Wednesday, June 22, 2016

Buyer's Guilt

For the last 6 months my sewing has been divided into two categories: 18th century sewing, and post-France sewing. Now that I find myself with a complete francaise, I can finally turn my attention to all the other projects I've been putting off--and I'm finding myself excited to make new things!

I'm not rushing into anything, as work has been in a crunch and my summer class just started, but I did start a list to determine where I stood on supplies for each project.  Some of them are "stash busters" (a Regency pelisse I bought fabric for years ago), which is great, and others came about because I happened to find the perfect fabric, and there are also a few that I don't have fabric for (yet).

this early 19th century portrait by Alexandre-Jean Dubois-Drahonet is the inspiration for one such upcoming project
But one thing kept popping up as I went through my wishlist: I need new underwear. This is not a new problem, but it's certainly an unavoidable one. I wear my clothes hard--I re-wear, I set up furniture, I carry trays, I wash dishes, I tramp on boats, through fields, I dance every dance at the ball. Beyond underpinnings being the key to a good fit, I really need the support and security that solid corsets (and other foundation garments) provide. The stopgap measures I took the last time I went through this have now worn out, and I have finally faced the facts that I need new, well-made, well-fitted underpinnings that will last a while (hopefully until I finish grad school!).

corset pattern patent, 1868 (via)
Of course, the real problem here is that I really don't like making corsets. I find it tedious, and frustrating, and disappointing. The last two there would probably be solved by practice, as I'd get better at it, but the first one means I'm not motivated enough to get over the hurtle and I go through the same cycle of misery every time I need a new one. So then I put off making a new one, until it becomes so desperate I can't make the part I do actually enjoy (the dresses) because I can't fit bodices without a corset. 

lacing stays (from The Progress of the Toilette), 1810 (via)
And so I found myself contemplating this cycle of dread and ill-fitted cleavage when I read Kitty Calash's post about what the clothes she makes are worth. Her point is that with labor factored in as a cost (she uses $25/hour), these items are incredibly expensive and should be treated and worn with respect. I don't disagree, but it also got me thinking about my current underpinnings predicament. What are good underpinnings worth to me? I have so little hours I can use to sew, and making corsets so I can make new dresses would eat most of my sewing time for the summer. Is it worth it to me? What would not having to spend the time (and potentially end up with a better-fitting, better-made final product) be worth to me?

I am rather amused by this advertisement for the "L.R. Corset"!
  I think, in the end, it's worth a great deal to me. Corsets (and other underpinnings like cage crinolines) could be purchased from dry goods stores in the second half of the 19th century, so it isn't even entirely wrong to buy my undergarments. In fact, the Worcester Corset Company began as the Worcester Skirt Company in Worcester, MA, in 1861 making cage crinolines (it shifted to corsets sometime before 1872). Buying new corsets will ensure I have lasting undergarments that will get me through the next couple of years of events, provide a foundation for the new dresses on my wish list, and keep me from spending the summer in a miserable cycle of tedium and anger. 

I still feel guilty about it--it feels like cheating--but I've talking myself into it. Not making this round of corsets is ok. Sometimes alleviating the misery is worth a lot more than being able to stubbornly say I made everything myself.

another inspiration image for an upcoming project: tea gown, 1858-62 (The Met)
On to new clothes!


10 comments:

  1. Oh, no! Don't feel guilty! Underwear is infrastructure and we *have* to have it. That makes it worth every penny you spend on it. I'm so close to finishing new must-have 18th century stays, and if I had the cash to pay someone to make them for me, and the time to wait for a custom order, I certainly would have. Order with impunity-- you have clothes to make!

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    1. Thanks, Kitty! The time waiting might be tight, but luckily having done it now I can schedule and plan accordingly. Fingers crossed!

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  2. Don't feel guilty! Leave the corsetmaking to a professional. I also used to feel this way, more out of cheapness than anything (the "I can make that so I won't spend the money for it" thing), but I finally did buy a two professionally made corsets, and it's the best thing I ever did. I feel they're worth the money because I know enough now to know I can really hurt myself making an ill-fitting corset. I also know that I don't have the skills or knowledge to engineer the thing to get the best shape with the proper fit. It's certainly not a small amount to have a corset custom made for you, but the benefits are myriad, not least of all having it done and there and ready so you can spend your time making the gowns to go atop it.

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    1. I hadn't even thought about the possibility of hurting myself, but that's a really good point--I have back problems as it is :) I am definitely feeling less guilty after all the kind words, and will greatly enjoy making clothes instead!

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  3. TOTALLY ok to buy some essentials--heck, even if you wanted to buy a new dress. Especially if it's for a period when manufactured clothing was available. Spend the time you do have for sewing making the things that you want to make, not the "I must make this or my historical costuming is invalid" items. Stays and corsets are so time consuming. The results can be worth it, but I look at it as I look at making my own modern bras (which I DON'T do): if I can get a good product with a good fit off the rack, why would I spend the time and effort making it? One day I will make my own 1870s-80s corset, but until that day I still have my 10-year-old, lightly-used Vollers corset that is perfectly comfortable and gives the correct silhouette. Heck, if full Regency stays that fit me perfectly were available off the rack, I might buy them too!

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    1. Ha, I have actually made bras (in a previously life I ran a burlesque troupe) and I was TERRIBLE at that too...I definitely don't expect to make my day-to-day bras! And I am now off to search for Vollers corsets--I have a lead on affordable custom Regency stays. I'll do a review when I get them and let you know :)

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    2. You can buy Vollers corsets at A Beautiful Corset in Salem (http://www.abeautifulcorset.com/). They do fittings (and have a custom perfume bar...).

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  4. ReeeeeealllY?! Hmm. A trip up to Salem may be in order.
    The Vollers model I have is very similar in cut and proportion to Truly Victorian's 1880/Late Victorian corset pattern.

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  5. I ran into this same issue a couple years ago, and the only reason I didn't buy a ready-made corset was because I *really* couldn't afford to, and I already had all the bits and bobs needed, plus 10 more years of sewing under my belt since the first one I'd made. I'm pleased with the result and it works well for me, but I absolutely would have bought one had it been feasible.

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  6. You want to have a look at Dark Garden too. From memory they're about the same price as Vollers and they're amazingly comfortable (I tried one in 2010 & in 2014 at the Dickens Fair).

    Comtesse de Chambord

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