I crocheted a dress in the 70s when I was about 14. It was awesome, really fashionable 😆 but it wasn’t as holey . And I wore a slip under it. It was lilac. Sadly, when my brother got married, his bride was encouraged (forced) to wear a wedding dress crocheted by her granny. That was in 1980, when it wasn’t fashionable. It was also mid summer, so really hot. They’re still married so it wasn’t all that bad I guess.
Omg I know someone who got married in a crocheted dress....in like 1998. I think her aunt had made it for her. I don't know if it was a forced or desired look. 😂 However, she looked like a vintage toilet paper cover doll. It was made with something at least DK weight and it stretched throughout the day. I laughed about it because I didn't like her.....that's a long story. 😂
I crocheted a pair of shorts and matching bra top - single and half double crochet, three colors. Got a million compliments, but refused to ever do it again.
We used to line the crochet dress. Much like you made the slip except we would sew it on to the crochet dress. I think your. pink crochet dress is very cute and it looks great on you.
some 25 years ago I was walking past a charity shop I'd never seen before, and never saw again, and decided to go in and have a look. One of the things I found was a black kneelength crochet dress (cotton) and I decided to try it on just for a laugh (not a fan of crochet clothes) to find it fit me perfectly which was a shock (as nothing ever does) so I bought it. For the next 10 years it was my very versatile little black dress that I modded for any occation by using a black slip/pink slip/lavender slip - you get the idea. When I moved to Mexico I decided it was time to let it go and find a new home (as it is faaaar too hot to wear in this climate), but I've never forgotten it, and, truth be told, I've regretted ever since. I hope it's new owner loved it as much as I did.
When I was a young mum in the 60’s, I crocheted a pink mini dress and decorated it with overlarge pink sequins. Looking back it was almost indecent. I always wore tights in those days so wore it a lot for family parties. 😱 I loved it and had a photo taken with my baby daughter on my lap. I cringe now but it was perfectly normal in those day. Happy times. 😂
This is good to know because so far I've disliked anything I've crocheted with aran weight yarn, especially if it's acrylic; lumpy, itchy, and miserable feeling when worn. I've taken to knitting apparel, but as I still enjoy crochet, I'll try this next time I take on a project in crochet.
My mum desperately wanted a crochet dress like that as a teen, but couldn't afford one, so her granny offered to make her one. Well, her granny was born in the 1890's, and so completely agreed with you that crochet dresses were obscene, except her solution was to make it with a really really tight crochet pattern to make sure it didn't have any holes in it 🤣. My mum was still disappointed 40 years later.
Very cute on you! You are correct about putting a slip under. We always wore slips or petticoats under our dresses in the 60’s. Gogo boots would be perfect with this. Or green fishnet hose. Plus a matching crochet hat.😀
I also love to crochet. When it came to clothing, I just couldn’t. Then I found a RUclips human who kept popping up in clothing I thought was knitting. It was not! TTDIY has the most clever designs. I still don’t love all of them, but I do like most of them! Her videos are are clear and simple to follow. If you know a bit about crochet, you can create without a written pattern. If you need written instructions, she has them available on Etsy. The best option is buying one of her collections. Make those items and you will then be able to make anything she’s made in a video. She may just change your mind about crochet clothing.
Early in my knitting journey, I found bought a vintage knitting book that had many lacy and see-through items! Many of the models had camisoles on underneath.
My mum made that pattern for my elder sisters when a was little. She lined everything in cotton from the fabric stall on the local market. I thought they were the best dresses ever,so with left over wool I got a striped version lined with a warn cotton sheet 😂😂🤗😘
Actually, the color is perfect for the retro 60's look. It turned out beautifully! If you do have a 60's dress party may I suggest bright stockings, ie: pink or psychedelic (multi colored) as we used to say back then. Also a a light colored flat pointy shoe. Huge earrings, pink of course, bright pink lipstick, dramatic eyeliner (cat eyes) and a huge ring on one hand. Haha!!🙂 That would really make it pop!!! My other thought about the dress itself, is that it was too long. I think 2-3 ok inches above the knee was standard back then. Thanks for making this. I appreciate it a great deal.
You look quite lovely in this dress despite not liking crochet clothing. I would shorten the hem to fall a couple of inches above your knees. I was a knitter, but my cousin crocheted and she guided me through an aqua crochet dress with a lacy pattern that required a slip. The dress was quite easy and quick to make and a favorite of mine. I still have that dress but it’s no longer my present size. Loved your video ❤.
