Chamomile Crop Dress

Introducing the Chamomile Dress — a flowy pattern addition to the Chamomile Crop.

It is flowy like a wildflower in the field and it has pockets to hold all the essentials of life — lip balm, keys, little rocks you fall in love with on walks along streams, money for buying little chocolates and paying parking meters, tampons, and other necessities. They are big pockets.

The skirt can be made long or short — you should probably make at least one in each length to cover all the options :)

Billowing gathers, confident lines. It’s a perfect summer dress.

Chamomile Dress Sewing Pattern - Sarah Kirsten
Chamomile Dress Sewing Pattern - Sarah Kirsten
Chamomile Dress Sewing Pattern - Sarah Kirsten
Chamomile Dress Sewing Pattern - Sarah Kirsten
Chamomile Dress Sewing Pattern - Sarah Kirsten
Chamomile Dress Sewing Pattern - Sarah Kirsten
Chamomile Dress Sewing Pattern - Sarah Kirsten
Chamomile Dress Sewing Pattern - Sarah Kirsten
Chamomile Dress Sewing Pattern - Sarah Kirsten
Chamomile Dress Sewing Pattern - Sarah Kirsten
Chamomile Dress Sewing Pattern - Sarah Kirsten
Chamomile Dress Sewing Pattern - Sarah Kirsten

Interviewed by Fabrics-Store.com

I had the big honor of being interviewed by Fabrics-Store.com to start of 2020 with a bang! They sent me a few yards of this beautiful, bright, heavyweight softened linen Marigold fabric along with some brilliant interview questions.

I tell the story about my unconventional upbringing, why not living around a lot of people is good for me, and why I’m so passionate about sewing.

Here’s an excerpt:

Somehow when we are disconnected from the process of creating clothes, we receive the message that the clothes we buy are the “right” version of how a body should be, and our bodies are the “wrong” version. It feels like it’s something we need to fix in order to be beautiful, to have worth even. When you start sewing, you recognize that clothes are mere shapes of fabric cut and sewn together. There is no “right” and “wrong” shape. It starts to dawn on you deep within. It wells up in an indomitable force of confidence, the realization that your body is perfect. Right and wrong simply doesn’t exist.

Rosemary Wrap Sew Along

Oh the elegance of wrapping yourself up in fabric. The Rosemary Wrap pattern is meant to be among the simplest forms of clothing, the form of wrapping yourself up in fabric, but in a way that hugs your beautiful curves.

Let’s dive in.

Sew the waist ties with right sides together and sew along the short end. 3/8” (1 cm) seam allowance. Press the seam open, then set aside the waist tie for now.

Sarah Kirsten Rosemary Wrap Sew Along
Sarah Kirsten Rosemary Wrap Sew Along

Sew all four darts. Press the outside darts out and the inside darts in.

Sarah Kirsten Rosemary Wrap Sew Along
Sarah Kirsten Rosemary Wrap Sew Along

Serge or zigzag stitch all the way around the sides and bottom of the skirt. Fold it toward the right side 1/4” (6 mm) and press. The curved hem version of this skit has the hem visible on the outside as a design detail. If you are using fabric that you would rather not show the wrong side, you can press the hem toward the wrong side.

Sarah Kirsten Rosemary Wrap Sew Along
Sarah Kirsten Rosemary Wrap Sew Along

Fold the hem again 1/4” (6 mm) toward the right side and press. Edge stitch along the entire length of the hem.

Sarah Kirsten Rosemary Wrap Sew Along
Sarah Kirsten Rosemary Wrap Sew Along

For the square hem version, fold up the bottom edge 1/2” (1.3 cm) toward the wrong side and press. Fold up again 1/2” (1.3 cm) and press again.

Sarah Kirsten Rosemary Wrap Sew Along
Sarah Kirsten Rosemary Wrap Sew Along

Edge stitch along the folded edge. Repeat steps to hem both sides of the skirt.

Sarah Kirsten Rosemary Wrap Sew Along
Sarah Kirsten Rosemary Wrap Sew Along

Place the center of the waist tie in the center of the skit with right sides together. Sew along the entire length of the top of the skirt. 3/8” (1 cm) seam allowance.

Sarah Kirsten Rosemary Wrap Sew Along
Sarah Kirsten Rosemary Wrap Sew Along

Fold the tails of the waist ties with right sides together so the edges meet. Sew the entire length of the tails with 3/8 (1 cm) seam allowance. Leave the ends of the tails open.

Sarah Kirsten Rosemary Wrap Sew Along
Sarah Kirsten Rosemary Wrap Sew Along

Turn the tails right side out using a bodkin or safety pin. It will be easier to turn if you grade the seam allowance before turning. Press the tails.

Once the tails are right side out, press the waist tie up, and the seam allowance up toward the waist tie.

Sarah Kirsten Rosemary Wrap Sew Along
IMG_9120.jpg

Fold the top edge of the waist tie down so it meets the seam allowance. Then fold it over again so the bottom folded edge just covers the seam.

Sarah Kirsten Rosemary Wrap Sew Along
Sarah Kirsten Rosemary Wrap Sew Along

From the front of the skirt, stitch right along the seam (stitch in the ditch) and make sure it’s just catching the folded edge of the waist tie on the back side.

Sarah+Kirsten+Rosemary+Wrap+Sew+Along
Sarah Kirsten Rosemary Wrap Sew Along

Fold in the ends of the waist tie tails and sew shut.

Sarah Kirsten Rosemary Wrap Sew Along

The last step is, of course, to wrap yourself up in handmade love and tie a bow in the back. To be worn proudly and confidently in all your feminine glory.

If you don’t have the Rosemary Wrap pattern yet, you can get it here!

Comparing the Philippa Pants and the Dawn Jeans

What a privilege and joy it is to sew our own clothes! Our own pants!

I sewed the Philippa Pants by Anna Allen and the Dawn Jeans by Megan Nielsen in the same denim to compare the look and fit of each. Both are wonderful patterns! They each have good instructions and are an enjoyable sewing experience. It’s a delight to have each of these pants in my wardrobe.

Note that the Philippa Pants pattern has a side seam, but I joined the front and back pattern pieces on this pair and omitted that seam.

The Dawn Jeans pattern has 4 leg options. This is the tapered leg view.

The denim is 12 oz brushed bull denim from the lovely Cloth Story. She still has some in stock if you want to grab it for yourself!

Here are side by side photos of each.

Philippa Pants

The Dawn Jeans vs the Philippa Pants

Dawn Jeans

The Dawn Jeans vs the Philippa Pants
The Dawn Jeans vs the Philippa Pants
The Dawn Jeans vs the Philippa Pants
The Dawn Jeans vs the Philippa Pants
The Dawn Jeans vs the Philippa Pants
The Dawn Jeans vs the Philippa Pants
The Dawn Jeans vs the Philippa Pants

The simple lines and wide fly are what I love about the Philippas. The classic jean look and back yoke are what I love about the Dawns. This is my second pair of each pattern, and I hope to make more!

XOXO

14 Long Sleeve T-Shirt Sewing Patterns for Winter Sewing