Thursday, 17 March 2011

Costing

The overall cost of my dress that I designed came to £21.43 including wasted fabric. This does not cover labour costs. In industry labour costs would be added to this sum.
          It is important to remember that using expensive fabric and quantities of styling details often makes the finished cost of the garment too high for the market which has been targeted. For example my design due to the length being very short and fabric choice of denim would be targeted at a young market group who would perhaps have lower incomes or be in education. This would affect the profit margins.
To alleviate this perhaps the safety pin detail could be paired down to one shoulder.
Additionally the material was bought in exccess due to the fact it was a one off dress and I bought extra just in case however in industry exact amounts of fabric would be ordered to avoid waste. I could have purchased one metre for the dress which would bring down the over all cost to £17.80. Then if i reduced the amount of safety pins to 1 pack which would bring down the overall cost even further to £13.04. This would be a more appropriate price for retailing and ordering in bulk would reduce this number further however labour costs would bring this sum back up.

Final piece

Having completed the construction of my dress there are things im pleased with and things that I could improve. I am pleased with the zip and over all shape of the garment and think Charlotte's design looks effective. One mistake I would alter is I would have overlocked the panels of the sides of the channel seams before sewing, as this made it very difficult to accomplish. I additionally need to practise making my seam lines straight as I felt they could be straighter. Other than these factors I was happy with the final piece and hopefully the designer of the dress likes the overall outcome of her design.


Wednesday, 16 March 2011

Beginning of making final dress

We started making our final dress. We each swapped designs and pattern pieces with other members of the group so we have each ended up making a different dress. I had Charlottes design.




Fabric dye workshop

We had an induction into the dye room and about different dye solutions for different fabrics. We were introduced to direct dyes which work best on cellullose fibers for example cotton fibres. Direct dyes are hot water dyes and are a purpose dye. The proccess involves warming a bowl of water and the direct dye over a hot plate stirring to ensure the grainules are fully disolved and in a seperate bowl heating salt and water which is then added to the dye mixture. This is due to the dye being salt and heat reactive. The samples need to be rinsed with cold water after to set the dye.

Fibre content of samples:
Cotton silk
Viscose crepe georgetteViscose linen
Devore
Cotton viscose/ satin weave


Thursday, 3 March 2011

Selecting fabric for dress

I chose a Denim material based on the biker theme and chose a black colour due to the groups decision of using blacks, chromes, greys only to represent our theme for the mini collection. I did buy a faux leather but was unsure whether to use it or not in my final design as this would deviate away from my initial design. I sourced the fabric from a Haberdashery in Portsmouth called 'Fabric' I chose this establishment to buy my material as when visiting the area came across the shop and found the fabric on the off chance. I decided it was the right sort of denim for my design and it was being sold at a fair price

Denim:

Fabric Width: 140cm
97% cotton
3% elastane
£4.25 per metre.





Faux Leather:

Fabric width: 140 cm
 £4.99 per metre