The bad news first: fewer kittens fit in your pockets when your Harper Tunic actually fits!
Although to be fair, the kittens, themselves, are bigger now, too. Look at these nearly seven-week-old chonkers!
The lightest of them (our picky Pickle!), is about one pound, 10 ounces currently, so we'll probably have these foster babies for another couple of weeks.
With my first try at the Harper Tunic, I took the advice that if I was between sizes, I should size up, but the finished tunic was just too roomy.
This time, I cut the pattern down to an OSP, and I love it!
I also love sewing this tunic. It's got some nice details, but is overall quite quick and easy to sew. My fabric of choice was a $5 thrifted sheet, the perfect price so that if, as with my first tunic, I didn't love it, I hadn't thrown too much money at it. I've got enough leftover from the sheet to sew some other projects, although not enough for another garment.
Don't you love a nice spiral of tidy double-fold bias tape?
Also as with my first tunic, I sewed a second pocket onto the front. When I tried the first tunic on, I just wasn't feeling the asymmetry, so I added the second pocket to this tunic as a matter of course:
It most certainly was! Here I am in a McDonald's parking lot, waiting for my French fries and Diet Coke:
After that, I wore my new tunic to the Museum of Miniature Houses (yay for Smithsonian's Museum Day!), then to IKEA for dorm stuff for Will, then to Trader Joe's for almost every single seasonal autumn product they had in stock, and then back home to lie around drinking pumpkin cider and eating Halloween Joe Joe's while my brand-new vanilla pumpkin candle burned and kittens used my body as a battleground:
That's probably all the Harper Tunics that I need for myself, although I do have the short-sleeved version printed out, and I could see myself sewing it up next summer when it's hot but I miss my giant pockets. Will's also somewhere in the middle of piecing together a Harper Tunic pattern of her own (oh, the hell of all those 8.5"x11" pieces of paper that must be trimmed, lined up, and taped together!!!), so that will be a fun beginner sewing project for me to help her with.
And then we can go out and about with our matching unflattering but comfy tunics!!!
2 comments:
Not only do I need to make that tunic, I also now need to foster kittens!
Yes to both!!!!!!! If you foster three or fewer, go with the smaller size. Four or more kittens and you'll need the larger size to fit them all in your pockets!
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