This reminds me of a sweater I had in high school. It also draped a bit weird but had nice bell sleeves. It looked better with a wide belt, but I hate the feel of belts, so I generally wore it without. Wasn't a favorite and wasn't very warm, but it still got worn a fair amount despite that. Oddly enough, it was real crochet but bought from a shop. Looking back, I worry about the working conditions of whoever made it :(
Sometimes done is better than perfect 🥰 That is up there with my wife's favourite "better is the enemy of good " Thanks for showing that we all err, even the experienced. Absolutely love you channel, attitude and sense of humour 👏
I'm also not a fan of crocheted garments, but this turned out very cute. You're ready for a 60s theme party now! I love that you try new things and take us along.
I don't knit, but I do crochet, and I think with crochet it's much more important to get the right yarn and needle size for the stich you're using. Then, still, there are some things that just will never be the same as with knitting, but it's definitely possible to get a more flowy and lightweight result! Even stretchy/elastic! Maybe not as flowy/stretchy as with knitting, but certainly much more flowy/stretchy than this dress ☺️
As a newbie, it’s weirdly comforting for me to see an experienced sewist like yourself make mistakes like pinning things the wrong way, which I do *often*. Thanks for sharing those foibles. ❤️
As n oldie, I still make mistakes, and am grateful when a vid is posted without the "just do this, and everything will be perfect." I have many plastic bins of projects gone wrong waiting for renewed inspiration.
@@RetroClaude ooh that's a good one! That's the one mistake I haven't made, not from want of trying though. I one sewed both the sleeves into the same armhole, one after the other. To this day I haven't figured out how I managed to do that😂
That is really cute on you! How about really bright tights...chartreuse, yellow, orange...and white boots? And a beret? And pink lipstick! :) Or over a black turtleneck in the winter? Solves the neckline flashing potential! Fun project!
That is a very pretty dress. I'm a crochet collector. Constantly on the lookout for crochet, open cut work embroidery, juiper and the like . crochet and those afore mentioned are works of art. There is yarn crochet, thread crochet that is thin, but the yarn is thicker (great for winter projects).
I knew that dress was going to look SMASHING on you! I'm a crocheter myself, but agree about the clothes in a lot of cases. I like to make smaller projects and home goods, generally. I think if you use some of the softer/finer yarns and specialty stitches you could make a beautiful garment that doesn't have that "granny square" look. Anyway, LOVE IT!
Amazing, how well the dress and lining turned out. I understand how crocheted fabric has a boxy cardboard feel. I made my first crocheted sweater, and that's how it felt. However, I didn't stop there. I crocheted the most comfy, soft, and flowy pullover ever. So, I have realized that a crocheted item has to start with the perfect yarn and go up a hook size. All is possible. That said, I usually knit a pullover.
I ADORE THE FINISHED RESULT!!!! I really do!!! have a hot pink crochet dress, made by my nan, that I wore for my formal baby portrait - when i was 3 yras old. It was 1971. I still have this dress to this day - and so i can honestly say that colour is historically accurate! All my baby clothes then were either knits or crochet. One nan knitted and the other preferred crochet, and was crochet-ing till the day she died at age 91. SO i have abig baby pictore of me just on 3 yrs old in this bright pink crochet dress. The bodice is tightly done, but the skirt of the dress is flared lace. So sweet! and it has draw string on the waist with pom poms at its ends!
As a teenager from the 60's I would have loved the crochet dress and the pink yarn was absolutely perfect 🥰 Now in my 70's I still crochet sweaters, knee high socks and lots of blankets 🥰 I'm going to try and find the crochet dress pattern, so I can make it 😍 I still have that exact dress pattern 😂
I wonder if adding fuchsia ribbon as a 'belt' at the underbust line of the crochet dress might help stabilize the dress a bit and anchor it to the body at that point. Maybe adding another ribbon in the holes nearest the neckline to essentially gather then slightly would also resolve some of the fit issues in that area. You could also add ribbon at the sleeves and hem to coordinate it all together and make it look more intentional. The 'lumpy' nature of the fabric is due to it being in that weird penumbra between floopy and stiff, so you might as well make the dress more stiff. You can't make it more floopy.
I learned to crochet first, and like you, I didn't like the way they looked, end result-wise. And I would see knit garments that had that beautiful finished look I wanted. So, I self-taught how to knit, and as I'm watching this, I'm in the middle of my second knit sweater. I never imagined I'd say I LOVE knitting over crochet. I'm thankful I know to crochet, and there are things I choose to crochet, over knit, so really I'm thankful to know both.
I'm a crochet designer and I don't like how some crochet stitches look in garments, so I use other stitch patterns to change the look. I've just designed a cable hoodie that I'll be releasing the pattern for soon
@@RetroClaude that's why I've just designed the hoodie. I couldn't find what I liked or wanted, so did it myself. I can't do that with knitting tho. I have to follow knitting patterns. I just wish the knitting patterns didn't assume you knew what the abbreviations mean, in particular vintage patterns. I'm self taught at knitting and struggle to understand patterns sometimes
18:01 To save fabric and/or time you can cut the binding on grain if the area you are binding is straight or close to it. Bias cut binding is great for curves but can take up a lot of fabric and require a lot of piecing if make from scaps. I have even cut off grain but not true bias pieces when in a pinch to get enough length and with for my binding piece and it came out fine.
