Tuesday, August 20, 2013

Talking Tuesday: "This marriage is ours."

For today, a reflection on a decade of marriage, which I thought appropriate and spot-on.

Taken at the July wedding of some church friends.

"Over this past decade, there have been a good many things we used to have in common that we no longer do. Life changed us. We got bored with some things. We discovered new things. We discovered that stuff we thought we had in common really wasn’t. One by one, our preconceptions of what married life is supposed to be have come to light. Many have been set aside. But we still belong, and this marriage is ours."

~Fr. Andrew Damick, 
"A Decade That Belongs" August 17, 2013


Friday, August 16, 2013

7QT: Disjointed Edition

--1--

Ponchik is the first of my babies to get chubby.  (The other three were very skinny).  Her rolls crack me up--  I don't know how to dress a fat baby!  

--2--

In other news, Ponchik is 3 months old!  

--3--


I mentioned in my vintage fashion update that I dislike modern cardigans because the boxy fit makes me feel a bit schlumpy.  I had some inexpensive, slighty-too boxy H&M cardis lying around and decided to try shortening them.  I started with a mint green one that I didn't mind losing if I goofed on the hack.  It turned out okay, but I should have used French seams on the bottom inside edge instead of pinking it (I thought it would roll more and look neater than it did).  I also shortened the sleeves to be true 3/4 length, but decided in the end that it was unnecessary, so I made the appropriate fixes on the blue one (below).  I'm pretty pleased with the result!  I may do this with other cardigans.  (Looking at the photos, I realize I probably could have taken the sides in slightly as well, but I think I'll leave well enough alone for now)


 This is the dress I wanted to wear the new cropped cardigan with (although I notice now in the picture that my seam could use a good press on the inside; oh well).  An etsy seller I've been eyeing for sometime ran a great sale recently, so I snapped up this 1940s deadstock shirtwaist dress.  It is slightly too big for me, but it allows for plenty of ease of movement, so I'm not too concerned.  I can always take it in later.  Piglet saw me this morning and said, "Mama, that is an AMAZING dress!"  I decided the braids keep the whole outfit from frumpiness. (And thanks to Tasha's excellent new hair tutorial, I think I've finally got the hang of a good front barrel roll bang!)

--4--

I found these buttons in my stash and they just make me happy.  They are from my great aunt's button box, and I'm hoping to find the perfect project for them.  I originally thought to put them on the B5209, but since that was a bust, I'm still waiting.  They might work on the cardigan I'm knitting.  


--5--

Just for fun.  I came downstairs yesterday and found Birdie with pull-up on her head.  As you do.

--6--

And on that note, I keep coming into the kitchen and finding the fruit bowl like this: 


Birdie keeps stealing in there when I'm not paying attention and stealth-biting whatever fruit happens to be there (this week, peaches).  

--7--

I finally finished a project I've been meaning to do for months.  We had several weddings this summer (friends and family alike) and I wanted to make two of these frames for gifts.  I got the basic idea from last year's annual catalog, but I tweaked the details a bit and used different frames.



#2, using a darker frame.  The background is from last year's dsp and it came out a bit pinker in the picture than it really is (it is more brick red in real life).  This was also my first go at paper medallions--those things are fussy!  But I like the 3D effect of them in the frame.  I changed the way the sentiment was pieced from the original, as the original one involved stamping each individual word several times, cutting it out and pasting it down.  Ain't no body got time for that.  Especially on two!  I was lucky to get these done at all, and when I realized how much work the sentiment was going to be, I just decided to stamp it all together on a paper flag and call it a day.   



Bonus:

We might possibly have our first thumb sucker.  Ponchik absolutely refuses a paci, and I've caught her with her thumb in her mouth a few times in the last couple of days.  Oh well.  I guess our new dental insurance will count for something.



Tuesday, August 13, 2013

Talking Tuesday: Rod Dreher and Moral Hierarchy

"I could be wrong — what I know about literature is not much — but it seems to me that the common elements of both Southern lit and 19th-c. Russian lit are that both emerge out of cultures that have a strong sense of hierarchy, both social and moral, and that the moral hierarchy is sustained by a religious sense."

