Tag Archives: crepe de chine

Embroidered Life

MAY 13, 2021

When I was a child I had to create things. I was happy to receive embroidery kits with the design printed on linen with all the colours of embroidery floss included for a Christmas gift. I found it was something fun to do while waiting for my aunt and uncle and cousins to come to our house for Christmas dinner or for us to go to their house because we alternated each year. I liked quiet projects but that didn’t mean I wasn’t an athletic girl because I was busy with downhill skiing, skating lessons, dance school, riding my bike and skateboarding, slalom waterskiing and Royal Conservatory piano lessons.    My mother and paternal grandmother influenced my interest in needlework. Both women always had a project on the go.

 

My grandmother crocheted and knitted many outfits for my Barbie dolls that she sent by mail from Montreal along with a pair of crochet slippers for Christmas gifts. Here are examples from her creative soul;  a Chanel inspired coat and hat with lips buttons and a short jacket and slim skirt with navy-blue contrast on the collar and hem. Striped stocking stitch sweaters with bateau neckline, a miniature button and matching hats with pompon. My grandmother knit clothes for my dolls but I designed clothes for my sister’s dolls.

 

 

 

 

My mum was a knitter when it was the style out of necessity to wear hand-knit sweaters, mittens, scarves and hats for both men and women. I think they both did cross stitch, needlepoint, crewelwork and smocking. My mother certainly took my sister and me to a dressmaker to have dresses made with smocked yokes.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Crewelwork detail, rattan chair and geraniums, tapestry wool on linen.

I was receptive to experimenting with the needle arts. I followed what the popular trends were in needlepoint, rug hooking, crewelwork, crochet and knitting. But needlework was a pastime that went by the way because my real interest from a young age always was design.

 

 

 

 

 

 

While on summer break from design school, and with a friend from school, we attempted to sew two smocked Peasant Blouses. The neckline and shoulder of the raglan sleeves have the honeycomb smocking stitch and the sleeves are gathered by running a length of embroidery floss through a channel created by the wave smocking stitch. There are six cross-stitch roses on the blouse. Because of the smocking on the neckline and shoulders the blouse was sixty inches wide at the hemline and fell just short of the waistline. The blouse was not comfortable to wear.

 

 

After design school, I was too busy to make anything other than what was related to clothing designs for my business. Years later, after my daughter was born I took up the 1980s quilting craze because I wanted to make a quilt for her and kitty-corner to my store, Janice and friends, there was a quilt store. I took a class once a week to make a twin size quilt.

Infant’s nightdress, smocking on front yoke only and sleeve cuffs, two sets of fabric ribbon closures on the back neckline and waist.

Raglan sleeve dress, smocking front and back and on the shoulders, snap closures on the back neckline.

I was lonely for my mother and grandmother who both died prematurely. Mary, my mother-in-law became the only needlewoman that I knew. She smocked flannelette nightdresses and knitted beautiful baby sweater-sets with hats and booties, works of art in traditional knitting patterns for our children.

Mary surprised us for our daughter’s first birthday with a smocked dress.

 

 

 

 

 

Classic Yoke Dress for English smocking on the front and back yokes and the set-in sleeves, button and loop closure with placket on sleeves and the back neckline.

To see that dress style again. I was hooked and asked if we could make a dress together.

I bought the fabric, Mary did the smocking and I sewed the dress in time for Christmas.

Smocking is usually worked on soft fabrics, batiste, cotton, lawn, silk and crêpe de Chine. Smocked dresses require a lot of yardage because you need 3 inches of fabric for every inch of the smocked pattern completed.  For this dress the measurement around the hemline for a small child is 72 inches. Children’s clothing remains the best-known use of smocking.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Here is the letter that arrived by post when Mary had finished her smocking portion of our project, Thursday, November 27, 1986.

She shared “a few little tips.”

“I have added the blue as you suggested. I am enclosing some floss in case you need to make button loops or on the edge of the collar. Sometimes they put an edge [blanket stitch] around the collar, but mostly for older children when the collars are larger.”

“The buttons are a good idea, again a button can be used at the wrist if you find difficulty getting her hands through or if too big—you are good at making plackets. I shy away from making them.”

“I ran a red thread on top of both front and back to help the fraying. It can be taken out after you put in the yokes—or left in will not show.”

“You will notice there are small seam allowances under the arm and side seams. Just sew over the smocking needed for seam, keeping the lines of the pattern even. The smocking is done this way so there are no blanks without smocking and the pattern is more even.”

She signed off with hugs to my family with wishing me Good Luck! Decades later on reading her letter again, her words struck me. She deferred to my youthful experience because I was educated in design. She took my suggestion to add some blue thread, enclosing extra floss in case I needed to make thread button-loops, and said, “I shy away from making plackets.” In hindsight I remember that when her father died from pneumonia, her mother sold the farm and moved with her two daughters into town. Her mother took in sewing to keep the family afloat. Mary knew more about sewing than she let on, but was never one to shine a light on her ability. I heard stories about her sewing the curtains and covering the upholstery when the family project was to refurbish a Volkswagen Camper Van—the Hippie Van— and she sewed garments for herself and her daughter. But that was long before I met her.