Look up how quilters make bias binding. It's truly amazing how many yards of binding are in a smallish square of fabric. I made matching dresses for my sister and myself, and I wanted a coordinating fabric for bias binding around the neckline, sleeves, and the very full skirts; there was a little less than half a yard of the coordinating fabric. I asked Mom if she had any more of it somewhere in her stash, and she said she didn't, and why did I need more? At this point, the dresses were very close to being completed. I explained my wish for the bias binding. Mom said that there was plenty of fabric! Just leave the dresses with her while I went to work for a 4 hour shift, and I could pick them up on my way home. The dresses were finished, and there was enough bias left to make coordinating hair bows! As an example, a 26 inch square yields more than 370 inches of 1.5 inch wide binding. That's more than enough to binding for a 90x90 inch quilt! Quilts don't always require bias binding unless the quilt has curved edges, but leave it to those mathemetician quilters to figure out a way to turn a square into yards! 😊
I prefer the look of knitted garments too, although my interest in learning to crochet is for lace and amigurumi. Those bell sleeves do look fun! Have you considered putting a magnet on your whiteboard and seeing if the metal end of your quick unpick tool will stick to it? You could put some magnetic tape on the handle or lid if it doesn't stick on it's own. Then it would be nearby but out of the way 🙂
I know I'm only one viewer, but I'd argue that if the previous slips you made from a pattern don't suit your needs for this dress, then making it will be different enough to make a video from. Heck, I'd probably watch multiple videos of you making the same thing from the same pattern if that's what you wanted to, but I appreciate that doesn't appease The Algorithm. Either way, I'm glad it led to this perfect confluence of pattern and fabric and so on. I also love to see you continue to practice compassionate goals and approaches to sewing in general (re: not pressing fabric before cutting because pressing is hard).
As someone suggested if you run a chain of yarn close to the neckline edge you can tighten the neck edge to keep it snug to the body. Or on the underside of the neck edge run elastic thread around the neckline edge making it invisible the onlooker! It is a beautiful dress! The dress coloe is not ho5 pink hot pink was more pink! That is fushia which was another very popular color in the1960's.
Back in the day, I made a sky blue crocheted poncho. It was made of a super soft yarn in granny squares. It had a pull tie at the top to sinch it in and fringe on the bottom. It was my all time favorite garmet, so soft and flowy, it's all about the yarn you start with. Thanks for the memories 💜
Love everything about this video - the dress colour and pattern, the slip construction process, the music in the background! I recently gave away my only crochet dress, similarly scandalous to this one (although not so wonderfully PINK!), and now I kinda regret it...
My mother used to crochet skirt and dresses for us and you always wore a slip under them and sometimes she built them in in a similar color...very stylish and comfortable.
Being that I was a teen in the 60’s, your dress is awesome! I agree with others who have said it should have been shorter but wearing a slip under it is perfect and what we would have done. The black stockings are “off” - should be sheer. It seems like the neckline is just a wee bit big on you. I’m wondering if you would be happier with the neckline if you did another row or two of single crochet around it followed by a finishing row of reverse single crochet. I would have worn this dress happily in the 60’s!
Oh, binding the edges of the zipper if you can't encase them in the seam itself is genius, thanks for the tip! Also I think you do look lovely in that dress, but I understand the neckline struggle haha
My mother wore a similar crochet top in the late 60s/early 70s with absolutely nothing underneath. I was very young so hadn't really noticed this, but do remember that she attracted a lot of attention going through border crossing from Mexico back into the United States. As you may know, clothing in the 60s was generally far more stiff and structured than it is now.
I don't know if you are still taking name suggestions but I'd throw out Beryl if you still are. I feel like she needs a vintage name, Beryl the Bernina adds a touch of alliteration, and as a nice bonus she would share the same name as my Nan (who was a wonderful woman that crafted with me as a child and also lived an amazing life of adventure and compassion).
What a great video, this had me smiling a lot. It bought back memories of a crochet dress that I was looking forward to wearing in spring/summer of 1969 as it was being made for me by a work colleague. I never got around to wearing it as halfway through I found that I was expecting my first baby. It ended up being put away for another day which incidentally never came. I think that it eventually was donated to a charity shop. Happy days and happy memories. 😂
So I had to go back and watch this video again after watching your paint by numbers video, love the solution of the slip, but I know crochet garments won't be my cup of tea. I have tried to crochet a couple of summer tops, but they have been frogged as I didn't enjoy the stiffnes of the fabric. Love the knitted jackets you are wearing in this video! The green one looks like a fun knit do do.