Rod Dreher, "Colin Brown Has Two Questions." August 13, 2013

I have so much I want to say about this thought, but I've hit the wall with so many things today, and I just...can't.  Maybe soon.

Friday, August 9, 2013

7QT: Crafty Updates and more




--1--

On the sewing machine this week:  I had a near-total sewing fail with the Butterick B5209 this week.  I spent four hours cutting it out, and the another six on the bodice.  Then I thought I should try on the bodice before attaching the skirt.  Not only did the bodice have major fit issues, I couldn't get it off!  And had to cut myself out of it.  All that work, gone, poof.  So sad.  On the bright side, I learned a ton of new techniques while putting the bodice together, and also decided that the fabric was not a good print to have near my face.  So I turned the skirt of the dress into a regular skirt and conquered French seams in the process.  I think the skirt is more of a wearable muslin, but it was still a good process.  



--2--

On the needles: still working on the cardigan.  I was just getting ready to shape the arm hole on the front, when I checked the pattern and realized I had missed a crucial step on the body of the piece that was going to adversely affect the button placket.  So I had to frog 7 inches of knitting back to the ribbing and redo it. Oh the pain!! So I'm mostly just back to where I was--with about an inch to knit to start shaping.  It's been that kind of week.  But!  I do have my next knitting project in mind, so that is a good thing!  I want to make a vintage pullover like this one, but with a different stitch pattern and in sport weight instead of fingering (mostly because I don't want to be knitting the same thing all winter long!)



--3--

On my nightstand: still reading Vintage Home Ec (which is starting to strike me as equal parts useful and hilarious.  To wit: pick up the clutter in your house because some people have a bad habit of falling over) and The English Girl.  We still had stomach flu this week, with lots of misery to go around, so there just wasn't much time to read.  I did buy the Collette Sewing Handbook, though, which has a ton of great tips and even includes two full patterns.  Not bad for an $18 book!


--4--

Three favorites this week:  (1) My new rotary cutter.  It has made cutting fabric so much easier and faster!  If you do any sewing at all, get one!  You won't regret it.  (2) Classic Specs.  I need new glasses, and I found this place in Brooklyn that has a great price, and lets you try on glasses via mail order, Netflix style.  These are my two contenders at the moment:  



This one also comes in "blond" a kind of golden tan--would that be better?

(The first one would be in tortiseshell, not black).  I've been wearing bifocals since age seven, and wouldn't be wearing these all the time, but my old glasses just aren't doing it anymore.  

(3) This picture:  

October 2003
10 years ago this week, this guy with a funny Greek name messaged me, and thus began the journey of a thousand miles.  I mentioned the date to my husband last night, and leaned in to me with a sort of half-leer and said, "Hey baby, want to have four wild and crazy kids with me?"  Well, when you put it that way...

--5--

In the stereo/on the screen: Music Machine (for the kids), and I've been listening to the Thomas Tallis station on Pandora while sewing or knitting in the evenings.  Also watching Luther on Netflix--Idris Elba is just.so.darn.good.  (Especially after watching him in The Wire).  Oh, oh, oh!!!  Outlander casting news!! Frank Randall/Captain Jack Randall has been cast!! Tobias Menzies will take on the role, and I think he will be superb!!  I'm also looking forward to watching The White Queen when it hits Netflix.  I'm such a costume drama junkie.

--6--

On the pen: nothing on the Iron Mountain Baby story this week, but I'm thinking about another story, based on another song (Prairie Wedding by Mark Knopfler).  Oh, and I posted a little bit about my vintage adventures over at the other blog.  Check it out for lots of embarrassing (postpartum) outfit photos of me from last week.  You'll probably feel better about yourself afterward.  

--7--

On the stove: I made this recipe from Real Simple last night, and goodness sakes, it was good.  Make it tonight!  Mine pretty much looked like the picture.  No really!

Zucchini Tart With Crumbled Sausage and Dijon
Photo from Real Simple.
Right, that's all for me.  Go see Jen and the other quick takers this week!

