Another easy way to make a bustle is to take a little girl's fancy dress that has a ribbon tie around the waist, fold the shirt part of the dress so it cannot be seen, and tie the skirt part of the dress as a bustle using the ribbon waist tie of the dress around your own waist. Does that make sense? I hope I explained it well enough.
Thanks! I just realized I should add that I used Simplicity #1819 for the apron, but for the bustle, I used the pattern as a fabric length guide and used a great youtube tutorial for the actual construction http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sW0M4h0HnAI
I've decided on a person now as well - Steampunk Entomologist/Naturalist - so lots of mechanical bugs, a steampunked butterfly net, some sort of beekeeper's hat, etc.
Comments 8
I love recycling things for steampunk. I have so many hobbies so I have bits and bobs of stuff everywhere.
Keep on sewing!
Reply
Another easy way to make a bustle is to take a little girl's fancy dress that has a ribbon tie around the waist, fold the shirt part of the dress so it cannot be seen, and tie the skirt part of the dress as a bustle using the ribbon waist tie of the dress around your own waist. Does that make sense? I hope I explained it well enough.
Reply
Reply
Reply
I just realized I should add that I used Simplicity #1819 for the apron, but for the bustle, I used the pattern as a fabric length guide and used a great youtube tutorial for the actual construction
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sW0M4h0HnAI
I've decided on a person now as well - Steampunk Entomologist/Naturalist - so lots of mechanical bugs, a steampunked butterfly net, some sort of beekeeper's hat, etc.
Reply
Leave a comment