I started planning for our next Costume Walkabout at the Del
Mar Antique Show in November once I heard the theme was Alice in Wonderland. Of
course there will be the usual characters there but I don’t like to do
“costumes” and wanted to stick to my historical clothing. This is where
“character development” comes in which I don’t normally do but I did one in the
past as The Ghost of Xmas Past, Present, and Future for a previous Walkabout.
It didn’t take me long after searching for Alice ideas to
come up with an adult Alice Liddell, who the book was written for, all grown
up. The book Alice’s Adventures in
Wonderland was written in 1865, and Alice Liddell was 10 years old when it
was written. So I figured by adding 30 years to her life that would make it
about 1895. So there I had my time period I wanted to make my dress.
My memory of Alice is from the original 1951 Disney movie
when I was growing up. And then I saw someone’s page of ideas for costuming an
Alice, and I got some ideas from it.
Blue skirt, white blouse, maybe a half apron. I’ve got black Mary Jane
shoes. Ooh, bunny jewelry!
And then I thought how about an Alice who became totally obsessed
with rabbits when she grew up?That gave me all kinds of ideas for some
accessories. It would be like the White Rabbit wouldn’t leave her, day or
night. Her jewelry could be rabbits. And she would always be looking for
rabbits.
I came across this photo of a watch-style purse, and
remembered this large wooden pocket watch I had that was actually a Christmas
decoration. It has a short gold chain, and I can hang it by a small chatelaine onto my waistband.
I first thought of wearing a black ribbon headband but after
being reminded of a hat, I pulled out my boater hat that HAS a black ribbon on
it. Perfect! Needing to add a little
something to the blouse for color, I thought of making a navy blue bow tie for
the neck like this photo I found. I still hadn’t decided on a white apron yet.
Hunting
for jewelry on Etsy was fun! I typed a search in for bunny jewelry and was
surprised the amount of it that popped up, and many referred to the Wonderland
White Rabbit, or Peter Rabbit. Since Alice Liddell was a real person, I didn’t
want to refer too much to the cartoon character, and picked this life-like
bunny pendant. It was only $10. But then I saw this antique child’s ring with THE
rabbit in it looking at his pocket watch, and it was ONLY $7, so yeah, gotta
have it! Total cost in jewelry was kept under $20. I like that. I don’t usually
spend a lot on accessories for my costumes, unless it’s something antique but
since everything else came from my stash, I decided that was ok.
I
also decided to include a very small stuffed rabbit and knew I had to make an
apron now to put it in the pocket of the apron. My friend Cindy found me a
cream plush one at a swap meet that was a perfect fit for a pocket. So which came
first, the apron or the rabbit?
While I was out
shopping in the Halloween sales department at Michael’s I found this black bow
tie for $3.97, so that saves me from making something that will probably cost
more than that. I originally planned on wearing my usual white boots but
remembered I’d bought some Mary Jane-style black shoes recently and they were
similar to the shoes Alice wore as a child.
I considered wearing a blonde wig for about 15 seconds. Uhh…no.
I used to be white blonde myself, and as I got older it became more
brown/auburn. So I decided I would stick to my usual wig color, and have it up
in a 90s style, her being an adult and all.
My patterns are the Truly Victorian #494- 1894 shirtwaist,
and #291- 1898 walking skirt.
I had picked up some powder blue cotton-twill blend fabric
for my friend but it had a bit of stretch in it and wouldn’t work for her, so I decided to use
it for my skirt instead of wasting it. My white 100% cotton for the shirtwaist
is a bit sheer and would need a good stiff netting in the sleeves to hold up
those big puppies.
The apron was the easy part. My very first sewing project
when I was a little girl was an apron I learned how to make at our local girls
club. A large square of fabric, hemmed on three sides, pleated or gathered onto
a long strip of fabric that was folded over and became the ties in the
back. Another small square of fabric
became the pocket just big enough to hold a bunny. He was safety-pinned in for
safety.
The skirt was very easy to sew together, although I had to
deal with some stretchiness. I staystitched all around each panel that helped a
bit but the waistband may start stretching quite a bit. In retrospect, I think
I should have sewn a real sturdy interfacing in it to hold it firm. Maybe at a
later time I can re-do that.
The blouse was probably the most work but still an easy sew.
I used some stiff netting folded over and covered with a layer of cotton
between my arm and the sleeve so it wasn’t scratchy. It only went in the
section from the armseye about 6 inches down, although there was more in the poofiness. There’s still a bit of it in the
armseye seam allowance that I’m slowly snipping away but will probably still
poke me occasionally. A solution for next time will be to finish off the
netting seam first with a strip of fabric before it goes into the armseye.
I chose the front buttoned view, and the short peplum
primarily for more length to tuck into the waistband. I don’t plan on wearing
it on the outside of the skirt. I’m not real happy with my collar. I managed to
miss having a piece in it that the upper collar would fold over, so mine sticks
up. Which is ok but there’s a slight gap. My bowtie will be covering that up
though.
So here is the whole outfit put together, and I decided I
would bring my blue parasol that had just been recovered by my friend, Connie,
at Victorian Parasols. *Don’t mind the little black and white furball there.
She gets into everything.*
So off we go to the Del Mar Antique Show in San Diego for
Lady Mari’s Costume Walkabout. We do this twice yearly and are given a theme to
dress in. Today’s theme was Alice in Wonderland, and there were many Cheshire
Cats, Mad Hatters, Queen of Hearts, White Queen, Dormouse, White Rabbits, a
White Knight, Tweedle Dedee, Knave of Hearts, and many variations of fantasy
and Steampunk. I had expected to see a lot of Alices though. Very surprising there was not!
This is worth pointing out. Bob was the Mad Hatter and had
his dormouse skeleton in his teapot. Also notice the bandoliers with tea tins,
tea spoons and strainers. And his tea medals. Lots of details went into this.
By
the way, did you know this year was the 150th Anniversary of the publishing of Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland book? Happy
anniversary Lewis Caroll and to Alice Liddell, who the book was written for.
You can read more about the book’s beginnings here: http://www.historytoday.com/richard-cavendish/alice-wonderland-story-first-told
This was likely the last costume event I’m going to this
year, unless I’m able to make it to our Guild holiday dinner since it coincides
with our family get-together. Keeping my fingers crossed I can get out early
enough to go. If I do go, I will most likely wear my 1880s Red & Black
Check bustle dress.
But there will be more sewing going on; like working on an
1830s bonnet in an online class I signed up for last month at Historical Sewing.com,
and working on my purple dress for the Riverside Dickens Festival fashion show.
Oh sheesh, I just realized what I wrote. I’m making dresses JUST for fashion
shows now? No, it will have other uses. It’s just the next and first event I
will need it for. And then there’s a maize yellow 1905 dress I want to make for
an April event.
Thank you to Jerry Abuan http://jerryabuan.zenfolio.com/ for
some of the photos I shared here.
~~~Val~~~