Wednesday, August 7, 2013

We Can Do It! Dressing Mid-Century Vintage in a Casual Modern World

I meant to get this post written earlier in the week and now it is Wednesday and it is still swirling around in my brain.  Forgive me if this is scattered--we've had an almost never-ending round of stomach flu here since last week Monday.  But in the midst of all that fun, I managed to take a week's worth of outfit photos for this post.  I also included a few outfit photos from earlier in July for variety.

1940s vintage reproduction dress from My Baby Jo.
A few weeks ago I was chatting with a friend, and she was admiring my dress and my hair (a brushed out wet set of pin curls).  I told her how I'd found it on thredUP for a song, and said that it reminded me of a late 1930s tea dress.  I said I was happy that I could style it 1930s or 1940s, depending on my hair's mood.

She sighed and said,
"I wish I could do that."

A little later in the conversation (we were talking about fashion and knitting, mostly), I mentioned a 1930s hat I'd received as a birthday gift but not worn yet, and she smiled and said,

"You must have a lot of fun getting dressed."

I grinned and said, "Yes, I do!"

Snood/victory rolls, cardigan/camisole, vintage Alfred Dunner skirt (thrifted): vintage inspired.

That conversation, as well as many other similar ones I've had over the last 18 or so months of dressing in a vintage style made me think it was time to post a bit of an update, as well as to encourage anyone else who might be tempted to jump on the ol' bandwagon, so to speak.

Monday.

I started my vintage journey for a few reasons.  First was the feeling that modern fashions just didn't suit me.  I'm quite pear shaped and the modern silhouette just doesn't do me any favors.  I realized that my favorite dress was a thrifted rayon dress from the 1980s that was quite evocative of a mid-1940s tea dress.



The dress that started it all. Vintage Caroline Wells rayon 1980s dress.  It came with ugly pearlized buttons down the front that I replaced with vintage 1930s or 1940s era buttons from my great aunt's stash.
It made me feel viscerally connected to one of my favorite times in history.  And being something of an historian of the era (my background is primarily in mid-20th century Soviet history, but I have a strong background in European history as well), I love the fashion and styles as well.  I feel better about myself when I'm dressed in a vintage (or vintage inspired) style and playing around with different aspects of my look has been tremendously fun for me.


Let's pretend this was Tuesday; this was the day after the stomach flu hit me (I lost 6 pounds in 18 hours), so I was a little less than 100%

Summer demi-wedges, and one of three pairs I wear all summer.

I decided to focus my "look," so to speak, on the 1940s and 1950s, and have spent a lot of time sourcing clothing, thrifting, and reading tons of vintage fashion and sewing bloggers.  It has been great fun to learn so much about the industry and era.  I feel like I'm part of something and it gives me a piece of identity that is not all about diapers and breastfeeding and little people's needs.

First day of wet set.

That said, there have been some fashion hiccups, and a bit of a learning curve along the way.  Mid-century fashion was much dressier than the way most Americans dress day-to-day now, and I live in a particularly casual city. I don't want to feel that I'm putting on a costume every day--I just want to feel dressed and ready for the day.  Finding balance for daily wear took a bit of doing.  I was also less than a year postpartum when I started, and carrying about 25-30 pounds of extra weight from previous pregnancies.  Finding plus size vintage was a bit tricky, but I'm also not a purist, and was able to find some vintage reproduction clothing (eshakti.com, I love you), as well as some larger sizes of actual vintage clothing.  I also became familiar with silhouettes, and there is quite a lot of 1970s/1980s clothing that is strongly reminiscent of the 1940s, and tends to be more reasonably priced and sized larger.

Wednesday. Vintage dress, thrifted.  I'm not sure whether it is 1970s or late 1950s, but the fabric is some kind of nylon or polyester and it has a "It's a Lehigh!" union label.  It had a belt at one point, but is long gone. The style is 1940s reminiscent.

I also had to figure out what suited my style and my figure.  I did lose 20+ pounds last summer, but then became pregnant again (surprise!) and am now nursing, which has posed a whole new set of wardrobe issues this past year.  I felt I was able to adapt my maternity wardrobe to vintage styles fairly easily, but I'm finding that keeping my postpartum wardrobe nursing-friendly has been more difficult.  I don't have enough button down blouses that fit right now, and my pullover shirts don't look that great untucked, as they generally must be in order to nurse easily.