Have you tried tunisian crochet yet? It can give a drapier fabric with a bit of swatching. I find that matching the hook size and the yarn size recommendation makes for a very very dense fabric but going up in hook size gives a nice fabric. Not quite like a knitted fabric but stretchier and generally less dense than a crocheted fabric.
It's really cute! Running some elastic thread through the neckline would help to cinch it in and keep it from gaping. I would go with matching lipstick because I'm dramatic like that.
I don't usually crochet clothes either. I imagine the dress you made to go under your crochet dress was probably made by several women back in the 60s too. Your fabric was a fabulous match. You might be able to sew some sort of hem tape to the inside of the collar of the crochet dress to keep it from stretching out. The two-piece outfit is fun. Great job!
Oh I actually like the dress. And me being me would have bought/made one of them vest top like dresses (body hugging but not creeping up things) 5-10 cm shorter then the dress in a contrasting color. Like the text markers you buy, bright fluo/neo green, yellow, orange or blue. Think that would work. Also it looks perfect for throwing over a bikini/swimsuit when you don't really want to walk around in your swimsuit but going back to your seat or sunbed in a short time. So many uses for this lovely dress.
I love this dress! And it suits you very much. 🙂 When I steam iron the crochet fabric slightly, it gets a bit more flowy and it makes such a difference!
Pro tip 🤗 use a hook a couple sizes up from what the ball band says to use & you'll get a more flowing & drape fabric for crocheting clothes ☺️ love the color btw 😁
@@RetroClaude you're welcome 😁 another pro tip for ya 🤗 single crochet & slip sts are usually tighter then the rest so using a half or a whole hook size bigger then for a double crochet, that'll help keep you're project nice & flowy 😁 so sometimes I use 2 hook sizes for a garment project 🤗
Yes we had slips that were a lot like some dresses women were out today. Even if our dresses not see through it was custom to wear slips to cover underwear. Same way men always wore undershirts. My dad never wore a shirt in his life without the underwear graded tshirts. No ome went out without slips! Poly and cotton. Even chamise were sold since 40s on up meant to layer!
I crocheted a dress in the 70s when I was about 14. It was awesome, really fashionable 😆 but it wasn’t as holey . And I wore a slip under it. It was lilac. Sadly, when my brother got married, his bride was encouraged (forced) to wear a wedding dress crocheted by her granny. That was in 1980, when it wasn’t fashionable. It was also mid summer, so really hot. They’re still married so it wasn’t all that bad I guess.
What a story! 🤣
Omg I know someone who got married in a crocheted dress....in like 1998. I think her aunt had made it for her. I don't know if it was a forced or desired look. 😂 However, she looked like a vintage toilet paper cover doll. It was made with something at least DK weight and it stretched throughout the day. I laughed about it because I didn't like her.....that's a long story. 😂
@@MrsBrit1 OMG, my Nan used to make those dolls from plastic bread bags. She also made me sweater vests from crocheted granny squares.
I crocheted a pair of shorts and matching bra top - single and half double crochet, three colors. Got a million compliments, but refused to ever do it again.
We used to line the crochet dress. Much like you made the slip except we would sew it on to the crochet dress. I think your. pink crochet dress is very cute and it looks great on you.
some 25 years ago I was walking past a charity shop I'd never seen before, and never saw again, and decided to go in and have a look. One of the things I found was a black kneelength crochet dress (cotton) and I decided to try it on just for a laugh (not a fan of crochet clothes) to find it fit me perfectly which was a shock (as nothing ever does) so I bought it.
For the next 10 years it was my very versatile little black dress that I modded for any occation by using a black slip/pink slip/lavender slip - you get the idea. When I moved to Mexico I decided it was time to let it go and find a new home (as it is faaaar too hot to wear in this climate), but I've never forgotten it, and, truth be told, I've regretted ever since. I hope it's new owner loved it as much as I did.
The tip of your iron looks like it has a little mouse face on it, the red light being the nose, it's absolutely adorable
When I was a young mum in the 60’s, I crocheted a pink mini dress and decorated it with overlarge pink sequins. Looking back it was almost indecent. I always wore tights in those days so wore it a lot for family parties. 😱 I loved it and had a photo taken with my baby daughter on my lap. I cringe now but it was perfectly normal in those day. Happy times. 😂
There's a trick to making crocheted clothing - use a smaller size yarn and a larger hook size to make make the fabric more flowy .
Thanks for the tip I'll remember that next time!
I second this piece of advice. My aunt made me crocheted dresses when I was a child. She used fine yarn.
