Thursday, October 26, 2017

Cafe curtains

"The timeless appeal of cafe curtains."
"Show off your best sewing techniques on cafe curtains."
"Impeccable details make fine cafe curtains."
"A very special pleat showcased on cafe curtains."
"For privacy AND a view, use cafe curtains."
"Cafe curtains, the under-appreciated solution. "
These were all possible titles for this post, but they are too long.  But all of them together comprise a perfect summary.
I was going to write about a different project today, but when Monica Plotka sent photos of these cafe curtains installed, I wanted to post them right away.
The 118" fabric was cut with the stripes running horizontally.  By the most serendipitous chance, the finished length worked out to be exactly the distance between the outer edges of two of the embroidered stripes, which allowed the embroidery to define both the top and the bottom of the curtain.
We used 4" clear fusible buckram from Dofix to reinforce the header, and a 4" bottom hem balances the top.  The embroidery is layered almost exactly over itself, eliminating shadowing. 
A semi-sheer lining from ADO adds body and more privacy.  After the sheer was layered in, the entire curtain was hemmed by hand.
The pleats are tacked by hand with pale grey button thread from Wawak.  The 3-finger pleat is tacked 2" down, right in the middle.  I don't know if this pleat has a name, but I'm calling it a "butterfly pleat." 
Cafe curtains are a great place to show off excellent workmanship.  A special pleat is especially noticed when it's at eye level. 
Cafe curtains afford privacy from the street, but leave the view of the sky and trees.  I wonder why they're not used more often.

There's another detail I wonder if you noticed, too.  The inside of the window frame is painted blue, the wall color.  I love it!  I'm putting this observation at the end of the post to see if anyone reads all the way to the end :) so if you have read to the end, I hope you comment on the inside blue!

Monday, October 16, 2017

Hobbled shades: ribs, no pockets

Several designers I know really love hobbled shades, so I've been making them regularly for years.
I used to dislike making them because the old way required sewing horizontal rib pockets.  The stitching lines had to be heavily pinned for the pockets to turn out well, and that meant ending the work day with scratches, stab wounds, and gouges in our arms and abdomens.  Right?
Also, it's not easy to sew straight lines.  More often than not, the lines want to distort during sewing; and later the ends have to be closed tightly to keep the ribs in.
There are other annoying steps to making a hobbled shade the old way, but the real clincher is, I think they just look cluttered, like this:
So...... over the past 2 years I've been experimenting with ways to eliminate the pockets and other unnecessary steps, and improve the look of the shade.  I have several methods I like now.  In my favorite version, I place ribs inside the shade, and with a three-step process I simultaneously tack in the rib, attach the tape, and sew the ring.
As I work, the shade piles up on my lap, but the pins are gone at that point, so I don't go home with wounds!
The result is a perfectly neat shade without those tightly stitched pocket ends I used to hate making so much.  If you're wondering about the safety standards, this shade was shrouded with ring locks during the stringing phase.
The side view reveals a sleek silhouette with no pinched pockets.
Hey, I wanted to point out something else.  For the arched part of the window, we made a wood frame and stretched a single layer of batiste over it to provide a little privacy and light filtering.  The shape was somewhat uneven, so a microcord of ivory fabric helped fill in any small gaps.



Thursday, October 12, 2017

Wrapping up a long project

The past three months have been pretty overwhelming!  Not only did we move the workroom, but we also took on a long-planned project that took two full weeks of non-stop fabrication.  The moment that was complete, I took off for Susan Woodcock and Rodger Walker's new school, Custom Workroom Technical Center, to co-teach a Roman Shade Master Class with Rosemarie Garner, then came home to a satisfyingly hefty workload.  Somewhere in there I took a day to tour the Garment District in New York City with a group hosted by The Trim Queen aka Jana Platina Phipps, and Kim's Upholstery.

So for my first blog post in over a month, I wanted to show you how we wrapped up a project you've seen before, earlier in the year.
You might remember a few posts about this project with Susan Marocco InteriorsThis post featured these pale blue wool ripplefold panels in the master bedroom:
Well, for the living room window- 202" wide- we originally fabricated 5.5 widths each side of heavy silk draperies, but the homeowner immediately decided that the look of these panels were too heavy for her, and asked us to cut them down to create these side panels:
The orange trim was selected to blend the drapery with the adjacent artwork and pillows:
Here's how we got there.
The original draperies were quite heavy, both visually and literally.  5.5 widths each side of lined and interlined wide-striped silk, hand-sewn, with inverted pleat header and breaking hemline, weighing 35 pounds each side, were a real feat to pull off,  but the result felt like too much for this homeowner.
The stripe layout didn't allow for both motifs to be featured, so the textured part went to the front, and the solid satin part was pleated to the back.
It worked beautifully, but the homeowner wanted to see both motifs if possible.
For the remake, we carefully picked apart all of those pleats and stitches-in-the-ditches, and then I had to figure out a way to feature both stripe motifs AND hide the original stitching holes in the satin.
To create a look similar to the ripplefold in the master bedroom, which the homeowner loves, I decided to make a sort of flat cartridge pleat, and instead of positioning the pleats on the centers of the stripes, I off-set them, to keep the stitching holes away from the fronts of the pleats.  The new stitching pretty much ran right over the old stitching. 
I liked the flattened cartridge pleat, but thought that they would imitate a wave or ripplefold look better with some stuffing to round out the fronts, and after experimenting, chose medium jumbo welt to make an understated oval cartridge pleat.
A linen sheer was hand-sewn and inverted-pleated to cover most of the window, and the new side panels stacked down to about 24" each side.
The hand-sewn rusty orange tape with sequined chrysanthemums, from Samuel and Sons, gives the drapery side of the room a bridge to the beautiful glass and art collection.

The pillow fabrics selected by Susan Marocco masterfully blended the room elements.
This is the same home, if you remember from this previous post, with wool stationary roman shade valances in the office and den....
...with more lovely pillows:
And with that, I think, this job is a wrap!