Thursday. Modern clothing, but evocative: fuller skirt with high waist, button down cardigan, plastic brooch, hair flower, day one of pin curl set.

I'm also still figuring out a few things about what I prefer in my clothing.  I know, for example, that stand up collars feel too fussy to me, and while I love the look of a shirtwaist dress, I don't love the way I feel while wearing one (i.e. frumpsville).  I made the recent discovery that the reason most pullover sweaters and cardigans drive me crazy is that the modern silhouette is boxy and falls below the waist onto the high hip, which isn't particularly flattering on me.  I look much better in a cropped, fitted style that hits at my waist.  I'm also coming to the sad conclusion that most full skirts just don't do me any favors.  I have two full skirts that I like a lot, but I can't really decide how well they suit me.  It doesn't help that I'm still carrying 10 pounds from this most recent pregnancy, and was far from done losing weight when I became pregnant last fall.

Friday. 1950s handmade cotton housedress.

With these things in mind, I've come up with a few tips for the vintage loving mama.

1. Just do it.  If you want to dress vintage, do it.  Feel your best in your clothing.  I hate the way I feel postpartum, and my clothing is usually a big part of it.  Nothing fits properly, everything feels wrong, I just want to scream!  I've still struggled this time, but I have also felt better in my clothes this summer than in any previous postpartum period.  That said, I'm officially bored of my summer clothing and ready for some fresh pieces.

Easy summer hair--rolls in the front, ponytail and scarf in the back.
2. Decide what works for your figure/skin tone/style preferences.  I discovered this summer, for example, that I prefer dresses in hot weather and separates in cold weather.  I have some summer separates, but I struggle to style them appropriately, and, with a few exceptions, they never seem to "feel" right to me.  Also, I have pale Irish skin and darkish hair, so there is a whole section of the color palette that just makes me look ghastly.  So even though I love the look of WWII era utility dresses, the drab gray and blue shades they were made in just don't flatter me at all.  I tend to look best in saturated jewel tones or bright colors, so I try to keep that in mind when I'm considering a purchase.

Dansko summer sandals.
3. Figure out what is realistic with your lifestyle and go for it.  Personally, I have four small children, and wearing pearls and heels just isn't realistic for me.  I've decided that my daily look is better served by simple day dresses, or even house dresses with clogs or brogues.  I don't have time for elaborate pin up hair styles (and they end up feeling too fussy and over styled for me anyway), so I've developed a handful of hair styles that I can easily put together from my lazy man's pin curl wet set, including the wet set itself.  I don't like wearing a lot of make up, and so I keep my routine very minimal--mascara, cream blush, lipstick, occasionally a dash of powder.  I'm also nursing full time right now, and so tend to steer toward surplice necklines, button down dresses, or peasant-style blouses that can be pulled down easily.

Saturday. Comfy vintage reproduction day dress.

4.  Find a style icon whose life is similar to yours for style inspiration.  If you are a mom of young children just trying to survive the day, find some photographs of ordinary women from whatever era you'd like to emulate and go from there.  Some of my best style inspiration has come from candid photos from the 1940s, or even from photographs of my grandparents, great aunts and uncles and other extended family.

Dansko sandals.
5.  Find some comfortable clothing for the days when life just happens.  I have found it is useful to have a modern knit dress or two with vintage fit and flare styling that can serve as my comfort wear (sweatpants in dress form, so to speak).  I don't need any shapewear to look good in these dresses, I can throw my hair in a headscarf backroll or even a full-on headscarf with rolled bangs and call it a day.  Sometimes just being evocative of an earlier era is enough to make you feel good about the way you look.

Easy backroll with lazy victory rolls on top.
6.  Surround yourself with vintage lovelies.  I have about 20 vintage fashion bloggers I read regularly, and I've pretty much stopped browsing modern clothing websites unless I'm looking for something super specific (like a cropped cardigan or modern shapewear).  Having mostly vintage ideas in your head will make it easier to style yourself without thinking about it.  A caveat: "old lady" clothing websites are sometimes treasure troves of vintage-styled clothing and shoes, but made with comfort in mind.

