Anyhow, all this real life stuff got in the way of my blogging, but more importantly it also got in the way of my sewing! This is why it has taken me weeks to complete the unlined shirt-jacket which I’ll now tell you about.
I'm really going to enjoy wearing it! It's made of a very fluid wool crepe, purchased at Tissus Couture-Elle in Montreal during PR Weekend in May (it already seems like half a lifetime ago...).
This is one of my 3 ghostly garments –probably the one that looked the least interesting to you. I was just checking for armscye depth – this is a Burda pattern from the 1990s. Sure enough, it turns out the armscyes were too low; I couldn’t raise my arm without the body of the jacket coming along for the ride. So I fixed that, and now I have a shirt-jacket I really like.
The solution is super-simple. I added approximately 2.5cm (1”)
This was done on the front, back and both sides of the sleeve (it’s a one piece shirt-style sleeve). No other adjustments were needed. The sleeve cap and shoulder remain the same.
Let’s see; what else to tell you…
I did a Hong Kong finish on all inner seams and edges. What a great way to make an unlined garment look as good on the inside as it does on the outside!
To the left you can see the completed armscye and side seam, both bound with bias strips of lining fabric. At the top is the shoulder pad which is covered with the same fabric.
Then there is the most prominent feature: the pockets. These are bellows pockets with flaps. I’ll say I didn’t interface the flaps because I wanted to keep the jacket very soft; the reality is that … um … I just forgot. I applied the patch pockets by hand. The grey thread I used is completely invisible on the inside.
Here’s a close up of the decorative button – they are sort of like wire spaghetti.
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