@@sophie1301 Mine too - i have so many childhood dresses that were all crochet!
This is good to know because so far I've disliked anything I've crocheted with aran weight yarn, especially if it's acrylic; lumpy, itchy, and miserable feeling when worn. I've taken to knitting apparel, but as I still enjoy crochet, I'll try this next time I take on a project in crochet.
Yes, and the type of yarn makes a huge difference. I’m making a sweater now with a lightweight bamboo/cotton blend and it’s so soft!
My mum desperately wanted a crochet dress like that as a teen, but couldn't afford one, so her granny offered to make her one. Well, her granny was born in the 1890's, and so completely agreed with you that crochet dresses were obscene, except her solution was to make it with a really really tight crochet pattern to make sure it didn't have any holes in it 🤣. My mum was still disappointed 40 years later.
Very cute on you! You are correct about putting a slip under. We always wore slips or petticoats under our dresses in the 60’s. Gogo boots would be perfect with this. Or green fishnet hose. Plus a matching crochet hat.😀
I do remember those dresses. Yes, you had to wear another slip dress or something under it. Me, I never even attempted to wear one. 😁😁👋👋💖💖
I also love to crochet. When it came to clothing, I just couldn’t. Then I found a RUclips human who kept popping up in clothing I thought was knitting. It was not! TTDIY has the most clever designs. I still don’t love all of them, but I do like most of them! Her videos are are clear and simple to follow. If you know a bit about crochet, you can create without a written pattern. If you need written instructions, she has them available on Etsy. The best option is buying one of her collections. Make those items and you will then be able to make anything she’s made in a video. She may just change your mind about crochet clothing.
Leaving a comment to make the algorithm happy for you!
Early in my knitting journey, I found bought a vintage knitting book that had many lacy and see-through items! Many of the models had camisoles on underneath.
My mum made that pattern for my elder sisters when a was little. She lined everything in cotton from the fabric stall on the local market. I thought they were the best dresses ever,so with left over wool I got a striped version lined with a warn cotton sheet 😂😂🤗😘
that hot pink is my favorite color!!!!!
Actually, the color is perfect for the retro 60's look. It turned out beautifully! If you do have a 60's dress party may I suggest bright stockings, ie: pink or psychedelic (multi colored) as we used to say back then. Also a a light colored flat pointy shoe. Huge earrings, pink of course, bright pink lipstick, dramatic eyeliner (cat eyes) and a huge ring on one hand. Haha!!🙂 That would really make it pop!!! My other thought about the dress itself, is that it was too long. I think 2-3 ok inches above the knee was standard back then. Thanks for making this. I appreciate it a great deal.
You look quite lovely in this dress despite not liking crochet clothing. I would shorten the hem to fall a couple of inches above your knees. I was a knitter, but my cousin crocheted and she guided me through an aqua crochet dress with a lacy pattern that required a slip. The dress was quite easy and quick to make and a favorite of mine. I still have that dress but it’s no longer my present size. Loved your video ❤.
I totally remember wearing crochet dresses in the 60's when I was a kid! Yours turned out so groovy!
The dress looks really nice on you. Your description of the experience is priceless. 🙂
This reminds me of a sweater I had in high school. It also draped a bit weird but had nice bell sleeves. It looked better with a wide belt, but I hate the feel of belts, so I generally wore it without. Wasn't a favorite and wasn't very warm, but it still got worn a fair amount despite that. Oddly enough, it was real crochet but bought from a shop. Looking back, I worry about the working conditions of whoever made it :(
I came here from your paint by numbers video! Already watched this when it came out but I'm going to watch it again.
Sometimes done is better than perfect 🥰 That is up there with my wife's favourite "better is the enemy of good " Thanks for showing that we all err, even the experienced. Absolutely love you channel, attitude and sense of humour 👏
I love the colour. The slip is lovely, too. Perhaps a little hat elastic around the neckline will help?
That dress is perfection!
I 💗💗💗 it!!!
I'm also not a fan of crocheted garments, but this turned out very cute. You're ready for a 60s theme party now!
I love that you try new things and take us along.
I like that flashy pink. Pretty on you.
I don't knit, but I do crochet, and I think with crochet it's much more important to get the right yarn and needle size for the stich you're using. Then, still, there are some things that just will never be the same as with knitting, but it's definitely possible to get a more flowy and lightweight result! Even stretchy/elastic! Maybe not as flowy/stretchy as with knitting, but certainly much more flowy/stretchy than this dress ☺️
As a newbie, it’s weirdly comforting for me to see an experienced sewist like yourself make mistakes like pinning things the wrong way, which I do *often*. Thanks for sharing those foibles. ❤️
Oh yes, I've been sewing for 14 years now and I still do things like sew the sleeves into the neck opening 😂
As n oldie, I still make mistakes, and am grateful when a vid is posted without the "just do this, and everything will be perfect." I have many plastic bins of projects gone wrong waiting for renewed inspiration.
