15.5.11

Perfectly Suited for Your Bod




Throughout high-school, I was a devoted reader of teen magazines - Seventeen, Cosmogirl!, YM, Ellegirl, J-14, etc. Every Spring/Summer almost all would feature an article detailing tips on 'The Right Suit for Your Body Type." If you are a female whose ever read a fashion magazine you can probably list the body types - pear shaped, hourglass, boyish... after categorizing your body the editors would suggest different suits offered by their advertisers. I no longer read teen magazines and wish I had spent those hours more productively. Especially because it never really seemed like these articles were out of the box in their approach to swimwear.

I'm sure the advice was useful to some people, but I never was satisfied with the suggestions. Now that I'm wiser(and I guess older), swimsuits aren't as scary as they used to be. In the early 1900s up until about 1925 swimwear was sewn from wool and if you wore anything that provided less than thigh to neck coverage you were a HUSSY.



Total Sliz.
With the invention of stretchy materials like latex, swim styles evolved. Ladies showed a little more thigh and suits actually echoed the contours of the body.




My favorite suits come from the 1950s - high-cut, flirty pin-up styles. Don't get me wrong I like bikinis - but weren't things a little sexier before the one-piece became two?











Did ladies of the past worry as much about which look best 'suited' them? By the 1950s swimwear became more structured and offered similar support as undergarments. Bikinis and maillots would come with bandeau-style, strapless tops. This is when padding in the bust and modesty panels in the front of suits appeared. By the 60s suits shrunk and became lighter, losing most of the structure that hid bumps and bulges. 



Today we don't have to wear wool suits that cover our nose to knees (some of those 20s suits are cute though!), and we don't have to feel uncomfortable just because an editor thinks you have a pear-shaped body. Unfortunately true vintage suits are often expensive or in unwearable condition. You can make one yourself or many retailers offer retro styles - some of the best are at Anthropologie:
[via.] Anthropologie
My opinion maybe biased but I think you can't go wrong with a retro suit. But the one thing I learned the hard way is the best look for you is something you feel comfortable in.

♡♡ur partner in crime for all time♡♡

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7.4.11

✂Life's a stitch - Retro Bikini

I finished this project a few weeks ago, but hadn't gotten around to taking/posting pictures (this could have something to do with the early spring snow flurries and hail storms - yay Midwest weather!)







Bottoms: front detail

Top: front detail

Bottoms: back detail
After a few attempts I ended up constructing this suit without a pattern, just using intuition and the internet as a guide to retro loveliness. I repurposed fabrics and bought new minimal materials, bringing this look in way under the $150+ versions I saw online.


Cost 
blue material (repurposed  lycra men's shirt) - $4.50 Rag-o-Rama
striped material (repurposed lycra panties) - $1.50 
Ric-Rac trim - $0.97 - JoAnn Fabrics
Thread - $3.50 JoAnn Fabrics
Support material (repurposed strapless bra) - free
= $10.47 Total!


Re-purposed shirt after removing the sleeves.


The suit took about 2 weekend days to construct but will probably be a lot faster next time since I have a better concept concerning construction. I haven't taken a plunge yet, but I will report back on how the suit holds up. I've always been more of a sun bather/wader and this suit is not built for laps in the pool :)

I will definitely be making another retro style suit - I loves the look and elegance of a pin-up style two-piece instead of Victoria's Secret string bikini, and the high-waist makes me feel like I can enjoy a sandwich in the sand. The next version will be a one-piece strapless sailor themed suit.
Searching the seas for inspiration?

If you're interested in making your own retro suit here are some internet resources that got me started - http://www.burdastyle.com/patterns/alison
Don't forget to visit your local fabric store for questions and advice! Also feel free to drop me a line.


In my next Life's A Stitch installment I'll be showing off some of the items I've repurposed so far this year.

Can't wait for sunny days to arrive!
XoXo - Funny Bunny

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14.1.11

Sew when can i go swimming?

Currently listening - Bikini Kill The Singles [mediafire.]



Vintage 30s swimsuit pattern [via.]

Beyond denim pants I can't think of something that needs to fit better than a swimsuit. I have found a few I like online, but I'm reluctant to sink $100 into swimwear. What's a girl to do? I'll make this sew easy for you - 


Life's a stitch.

I want to do a high-waisted one piece. 50s styled, no skirt. Add a few buttons and an anchor? Perhaps a sailor-hat when I'm kicking it at the pool? There are some really cute patterns at Heavens to Betsy but most of the ones I like sold out.
1940s style high waist culotte shorts



Alas, no bathing cap pattern included.
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I found a pattern on burdastyle.com that seams (haha, sewing puns!) to be perfect. I'll need to figure out mods to make it a two piece, but its sew-no problem.

Variation on alison pattern from burdastyle.com

I am a very slow sewer so I assume it will be the season for this sort of thing by the time I'm done. Stay tuned for updates.

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