Dansko summer shoes (top view)

7.  Vintage styling is often in the details.  But those details don't need to take a lot of time.  I do my hair every day and I make a point to wear earrings and a brooch or necklace almost every day.  I try to keep my wardrobe small and simple so that the hardest choice I have to make in the morning is what brooch to pin to my dress.
Dansko summer shoes.

8. If you have time to brush your hair, you have time to do vintage.  I can generally get myself ready,
shower to door, in about 20-25 minutes.

Easy victory rolls, snood, done.  Five minutes or less.
9.  Keep it simple.  A handful of simple day dresses, a pair of comfortable clogs or flats (these were quite common in the 1940s, especially during the war), a headscarf or snood, some resin brooches and you're good to go!  I wet set my hair once a week, usually in the morning, wear it set all day, and then style it different ways for the rest of the week, usually relying on snood or scarf styles, ponytails or braids as the week wears on.  These are all perfectly appropriate vintage styles.  I may wear heels for special occasions, but stick to my danskos for every day wear.


Sunday. Resin brooch, earrings, vintage bead necklace, hair brushed and clipped back on the sides.

That's basically it!  I'm looking forward to fitting back into my slim wool skirts and knitted jumpers (hopefully) in the fall, and have gotten back into knitting for myself--oh the possibilities for vintage knits!!  I recently started sewing again as well, and am eager to conquer my sewing inexperience and previous frustrations to make some lovely vintage repro pieces to add to my wardrobe!  But even if you don't sew or knit or do anything crafty, you can wear vintage with confidence.  There are tons of great resources on the web (etsy.com and ebay.com are great places to source vintage or vintage reproduction clothing) and with some perseverance, there are deals to be had.

Friday, August 2, 2013

7QT: Linky Mash-Up Edition


I missed most of my usual blogging this week because our household was hit with the mighty stomach/intestinal virus and we've been going down one by one. The downside of a stomach/intenstinal virus is 24 hours of pure unadulterated misery.  The upside is that I lost 6 pounds in 18 hours and have a squeaky clean colon.  I had it Monday night into Tuesday, Birdie came down with it on Wednesday night, Piglet got it early Thursday morning and Boo started very very early this morning (as in, 1:00 a.m.)  So, four down, two to go.  I'm hoping Ponchik doesn't get it as she is so little yet.  

So without further ado, I present you with my weekly linky mash-up, or a selection of all the blogging I would have done if I had felt better this week.

--1--

Sewing progress this week: None.  I did get the patterns I had ordered, and now I know what dress I'm 
going to make with my free fabric!  

The fabric in question--isn't that a fantastic pattern?  it is a cotton blend with a bit of stretch.
These are the patterns I bought.  Vogue was having a crazy pattern sale, so I got the vintage 1930s reissue for $3.99.  Yes, friends, $3.99.  


The Butterick one was a bit more, but after I saw Brittany's version of this dress, I knew this was the winner!  I've also been watching sewing tutorials like crazy this week--especially the ones on the Collette website.  Lucky Lucille did a wonderful round up of great sewing tutorials this week.  I also found Beccie's Hong Kong seam binding tutorial enormously helpful, as I want to start making the insides of my garments look more professionally finished.  I'm definitely trying this on the B5209!  But now to find single fold bias tape...

--2--


Yarn Along: Still working on the vintage cardigan.  I tend to have just one thing going on my needles at one time, so I expect you'll be seeing bits and pieces of this robin egg blue cardigan until you're quite sick of it!  Right now I'm working on the front right hand side.  

--3--

Reading: As always, I'm reading about five things at once.  At night, when I'm nursing the baby, I'm reading Daniel Silva's The English Girl.  I read a bunch of his Gabriel Allon books a long time ago and then burned out on them, but I'm enjoying this one.  It isn't taxing, which I need at night when my brain isn't all there.  


