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I have decided that it's time for the sewing machine I go as a wedding present to stop sitting bored in the corner and for me to make something. Possibly vastly over reaching I have decided to make a dress. This would be useful as I have found it impossible to find dresses which cover of of the bits of my that I usually keep covered. I want to make a nice summer dress which will look smart enough to wear to weddings and posh garden parties. I thought that the best style to suit me would be be a slightly 50s-style dress with a a-line skirt to just below the knee, high waist, fitted bodice and 3/4 length sleeves. I couldn't find a pattern like that but I found one pattern with the skirt I wanted and one with the bodice. The plan is to combine them, which shouldn't be too difficult as I'll have a broad band on my waist.
I bought the pattern for the bodice yesterday (the skirt one wasn't in stock). I was looking at the instructions and decided to work out what size I'll need, with the help of Alec and his measuring tape. Here is where I get confused. In most shops I take a UK size 12. In tops made of non-stretchy material I usually take a 14 due to my bust. I wear a 34E bra. So, Alec takes my 'vital statistics' and they are 40-32-40. According to the chart on the pattern package, that makes me an 18! Alec then measures my back neck-waist, which is 15 and a half inches, smaller than a size 8 even though I'm 3 inches taller than the 'typical woman' the pattern is designed for. For further help I looked at the Simplicity Fit brochure. It said that for a dress I should go by my bust measurement, which would mean a size 18. However, to complicate matters they design patterns for a B-cup. If you are larger than a B-cup you are supposed to measure your 'high-bust' horizontal immediately under the arms and use the pattern size for the bust which is 2 and a half inches more than that measurement. The confusing thing is that my 'high-bust' was 37 inches, but their fit guide claimed that a D-cup would have a high chest 4 inches smaller than her bust. I might not be wearing the correct bra but I doubt that it's that that wrong.
So now I am very confused because according to their sizing chart I am a size 18 midget with C-cup breasts as opposed to the quite tall size 12 with E-cup breasts my clothes suggest.
I bought the pattern for the bodice yesterday (the skirt one wasn't in stock). I was looking at the instructions and decided to work out what size I'll need, with the help of Alec and his measuring tape. Here is where I get confused. In most shops I take a UK size 12. In tops made of non-stretchy material I usually take a 14 due to my bust. I wear a 34E bra. So, Alec takes my 'vital statistics' and they are 40-32-40. According to the chart on the pattern package, that makes me an 18! Alec then measures my back neck-waist, which is 15 and a half inches, smaller than a size 8 even though I'm 3 inches taller than the 'typical woman' the pattern is designed for. For further help I looked at the Simplicity Fit brochure. It said that for a dress I should go by my bust measurement, which would mean a size 18. However, to complicate matters they design patterns for a B-cup. If you are larger than a B-cup you are supposed to measure your 'high-bust' horizontal immediately under the arms and use the pattern size for the bust which is 2 and a half inches more than that measurement. The confusing thing is that my 'high-bust' was 37 inches, but their fit guide claimed that a D-cup would have a high chest 4 inches smaller than her bust. I might not be wearing the correct bra but I doubt that it's that that wrong.
So now I am very confused because according to their sizing chart I am a size 18 midget with C-cup breasts as opposed to the quite tall size 12 with E-cup breasts my clothes suggest.
(no subject)
Date: 2009-02-16 06:20 pm (UTC)Their stuff about high-bust is a piece of crap. You should take the 18 line over the bust and then use the line that fit the other measurements, drawing a smooth line with a pencil to join them up between.
(no subject)
Date: 2009-02-17 02:17 am (UTC)