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Finishing Touches: Goldenrod Smooth and Lavender Latin

Two of my gowns in progress received their finishing touches in the last week, which is to say the finishing touches of gown construction. The details of adding rhinestones to these dresses are yet to come.

The first is my Goldenrod colored smooth dress. Last we checked in the dress was skirt-less and unfinished along the bottom edge of the separate top. I made a skirt according to my previous method, using more of the stretch nylon goldenrod fabric for the main skirt sections and then using ivory-colored nylon chiffon tricot (from Fabric.com) for the triangular godet sections. I decided to use a contrasting color for the godets because I had used that chiffon before and liked working with it, but it did not come in any shade closer to yellow. Also, I like to use contrast whenever possible, and using ivory chiffon allowed me to coordinate with ivory satin trim for both the skirt and the top.

Making the satin trim for this dress, I used my 2-inch bias tape maker for the first time. It turned out to be a great advantage over making bias trim by hand. It's still a time-consuming process (as is everything with dress construction), but the bias tape maker allowed me to streamline the most labor-intensive part of the process, which is the ironing of the two edges inward. After that, folding the trim in half to iron was a simple process, and the tape was ready to go.

The essential finishing touch of the skirt was this ivory satin bias trim in conjunction with a horsehair braid. I've found horsehair to be an essential ingredient in the construction of smooth gowns and even some Latin. It give the skirt shape like nothing else; it is no wonder that almost all the smooth dresses from vendors at the last competition I went to were finished with horsehair braid.

My lavender Latin dress was all put together, but for a faux belt in a contrasting color of white. This belt is essentially a long strip of fabric, reinforced with elastic fusible interfacing, sewed together at the ends and then folded in half. The only tricky part was making sure that the strip was precisely the correct length for fitting the hips at the point where the drape top would end. When the contrast belt was cut and fused, I fitted the drape top by pulling the sloped edges taut around my dressform, safety-pinning them together after angling them as needed to make it lay as I wanted it to across the dress. I trimmed away the excess edges and then basted the overlapping sloped edges together. From there, I sewed on the folded contrast belt, adding interest and finishing the bottom edge of the top in one go.

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