I'm glad I had already sewn a cape from this pattern with fleece for Ben. I lined the cape with satin, but I didn't follow the pattern precisely. I essentially made a second cape out of grey satin, where the pattern was excluding front panels for the lining, which I couldn't understand. I used the red side of the wool inside the placket and hood so that it would show (I was afraid that a full red cape would always and forever mean "Little Red Riding Hood" in a tiresome way).
I also made more of a placket for the buttonholes than the pattern directed, but this wool was so plush that keeping it smooth under the presser foot was very tricky. I think I should have used my walking foot when I was sewing double thickness. I would like to pick out one of the placket seams and straighten it out a bit, but I'm worried that I'm going to snip the wool in the process because the stitches are so deep in the plush. Oh well.
Genevieve adores the cape, and (don't tell!) I'm going to make her a muff to go with it. She probably needs a lantern in her hand, too, don't you think? She was hoping I would make it floor-length like Ben's, but I thought it would look so costume-y that she would have to switch her wardrobe to hoop skirts and bonnets.
As it is, if she keeps growing straight up the way she has been doing since toddlerhood, this cape should fit her forever, even as it becomes above-the-knee length.
Wow, what a beautiful cape! Genevieve looks so pleased, and she's beautiful too!
ReplyDeleteOh, my goodness! What a wonderful garment! Maybe we all go through a cape phase - and some of us are lucky enough to have a mother who indulges us. I have a cape and my daughter has a cape... they are just so dramatic!
ReplyDeleteThis is great! And I love her poses in these pictures.
ReplyDeleteDarling! I think I need to make a cape soon. I've been kicking around the idea for a little bit now.
ReplyDelete