 

The last smocked dress that Mary made was a sundress. The hemline circumference on this one is eighty-eight inches. Smocked dresses, intended for special occasions, don’t show signs of wear, because young children grow rapidly and need new clothes for every change of season.

Children gravitate quickly to exploring the world of gathering bugs in the ravine, sand boxes and play forts and painting with mud. The time for fancy dresses is short lived.

Smocking embroidery is a labour intensive needlework art and it’s best to be done when one has time and young children in your life to enjoy it.

 

 

 

 

 

When I had my store I made this door hanger for my business. The atelier is OPEN!

For my on-line Handmade Shop, I’m working on hand and machine embroidered brooches on linen fabric.

      

 

      

The colour ways include, orange, pink, blue and grey-ecru with red thread.

Left to right, ecru, pink, green and red French-knots sewn with Perle Cotton outline the edge of each brooch.

Wool and an antique-brass brooch-clasp finish the back. Each brooch measures 4.5 x 2.5 inches.

 

Closing time at the atelier.

9 x 18 inches. Satin stitch embroidery sewn by hand, embroidery floss, cotton, eyelet lace.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

WOOL AND CREPE DE CHINE

SEPTEMBER 17, 2020

We adopted a dog named Scamp! You will see him in the pictures for a feature on my work in the local paper, the  Hamilton Spectator.

Local designer enjoys job’s independence

By Doreen Pitkeathly Spectator Staff

picture, Janice wears feather corduroy pant with silk pullover blouse, asymmetrical bow tied at the neck, c. fall 1981, Hamilton design studio

c. fall 1981 Hamilton design studio

DESIGNER JANICE Colbert doesn’t only believe Hamilton is as good a location as Toronto for designing—she thinks it’s better.

“I’m better off here. Toronto is so big and all the manufacturers are there. The stores are just clogged with people trying to sell their clothing.”

Janice moved her small designing business from Toronto to Hamilton in October of last year and, although the move was for personal reasons, she finds it hasn’t hurt her work one bit.

A graduate of the fashion course at St. Lawrence College in Kingston and a native of Ottawa, Janice has had her own business for about a year and a half.

Instead of custom work, she operates a scaled-down version of what the big tIme designers do. Every season she designs a line of clothing and then goes out and searches for a buyer among the retail stores.

“In my first season I sold 40 outfits. Last season, my second, I sold 250 garments, so I’m happy with the way things are going.”

 

 

Janice estimates that to be successful her seasonal production should total more than 1,000 garments but she’s in no hurry to become that big.

“I figure about 250 garments is my limit, doing all the sewing. I’m getting to the point now where I have to get other people to help me with the sewing.

Janice’s studio is located in the upper floor of her King Street East home. Like any other full-time job, she spends an entire day designing, cutting and sewing and finishing her garments. She has no problem disciplining herself, she says, and enjoys the job’s freedom.

“I like being my own boss. I’m disciplined enough and organized enough to do it. Some people don’t understand how I can, but I enjoy scheduling my own time. I also like selling my ideas to stores and I like shopping for fabric. I think it’s the independence that appeals to me mainly.”

Janice designs for the 18-to-40-year old woman who wants sophisticated, good-looking clothing. Her designs are essentially classic and she keeps her line small with good mix and match ability.

c.fall 1981, Janice wears popular ethnic look, wool blend skirt with matching shawl, her dog Scamp, a Cockapoo is on leash in her backyard

c. fall 1981, popular ethnic look, wool blend skirt with matching shawl

Her fall line features feather corduroy in wine, gray, camel and green in two skirts styles, a walking short and a pant. To wear with the bottoms, Janice has designed a pullover bow blouse, available in natural-coloured raw silk or an elegant print polyester crepe de chine in colours of gray, brown, mauve and wine.

She has also incorporated this fall’s popular ethnic look into a wool blend divided skirt and regular skirt, each with matching shawl, in a brown or wine mixture.

One of Janice’s designing quirks is buttons—she loves them and says they add a little extra to a garment when they’re good quality. On her corduroy pieces all the buttons are real leather, on the blouses, they’re mother of pearl.

The retail price of Janice’s designs is reasonable, ranging from about $55 to $80, depending too on the retailer. Currently her clothing is available at J. Jatel’s in Stoney Creek and Designer Collections in Burlington, as well as Kingston and Gananoque.

“I don’t need a lot of accounts to keep going. I think I can make it, going by my increase in sales already. If it keeps increasing, I’ll be fine. You need to get to a point where you have a few good stores that will buy from you on a regular basis.”

At this point, Janice is turning all of the money she makes back into her business, buying extra machinery and setting up an efficient studio. The financial rewards may not be great but she’s much happier doing this that working in a design factory where most young designers have to get their start.

 

 

 

Gray feather-weight corduroy walking short,

front wrap conceals the front zipper, leather button with loop,

front pleats, slash pockets