@@RetroClaude ooh that's a good one! That's the one mistake I haven't made, not from want of trying though. I one sewed both the sleeves into the same armhole, one after the other. To this day I haven't figured out how I managed to do that😂
We used to wear slips... very useful garments that are nearly impossible to find these days.
I've added crocheted sleeves to knit or sewn tops - best of both worlds 💜
That is really cute on you! How about really bright tights...chartreuse, yellow, orange...and white boots? And a beret? And pink lipstick! :) Or over a black turtleneck in the winter? Solves the neckline flashing potential! Fun project!
Brilliant idea! I'd be a psychedelic groovy chic for sure 😁
That is a very pretty dress. I'm a crochet collector. Constantly on the lookout for crochet, open cut work embroidery, juiper and the like . crochet and those afore mentioned are works of art. There is yarn crochet, thread crochet that is thin, but the yarn is thicker (great for winter projects).
I knew that dress was going to look SMASHING on you! I'm a crocheter myself, but agree about the clothes in a lot of cases. I like to make smaller projects and home goods, generally. I think if you use some of the softer/finer yarns and specialty stitches you could make a beautiful garment that doesn't have that "granny square" look. Anyway, LOVE IT!
It's gorgeous! I think I'd happily wear something like that if there were a good way to include pockets.
You could accommodate pockets in the slip and access through slits in the crochet dress. Or put on small crochet bags.
Amazing, how well the dress and lining turned out. I understand how crocheted fabric has a boxy cardboard feel. I made my first crocheted sweater, and that's how it felt. However, I didn't stop there. I crocheted the most comfy, soft, and flowy pullover ever. So, I have realized that a crocheted item has to start with the perfect yarn and go up a hook size. All is possible. That said, I usually knit a pullover.
I ADORE THE FINISHED RESULT!!!! I really do!!! have a hot pink crochet dress, made by my nan, that I wore for my formal baby portrait - when i was 3 yras old. It was 1971. I still have this dress to this day - and so i can honestly say that colour is historically accurate! All my baby clothes then were either knits or crochet. One nan knitted and the other preferred crochet, and was crochet-ing till the day she died at age 91. SO i have abig baby pictore of me just on 3 yrs old in this bright pink crochet dress. The bodice is tightly done, but the skirt of the dress is flared lace. So sweet! and it has draw string on the waist with pom poms at its ends!
How cute!
top tip for marking sewing lines on floaty fabric. I made some silk boxers and it was a challenge.
i think the dress and slip are really cool!
As a teenager from the 60's I would have loved the crochet dress and the pink yarn was absolutely perfect 🥰 Now in my 70's I still crochet sweaters, knee high socks and lots of blankets 🥰 I'm going to try and find the crochet dress pattern, so I can make it 😍 I still have that exact dress pattern 😂
I wonder if adding fuchsia ribbon as a 'belt' at the underbust line of the crochet dress might help stabilize the dress a bit and anchor it to the body at that point. Maybe adding another ribbon in the holes nearest the neckline to essentially gather then slightly would also resolve some of the fit issues in that area. You could also add ribbon at the sleeves and hem to coordinate it all together and make it look more intentional. The 'lumpy' nature of the fabric is due to it being in that weird penumbra between floopy and stiff, so you might as well make the dress more stiff. You can't make it more floopy.
With a little bow at the front yes very 60s
Great idea
Great idea.
OMG, I am so glad I'm not the only one who's not thrilled with most crochet garments!
I know you said it’s lumpy but you seem very graceful in it 🌺
My grand-ma made that dress for me when I was 13 or 14. She changed the top to make the holes much smaller. I wore it many times
Your hair and make up in the reveal is gorgeous!
Ummmmm, that see through shirt on the pattern though!! SO CUTE!
I learned to crochet first, and like you, I didn't like the way they looked, end result-wise. And I would see knit garments that had that beautiful finished look I wanted. So, I self-taught how to knit, and as I'm watching this, I'm in the middle of my second knit sweater. I never imagined I'd say I LOVE knitting over crochet.
I'm thankful I know to crochet, and there are things I choose to crochet, over knit, so really I'm thankful to know both.
I'm thankful to know both too. I don't think I'd ever want to knit a bedspread!
