100% wool batting for the shoulder padding. I came across an online vendor of wool quilt batting - Cedarview Farms. I purchased a lap size quilt batting (55" x 74"). It was very reasonably priced, I thought, and they were having a 20% off sale at the time. The batting arrived very promptly, neatly packed - loosely folded around tissue paper to keep the layers separate and then rolled. It is absolutely scrumptiously woolly - soft, light and smells faintly of lanolin.
You know that I don't knit. I also don't quilt. I bought this batting to add to my considerable stash of padding-materials (though I think it would make a pretty awesome duvet). Today I tried it for my intended purpose and I am pretty happy with the results. Here's what I did.
I cut the pad shape out of a thin fusible fleece (a Pellon product) and the wool batting. Then I "feathered" the curved edges of the pad by pulling some of the fleece away, so the pad edges will be thin and invisible inside my jacket. Once I was satisfied, I recut the shape according to the pattern.



To the right is the finished item from the front.
And, once installed in the jacket, this is what it looks like from the back:
Onward!
No comments:
Post a Comment