I'm nearly finished with the Home Ec book (left)--it had a lot of good tips, not only for household management, but for family life and deportment (manners, ways of being, etc).  We're working very hard right now on "inside voices" and good manners with our kids, and I found a few things in the book helpful to keep in mind.  I just started the Schaeffer book.  So far I'm finding it a bit esoteric.  I'm just starting chapter two, so perhaps it will get better.  I do appreciate the lyricism of her writing, and the case for the artist in the home, but I find myself wanting more nuts and bolts.

--4--

Workin', workin' workin'

Writing: still working on the Iron Mountain Baby story.  I decided to do more of it long-hand, the way I used to write, in an effort to allow me to write without the constriction of needing to be in front of a computer, and also to slow my mind down and force some parameters.  I have to say, I'm enjoying the sanity of it.

--5--

Braids!  At last!  Birdie: "I don't whike it."

Some favorites for this week: this recipe, which I can't seem to stop making; Fireman Sam, the lovely little Welsh cartoon that is currently keeping my late afternoons half-way sane; my new pesto pasta recipe, oh, and Birdie's hair braids.  She is terrible, terrible!  about letting me do anything with her hair, but after her lengthy sesh with ye olde stomach virus on Wednesday night, she was willing to let me braid her hair.  She even left it in all day!  

--6--

Late 1950s  handmade housedress; notice hand on the desk--so much more interesting, no?  It's so hard to be a fashion model.  Ha!
Next week on the other blog, I'm doing a 7 day outfit post with my vintage mama's fashion manifesto, and so I've been taking outfit photos every day this week.  I suddenly have a lot of respect for fashion bloggers who do this all the time--outfit photos are hard!  I don't know how to stand and not look silly, I don't like artificial poses, but my smile-and-face-the-camera-with-arms-akimbo just looks odd in multiple shots.  Sheesh.  The things I do for the blog.  (smile)  But seriously, I'm looking forward to sharing this post, and wanted to share a sneeky peek--today's outfit.  It is supposed to be 85 degrees today and the humidity is hovering around 85%, so I wanted cool and breezy.  I bought this dress from an etsy seller earlier this summer during the first heat wave.  It is a late 1950s cotton handmade dress.  It has some flaws, the but price reflected it, and the dress is still quite wearable.  I don't love sleeveless dresses because I think my upper arms are a bit beefy, but sometimes it is just too sticky for sleeves.  I also noticed this morning that the top is getting a bit blousy, but I need easy access for nursing, so that is okay.

Solution to a failed pin curl set on a humid day: 1950s ponytail!
--7--

Still working with By the Tide when I get a chance to stamp.  I made these three cards yesterday.  All three are inspired by Splitcoast stampers samples.


So that's all for me!  Hopefully we will be scourge free next week.  Go see Jen for more Quick Takes.

Foodie Friday: Noodles and Co. Pesto Pasta

I have no pictures for this post, mostly because we gobbled up the pasta before I thought to photograph the dish, but let me tell you, this dish is so delicious.  I had it for lunch the next day, reheated in a pan and it was even better as the cheese got slightly crispy.

I didn't set out to recreate Noodles and Co.'s Pesto Pasta, but when I made this recipe up, I realized it reminded me very much of that dish, which I used to get often when I lived in Minneapolis.  That was in the good old days when the only allergy I had to worry about was nuts and the odd sunflower seed.  Le sigh.

Noodles and Co. Pesto Pasta

13 oz package rotini pasta
1/3 cup pesto (I made mine with 2 oz. fresh basil, 3 cloves garlic, and olive oil enough to make creamy)
8 oz. mozarella cheese, shredded
1/4 c. Parmesan cheese (give or take)
red onion, diced
olive oil
Maldon sea salt

In a large deep skillet, fry red onion in 2 T. olive oil until brown and fragrant.  While onion is cooking, make pasta according to package directions and drain.  Add to onion, then add pesto and mix through until noodles are coated evenly with pesto and onions.  Add cheeses and mix through.  Sprinkle with Maldon.  Reheat until cheeses melt and serve with a generous drizzle of olive oil.  Serves about 6 people.

For leftovers, reheat in a non-stick skillet with a tablespoon of olive oil.  Toss until pan is warm, and then try not to stir and allow cheeses to brown slightly.