I'm a crochet designer and I don't like how some crochet stitches look in garments, so I use other stitch patterns to change the look. I've just designed a cable hoodie that I'll be releasing the pattern for soon
I think my limited crochet skills are definitely holding me back from finding designs I like 💚
@@RetroClaude that's why I've just designed the hoodie. I couldn't find what I liked or wanted, so did it myself. I can't do that with knitting tho. I have to follow knitting patterns. I just wish the knitting patterns didn't assume you knew what the abbreviations mean, in particular vintage patterns. I'm self taught at knitting and struggle to understand patterns sometimes
18:01 To save fabric and/or time you can cut the binding on grain if the area you are binding is straight or close to it. Bias cut binding is great for curves but can take up a lot of fabric and require a lot of piecing if make from scaps. I have even cut off grain but not true bias pieces when in a pinch to get enough length and with for my binding piece and it came out fine.
Look up how quilters make bias binding. It's truly amazing how many yards of binding are in a smallish square of fabric. I made matching dresses for my sister and myself, and I wanted a coordinating fabric for bias binding around the neckline, sleeves, and the very full skirts; there was a little less than half a yard of the coordinating fabric. I asked Mom if she had any more of it somewhere in her stash, and she said she didn't, and why did I need more? At this point, the dresses were very close to being completed. I explained my wish for the bias binding. Mom said that there was plenty of fabric! Just leave the dresses with her while I went to work for a 4 hour shift, and I could pick them up on my way home.
The dresses were finished, and there was enough bias left to make coordinating hair bows! As an example, a 26 inch square yields more than 370 inches of 1.5 inch wide binding. That's more than enough to binding for a 90x90 inch quilt! Quilts don't always require bias binding unless the quilt has curved edges, but leave it to those mathemetician quilters to figure out a way to turn a square into yards! 😊
I prefer the look of knitted garments too, although my interest in learning to crochet is for lace and amigurumi. Those bell sleeves do look fun!
Have you considered putting a magnet on your whiteboard and seeing if the metal end of your quick unpick tool will stick to it? You could put some magnetic tape on the handle or lid if it doesn't stick on it's own. Then it would be nearby but out of the way 🙂
I know I'm only one viewer, but I'd argue that if the previous slips you made from a pattern don't suit your needs for this dress, then making it will be different enough to make a video from. Heck, I'd probably watch multiple videos of you making the same thing from the same pattern if that's what you wanted to, but I appreciate that doesn't appease The Algorithm.
Either way, I'm glad it led to this perfect confluence of pattern and fabric and so on. I also love to see you continue to practice compassionate goals and approaches to sewing in general (re: not pressing fabric before cutting because pressing is hard).
I remember those. They were definitely worn over slips
As someone suggested if you run a chain of yarn close to the neckline edge you can tighten the neck edge to keep it snug to the body. Or on the underside of the neck edge run elastic thread around the neckline edge making it invisible the onlooker!
It is a beautiful dress! The dress coloe is not ho5 pink hot pink was more pink! That is fushia which was another very popular color in the1960's.
You can thread hat elastic or shirring elastic around through the crochet around the neck line.
Back in the day, I made a sky blue crocheted poncho. It was made of a super soft yarn in granny squares. It had a pull tie at the top to sinch it in and fringe on the bottom. It was my all time favorite garmet, so soft and flowy, it's all about the yarn you start with. Thanks for the memories 💜
The poncho sounds amazing! 💚
Fun experiment and at least if you get invited to a 60’s theme party your ready to go!
Wow you are amazing . I could never do that sewing. Glad you survived COVID and that I did too.
I have three unpickers 'cause I always loose them somewhere when working on a sewing project 😁
Love everything about this video - the dress colour and pattern, the slip construction process, the music in the background! I recently gave away my only crochet dress, similarly scandalous to this one (although not so wonderfully PINK!), and now I kinda regret it...
My mother used to crochet skirt and dresses for us and you always wore a slip under them and sometimes she built them in in a similar color...very stylish and comfortable.
I see this as something to wear over your swim suit going to the beach.... done in a soft cotton yarn.
Being that I was a teen in the 60’s, your dress is awesome! I agree with others who have said it should have been shorter but wearing a slip under it is perfect and what we would have done. The black stockings are “off” - should be sheer. It seems like the neckline is just a wee bit big on you. I’m wondering if you would be happier with the neckline if you did another row or two of single crochet around it followed by a finishing row of reverse single crochet. I would have worn this dress happily in the 60’s!
Oh, binding the edges of the zipper if you can't encase them in the seam itself is genius, thanks for the tip!
Also I think you do look lovely in that dress, but I understand the neckline struggle haha
My mother wore a similar crochet top in the late 60s/early 70s with absolutely nothing underneath. I was very young so hadn't really noticed this, but do remember that she attracted a lot of attention going through border crossing from Mexico back into the United States.
As you may know, clothing in the 60s was generally far more stiff and structured than it is now.
I think it’s really pretty, despite the issues you had. At least you got to rediscover the wonders of bell sleeves!
Such a fun dress and you look so cool in it. Much cooler than you imagine.
