Oneal is back with another costuming project for me. He is attending a
Dr. Who theme wedding and wants to go as Captain John Hart from the spinoff “Torchwood.”
I asked, “Who?”
He said, “Yes.”
I asked again, “Captain Who?”
He said, “No, Dr. Who. Captain John Hart.”
Before I could open my mouth again, he showed me the online photos of
Captain John Hart. He said that’s the jacket he wants to wear to the wedding.
Oneal said he will look for a jacket of the same color and texture and
I can just convert it. Add the braid and buttons accessories, and adjust the
collar and sleeves.
Easy as pie. If he can bring me the jacket (so I won’t have to make one
from scratch), I’ll do the required renovations.
The search for the jacket took a few weekend trips to where jackets are
sold. Remotely, he consulted with me on the options he found.
One had black sleeves, one looked like salmon, one looked like
eggplant. We agreed on the maroon corduroy. I could make it work.
Next was the search for the braid material, or technically, the
soutache. And the brass buttons. After total fails at several sewing stores, he
landed at Carolina’s where they had these fancy options:
Since it was going to be a wedding anyway, we agreed to use the white one
with the silver trim (but without glitter or crystals). Here’s our messaging
about the soutache and buttons.
He ended up buying a whole roll of the soutache (60+ feet) and the store's entire stash of gold buttons (a dozen more than we needed).
With all the materials available, I went to work. Digging through the sewing accessories I hauled from the US, I determined that the best way to work with the soutache is with a sticky stabilizer and fusing tape. Keeping an eye on the reference photo, I estimated the size and shape of the area the soutache will cover and cut a paper pattern.
With all the materials available, I went to work. Digging through the sewing accessories I hauled from the US, I determined that the best way to work with the soutache is with a sticky stabilizer and fusing tape. Keeping an eye on the reference photo, I estimated the size and shape of the area the soutache will cover and cut a paper pattern.
This part required a lot of patience but the result was remarkable!
The next step was to sew the soutache onto the jacket. Two straight
lines for now, just to hold the panel in place. Final stitching will be done
after the fitting.
Oneal went searching again, this time for dark blue corduroy material
that I will use for the sleeves and collar. But his search was a bust, so I
said, “How about I use a blue microfiber that I have in my fabric stash? I will
show you.”
This was the jacket Oneal tried for a final fitting. Just a few
buttons, and pins all over the place.
The jacket passed the fitting.
Achievement unlocked!
Here’s Oneal at the wedding, with his wife wearing the project in my
next blog entry.
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