So, the inevitable flu has finally caught up on me, spoiling all
plans of celebrating Imbolc, going to
the
gym, or getting some reports done at work. With little else to
entertain me than fumbling what could have been rather spectacular
jumps and moves in Assassin's Creed II on Rick's new Xbox, playing
Spider Solitaire for the umpteenth time and surfing on a rather
unstable internet connection, I have decided to turn my attention to
my next little sewing project.
At the beginning of March, the larp "Broderskapet" ("The
Brotherhood") takes place just outside of Oslo. It's a 18th
century larp about thieves of all sorts (wood bandits, pirates,
highwaymen and society thieves), with a dash of horror and
supernatural elements brought into the mix. Combat; almost
non-existent, intrigue; essential. Quite my cup of tea.
Being given the role as the leader of a clan of wood bandits, I
was relived of the preassure of having to sew all the fineries of the
quintessential 18th century lady in four weeks, however it gave me
the tricky task of deciding what the clanleader of such a motley crew
would indeed be wearing.
Regardless of what conclusion I will arrive at in the end and
although the costume requirements are not at a reenactment level, one
thing is quite clear: no matter her class or occupation, proper stays
would be required. And if you disagree, you have never experienced
the pain of having an F-cup and running/jumping without a bra. ;)
And so, equipped with some black cotton, a grey wool mix, dark
beige cotton canvas and 18 pocket packets of paper tissue, I am
setting out on the adventure of making stays. Being lazy and slightly
short on time, I will be machine sewing some of the seams this time
(if the result is good, I will then have a working pattern for a more
accurate, hand sewn version later). I had previously made a pattern
(with two different solutions for the front), using the cardboard
method described in this
blog,
and cut out the pieces.