Wardrobe Architect: Colors

We’re firmly in the middle of Kiddo Birthday Month, where pretty much everything ceases in a mad dash to get a birthday party, birthday dinner, presents and a visit in by the end of the month/birthday time. So I haven’t been writing much.

But…I have been thinking about the Wardrobe Architect series on the Coletterie. For the past few weeks, Sarai has been talking about colors and style shapes/clothing silhouettes. I’ll talk about that last one later. Right now, I’m focused.

So, this week was about a color palette based on personal preferences. You may have probably already guessed, but I like black. In fact, I like black a whole lot. To the detriment of most other colors. I know it’s a cliché, but black makes me feel the happiest and most comfortable. Not because it’s “so slimming” (it really isn’t, actually), but I like it.

Other colors that are right up there are a light gray, slightly darker than a dove gray but in that area, dark brown (duh), purple, cerulean blue, and blood red. I don’t have any white shirts (I’ve written about that before), but I think I’d like at least one.

A’s been doing this with me as an experiment for her. I’ll ask her tonight what colors she’d like to wear the most.

What are your favorites?

What is “My Style”, anyway?

This week, the Wardrobe Architect series focused on a “core style”, based on the results of last week’s worksheet and some other questions. Sarai put together a great worksheet again that gets people thinking about what they wear the most and how they feel about the clothing they wear. Here are this week’s questions and my answers:

When you are wearing your favorite clothing, how do you feel (e.g. confident, sexy, poised, powerful, etc)? Confident, comfortable, pretty, strong, more grownup for lack of another, better phrase.

When you’re wearing something that is not quite right, how do you feel? What are the feelings you want to avoid about the clothes you wear? Very uncomfortable. Fearful, even. Like I’m standing out in the worst possible way. Feelings I want to avoid: trashy, kidlike, pretense.

Who do you consider to be your style icons? What is it about them that appeals to you?
Helena Bonham Carter. She dresses the way she wants to – most of her style hasn’t changed a lot in the past 20 years or so, and it just…looks right on her. She dresses, for the most part, like a romantic Goth.

What are some words that describe styles that you like in theory, but are not quite you?
“Cupcake Goth”/Lolita Goth, bohemian/hippie, flowery.

Look over your answers from last week on history, philosophy, culture, community, activities, location, and body. List at least 15 words that you associate with your answers. Think about descriptive words, moods, and feelings you associate with these things:
Dark, romantic, handmade, blending, camouflage, multiseason, Victorian, jewel-tone, black, outdoor, comfort, hiding, layering, business, Corporate Goth, ease, geek.

Are there other words you would like to add to this list? What other words describe
your core style?

Simple, vintage.

Look over the answers to all of the questions above. If you had to narrow your list to only 3-5 words to describe you, which words would you choose?
Corporate Goth, vintage, dark, blending in, easy.

Collect 15-20 images that represent these 3-5 words for you. You could create a pinterest board, a folder on your computer, a moodboard, or a collage. Be creative and have fun!
My Pinterest boards are over here. The two that are related to clothing are My Style and Core Style.

Building Something New

This week, one of my favorite sewing blogs, The Coletterie, is starting something called The Wardrobe Architect. This might be what I need to get started.

The first post is more of an exercise, with a worksheet asking questions about 7 areas that help shape an individual’s style: history, philosophy, culture, community, activities, location, and body. So…here are my answers to the worksheet.

How has your personal history informed the way you dress? When did your tastes crystalize? Have they changed over the years, and why?

I grew up in the 60s and 70s, with a mother who, well, didn’t dress up very much. She wore jeans and T-shirts, no makeup, etc. Things didn’t change very much when she went to work, mostly because she worked in an analytical lab in a hospital until I was 16. When we moved to rural Pennsylvania when I was 16, I dressed so as to not be noticed: jeans and T-shirts or jeans and long-sleeved shirts or turtlenecks. When I moved away after college, I discovered Goth (or it discovered me – I think I’ve always been that way a little bit). Vintage black dresses, T-shirts with the sleeves ripped out, even dyeing my hair plum red (Pro tip: if you really want to make a difference in your hair color, it might be better to bleach your hair first, especially if it’s very, very dark). When I moved to NC in the late 80s, it pretty much stayed the same, with some concessions to having to go to work every day. Now we live in CO, and I’m moving away from being a SAHM. Which has enabled me to both wear nothing but jeans and T-shirts every damn day and not buy or make myself very many clothes (the money’s only meant for 2 people here, not 3).

How does your philosophy, spirituality, or religion affect your aesthetics and buying habits? Or, what aspects of those things would you like to see reflected?
Simply put, not much. I would love to be able to buy based on ethics, such as paying attention to where and by whom my clothing is made, but financially I can’t. Which is more than a little unethical in itself – and I’m not talking about MY ethics here. Stepping down off my soapbox…

How has your cultural background shaped the way you look? How did the aesthetics and values you grew up with affect your tastes as you got older?
My cultural background growing up pretty much reinforced how I dressed at the time. Not everybody in the late ’60s dressed like Mad Men or hippies. In our house, handmade items were pretty valuable; if somebody took the time to make you an outfit or bag – or anything, for that matter – it was a sign of great love and affection. It meant a whole damn lot. Something solid, that would last for a long time, was worth spending money on rather than what everybody else was wearing.

