I sewed this nightie for my wife for Valentine's Day. Of course, I bought her one from Macy's as a backup---some risks aren't worth taking.
I used primarily a video by GiannyL as a basis. However, I made some modifications---I made the spaghetti straps myself out of the same material, and my wife wasn't interested in any lace trim.
How does it compare to store-bought night gown?
The neck curve puckered a little because I didn't notch it. |
You could probably buy a comparable garment for $25-50. I spent $20, and ten hours. The looks are comparable. My seams are imperfect, but if you don't look closely you wouldn't notice, and when my wife is wearing it I have better things to look at. I suspect my garment is "sturdier" --- but who needs a sturdy nightgown? The one advantage is that I did get to choose precisely the color I wanted. My wife is a redhead and looks great in royal blue. The "satin" is really polyester with a shiny side and a less shiny side. The less shiny side is a little coarse to be against skin, so I made this harder than GiannyL's construction by using a French seam on the sides.
A French seam runs up the side, but the bottom doesn't need it. |
What I Learned
- I need to research fabric more. Satin looks nice, but isn't really a great fabric for sleepwear.
- Sewing curves perfectly requires cutting notches or some other technique that I have yet to master.
- Satin has zero give. You have to fit it perfectly. Luckily, I was able to do that.
- I tried to make this with a fitted waist as GiannyL shows. But my wife's bust is a few inches bigger than her waist. I made the first model to my wife's waist size, and she couldn't get the waist over her bust. I know this must be obvious to any woman, but now I understand why a standard tight-fitting woman's dress has a zipper in the back: otherwise you can't put it on! That is really the difference between this garment and a cocktail dress. To make a dress, I would take in the waist and add a zipper. Instead, I cut it completely straight down the sides, so basically the waist is the same size as the bust.
- You can fix things with a seam ripper---but not using the kind of thread I was using with short stitch on satin. It was impossible to unpick a seam in this situation.
- Taking body measurements work, but with this fabric, you have to be very precise.
- Sometimes the garment ends up looking good even when you do a poor job with the details.
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