I wanted to make a doll-size bomber jacket
which required getting into the Doll-Appropriate Knits drawer
which was so over-stuffed that the sides squeaked when I moved cloth in and out of it
which made me decide to grab a stack of smaller bits of knit fabric
from which I cut a lot of random doll clothes
and that got me to here
which took me seven days to completely sew and ended up being 50 items
I haven't yet taken pictures of dolls wearing them, mostly because I'm still working on dressing them. And some are for 60cm dolls, of which I have only 3, so that means that I physically don't have enough dolls to wear everything I made in that size. I also plan to send a stack of the clothes to a friend, plus there were a few pieces that I just didn't feel immediately inspired about, which is common with the "there is too much cloth so I will sew random things to fix that problem" doll clothes making projects, which is something I've done since 2004-ish, and has ended up creating some pieces I really like that I know I would not have made otherwise, despite how foolhardy it sounds. But! What I do use will end up on Instagram, and I'm also making long rambling background noise videos of the doll dressing process (which some doll people appreciate) for my YouTube channel (which is, so far, all rambling doll stuff.)
And I also had a revelation about the reason I had never really had an easy time of sewing thin knits for doll clothes over the years: because I was using low-quality thread. I always assumed it was entirely because a thin knit with a tiny seam allowance was just never ever going to go well, which is why I grudgingly cut a doll dress from a foiled synthetic jersey for this project--just to use up the bit of cloth--but expected to fight with it the entire time sewing.
But it went together with almost no problems?
I thought maybe it was because I had a better machine now, or maybe the cloth was higher quality than foiled synthetic jerseys I'd tried to sew in the past (this particular fabric was a 6" square swatch I had gotten from someone else's destash, so it's easily believable that it would be higher quality than cheapskate-me would buy.)
But, once the bobbin of that thread (my current thread love: Saba C tex 40) ran out, I decided to switch to a new color to match a lot of the things waiting to be sewn, and the best match was a thread I used to use all the time...because it was so cheap. And the first thing I tried to sew with it--a sturdy cotton interlock that I had already sewn in different colors for this project--got mangled as badly as I had expected the foiled synthetic jersey to be mangled.
and I immediately realized: OH. IT'S THE THREAD.
So I emptied that bobbin and refilled it with a not-as-good-color-match Saba C and things went back to sewing fairly well.
Of course I've always known the advice is to sew with good thread, and I long ago realized that good fabric sews more easily than cheaply-made fabric, but it wasn't until this unplanned demonstration that I realized how thread quality matters. (And of course, thanks go to Wawak for expanding my world to the ability to acquire good quality thread for relatively low cost--there are things in the modern age that I just didn't even have a clue about or access to in the way back when...)
So! This project produced a big stack of doll clothes and some first-hand sewing knowledge.
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