How are you influenced by the people around you, including friends, family, and other communities you’re involved in?
I’m not terribly influenced by my family, as they’re far from us. I’m more influenced right now by the other parents that are where we live. I still like to dress so as not to be noticed… Still jeans and T-shirts, but I’m starting to dress in dress trousers and a nice pullover sweater when I have lessons or have to do something at my daughter’s school.

How do your day to day activities influence your choices?
Right now, I still stay at home and only go out to teach and do things with our family. So it’s easy to not bother with dressing any particular way at this point.

Does the place you live inform the way you dress? How does climate factor in?
I live near the Rocky Mountain foothills in Colorado. The climate is High Desert Freakishness. I can never, ever, put anything away. One day can be 60F and sunny, the next can be 30F and a blizzard. In June. Or November. Really, any month of the year. So every single item of clothing I have has to be able to be layered at a moment’s notice or never put away.

In what ways does body image affect your choices in clothing? What clothes make you feel good about the body you live in? What clothes make you feel uncomfortable or alienated from your body?
The whole idea of Not Being Noticed, or only wearing a couple of things, is from my body. Or, rather, how I feel about it. This is probably a whole post in itself.

I’ve only been actually skinny once in my life. I know what it took for me to get there, and I never want to go back to that. Having said that, I’ve only recently started to accept the way I look. Not like, probably never, but accept. I can be stronger and more healthy, but I will never look like a model. Certain kinds of clothing – revealing, or very body-hugging – are out for me. I just don’t feel comfortable in them. There are some kinds of Goth wear that are fine for me, but that require more self-confidence than I have to wear them. I still love vintage clothing. For me, that means Victorian, Edwardian, pre-WWI/”Titanic” style clothing.

My body is getting older, and I feel that some of my favorite things that actually look good and aren’t jeans are age inappropriate. But that’s another post for another day as well.

The Day After Halloween

Or November 1. Or something.

Something broke in my brain last night when I was trying to decide what to wear to take the Girl out trick-or-treating with our friends.  I came to the stark realization that I have nothing to wear.  As in 2 pairs of jeans, a skirt, a business suit, 5 T-shirts that are in good enough shape to wear out of the house, underwear, bras and socks.  That sort of nothing. 

So.  Now I need to figure out what I need, what I will wear, how much I’m reasonably going to be able to make, and what I should set aside from my weekly pay.  So far, I have:

  • another skirt, maybe two
  • a good pair of trousers (at least one <a href=”http://www.colettepatterns.com/shop/clover”>Clover</a&gt; and another type of trouser)
  • possibly a couple of pretty goth-type things; maybe for next Halloween, most likely for before
  • another pair of jeans (definitely store-bought for this)
  • a white shirt
  • a black or purple shirt
  • some new socks/stockings

I’d like to try making all these things except for the jeans.  Jeans sewing (and really, jeans fitting), scares the hell out of me.  But I’ve successfully made and fitted slacks and trousers for myself.  I know I can do that.

First though, I think I’d like a skirt.  Maybe the <a href=”http://www.colettepatterns.com/shop/zinnia”>Zinnia</a&gt; I bought for my birthday this year.  There’s some black crepe that I could use for the pleated version, but it’d have to be lengthened.  By quite a bit.  Not because I’m 7 feet tall, either.

 

Sewing Things for the New Year

Yes, things. You can call them resolutions, but those tend to go by the wayside in about a week. Goals is probably a better choice, so goals it is.

I’d really like to sew at least half of my outer garmets this year, except for jeans and T-shirts. Unfortunately, jeans and T-shirts are the staples of my wardrobe. I don’t need them for work at the moment; if by some bizarre miracle I do find a job, it probably won’t be one that requires me to dress especially well.

I’m thinking I’d like to have…

  • At least one good blouse. Maybe a Sorbetto or a men’s shirt-type blouse.
  • Another pair of Clovers, but in a smaller size. Hooray!
  • At least one long-ish skirt. Maybe in light wool or velvet. As I’m writing this, it’s 20F and getting colder.

I have no idea how long this will all take. But I’m starting to think I’m way too old to dress the way I’d like, and the way I’ve been used to dressing since I’ve stayed home with my daughter.

Hello there

Welcome to Morticia’s Sewing.  My sewing projects these days vary between costumes (as in Halloween costumes for my kid) and Corporate Goth* outfits for work (when I find some) or any other occasion when I need to impersonate a grownup.

Most of the projects will be clothing, but some may be either accessories (like bags – I need/want to start making bags again) or toys. If there’s anything in particular that you would like to see, either put a comment at the end of this post (or any other, really) or use the “Contact Me” link on the sidebar.

We’ll get started tomorrow. Promise.

*Corporate Goth is the general category for clothing that expresses a darker aesthetic, but allows the wearer to hold down a job in a more conservative setting (doctor/lawyer/business occupations, teaching, etc.)  For more information, check out the Corporate Goth website, This is CorpGoth written by Trystan L. Bass (aka the Gothic Martha Stewart), or this post written by Gothic Charm School’s Lady of the Manners Jillian Ventners.