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Anna Dress

A beautiful handmade bridesmaids dress for a beautiful handmade wedding

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A beautiful handmade bridesmaids dress for a beautiful handmade wedding

Last weekend I was lucky enough to be a bridesmaid at the wedding of one my oldest and dearest family friends down in Somerset. The bridesmaids were able to choose their own dresses, so naturally I wanted to make a special dress to mark the occasion. 

My mum trained in fashion and textiles at Farnham art school and still has many of her printed silks that she designed and printed by hand for her degree collection more than 30 years ago!

For this fabric, my mum had airbrushed most of the surface area in soft pastel shades of pinks, blues and greens and then screen printed an intricate pattern based on feathers in coral, gold, yellow and teal. Every part of the design was printed by hand using either an airbrush gun or silk screen stencils. 

One-of-a-kind vintage silk twill!

One-of-a-kind vintage silk twill!

Constructing the perfect bridesmaids dress!

I used ByHand London's Anna Dress sewing pattern and opted for their maxi dress version with a few alterations:

  • Extra Fabric: I didn't have quite enough fabric for the entire dress, so I picked up some pale grey silk crepe de chine from Broadwick Silks (just off Berwick Street in London) and used it to make up the 2 side-back skirt panels;
  • Shorter Skirt Length: I reduced the length of the skirt by 14.5 cm (partly because of my short legs and partly because all the bridesmaids were going barefoot during the ceremony!);
  • Skirt Width: my first attempt at an Anna dress ended up a bit voluminous around the bottom of the skirt, so I reduced the bottom width of some skirt panels by 8 cm  (4 cm each side), tapering it in at the top to ensure the width of the waist remained exactly the same;
  • Small Back Adjustment: as with my original test run of the Anna dress, I needed to reduce the back by about an inch around the top of the zip;
  • French Seams: finally, as the fabric was so old and delicate, I used French seams wherever possible for durability.

The wedding took placeat Little Quarm Cottages in Wheddon Cross in the heart of Exmoor National Park in Somerset.

As well as making my dress, I helped decorate the venue with 25 metres of home made bunting in lace and hessian with matching table runners, and helped feed the guests with home made Rocky Road!

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Anna maxi dress, ByHand London

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Anna maxi dress, ByHand London

My third pattern from ByHand London is the Anna Dress.

With summer coming, I have a gazillion versions of this dress that I want to make...but first up, a practice run of the V-neck maxi dress variation.

I used a black and white zebra print, but wanted to break up the pattern so I cut the centre-front skirt panel from a plain black fabric. This meant I could squeeze the rest of the pattern pieces out of only 2.5 metres of fabric...result! Maxi dress for just over a tenner :)

As the cost of the dress was now cheap-as-chips (although I never seem to value how many hours I spend on my creations), I was bit quick with my stitching. I ended up with loads of puckering attaching the bodice to the skirt panels! Argh! But as I had opted for French seams with this garment, I was in for a surprise...all my puckering was hidden by the second line of stitching!

Other than this little hiccup, this dress is really simple to sew up (especially with ByHand London's helpful sewalong) , and I can't wait to get started on the next one!

Easy to adapt: 

  • A PERFECT FIT: I'm not normally confident tweaking a garment for a better fit, but I found it easy to shorten the skirt panels by 14.5cm (I then turned up my hem twice at 1/2 inch each time), and then to reduce the back by tapering in the top of the zip by about 1/2 inch each side of the zip. 
  • REDUCE AMOUNT OF SKIRT FABRIC: A possible adaption for my next version might include taking in the bottom width of at least one skirt panel (by an inch or two). It may just be the way the crisp fabric falls, but I feel that there's a bit too much fabric floating around at my feet). 
  • COLOUR: Although more to do with the choice of fabric rather than the pattern, I'd quite like to introduce some colour (especially given the huge volume of fabric of this garment). I have some ideas in mind, so I might "upgrade" this dress once I'm bored with the monochrome look :) 

OTHER VERSIONS IN THE PIPELINE (ALL MAXI-dress VERSIONS SO FAR):

  • A very special hand printed patterned silk, safely preserved for a few decades (more on that later);
  • a very soft navy cotton that has an almost silk like sheen, covered with a multicoloured tropical bird print; and
  • ....maybe I should stop there for now!
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