Slips were a must up till 90's
Vintage/antique crochet is my passion. Love the dress.
I don't know if you are still taking name suggestions but I'd throw out Beryl if you still are. I feel like she needs a vintage name, Beryl the Bernina adds a touch of alliteration, and as a nice bonus she would share the same name as my Nan (who was a wonderful woman that crafted with me as a child and also lived an amazing life of adventure and compassion).
What a great video, this had me smiling a lot. It bought back memories of a crochet dress that I was looking forward to wearing in spring/summer of 1969 as it was being made for me by a work colleague. I never got around to wearing it as halfway through I found that I was expecting my first baby. It ended up being put away for another day which incidentally never came. I think that it eventually was donated to a charity shop. Happy days and happy memories. 😂
You do look very cute in this dress! Great color, it is very professional looking! Well done :-)
So I had to go back and watch this video again after watching your paint by numbers video, love the solution of the slip, but I know crochet garments won't be my cup of tea. I have tried to crochet a couple of summer tops, but they have been frogged as I didn't enjoy the stiffnes of the fabric. Love the knitted jackets you are wearing in this video! The green one looks like a fun knit do do.
Have you tried tunisian crochet yet? It can give a drapier fabric with a bit of swatching. I find that matching the hook size and the yarn size recommendation makes for a very very dense fabric but going up in hook size gives a nice fabric. Not quite like a knitted fabric but stretchier and generally less dense than a crocheted fabric.
It's really cute! Running some elastic thread through the neckline would help to cinch it in and keep it from gaping.
I would go with matching lipstick because I'm dramatic like that.
that actually looks really good on you! the slip is really nice.
Love that green cardigan!
I don't usually crochet clothes either. I imagine the dress you made to go under your crochet dress was probably made by several women back in the 60s too. Your fabric was a fabulous match. You might be able to sew some sort of hem tape to the inside of the collar of the crochet dress to keep it from stretching out. The two-piece outfit is fun. Great job!
That green top is perfect.
Oh I actually like the dress. And me being me would have bought/made one of them vest top like dresses (body hugging but not creeping up things) 5-10 cm shorter then the dress in a contrasting color. Like the text markers you buy, bright fluo/neo green, yellow, orange or blue. Think that would work. Also it looks perfect for throwing over a bikini/swimsuit when you don't really want to walk around in your swimsuit but going back to your seat or sunbed in a short time. So many uses for this lovely dress.
I admire your perseverance! Turned out great.
You can always add lace along the bottom for coverage. Super cute!😊
The combination of the two, is really cute.🌹
Lol I love everything about this dress. However I have been told on multiple occasions my taste is quite eccentric. 😋
Hi Claude
About to start on an adjustment of one of my new favorite dresses
Love the sweater your wearing ❤
It looks fab! And should be cosy in winter. 💖
Tip: what ever you are easing in, put the piece that needs easing on the bottom, the teeth under the foot will naturally grab the fabric
I love this dress! And it suits you very much. 🙂
When I steam iron the crochet fabric slightly, it gets a bit more flowy and it makes such a difference!
It's relaxing to watch you sew, I can see how much you love this craft 😊
Ooh I love crochet sometimes. It makes such nice squishy items. I've never used it for a dress though, I do love how yours came out
I learned to always try on my pattern. No exact of course, but in the ballpark.
Pro tip 🤗 use a hook a couple sizes up from what the ball band says to use & you'll get a more flowing & drape fabric for crocheting clothes ☺️ love the color btw 😁
Thank you! That makes a lot of sense 😊
@@RetroClaude you're welcome 😁 another pro tip for ya 🤗 single crochet & slip sts are usually tighter then the rest so using a half or a whole hook size bigger then for a double crochet, that'll help keep you're project nice & flowy 😁 so sometimes I use 2 hook sizes for a garment project 🤗
I totally agree with your thoughts on crochet versus knitting. I know how to crochet but I just like the looks and feel of a knit item better.
It's adorable! Well done you!
This is such a good haircut on you!
I love hearing that I’m not the only one who has had to re do all sorts of sewing, which is why I don’t sew now. I did love it much.
My gran crocheted my sisters dresses like these. Everyone still wore slips / underskirts in the 60s.
Yes we had slips that were a lot like some dresses women were out today. Even if our dresses not see through it was custom to wear slips to cover underwear. Same way men always wore undershirts. My dad never wore a shirt in his life without the underwear graded tshirts. No ome went out without slips! Poly and cotton. Even chamise were sold since 40s on up meant to layer!
wow!! i love the finished ensemble--it's just gorgeous and very becoming! :)
I think it looks great on you Claude, job well done!
I know you were uncomfortable with it, but you still rocked it!
It is very cute! Well done!