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Q&A for How to Make a Ballgown
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QuestionWhat fabric would work best? I am thinking of a sleeveles ball gown with a horizontal oval slit around the bottom of the rib cage. Any fabric recommendations?Community AnswerYou could use silk, satin, or taffeta.
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QuestionI want to make a gown (of my own design), but I'm told I need patterns, even though I made up this dress, I am not going to pay for a pattern, and I've got a good Idea of what I'm going to do. Suggestions?Community AnswerIf you have the measurements, there is another option. You need to buy some cheep tracing paper and draw the pattern out on it (using rulers). That way you can lay your homemade pattern out on the fabric for tracing and cutting. You do at least need a homemade pattern sheet to use as a template for cutting out the fabric pieces. And a good eye for the right sizing.
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QuestionHow long does this whole process take for the huge puffy ball gown?Community AnswerIt depends. This is going to take a long time if you are new at this. If you sew a lot or are a professional however, this probably won't take you more than a day or two.
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QuestionWhat will make the ball gown huge and puffy?Community AnswerYou will have to add a number of layers of fluffy net fabric inside. Holding them together at the waist or the top and sewing it in place releases the lower end to fluff up.
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QuestionHow many yards of fabric would I need for a 13 year old?Community AnswerIf the girl is about 5 feet tall, if you cut well for the sleeve or leave it sleeveless, you might need at least four yards of fabric. The lower flare takes up one yard each for both the front and the back.
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QuestionWhat is the best way to cut a ball gown flare without making it shorter than the desired length? Can cut out short flares with ease but long flares give me too much trouble, always shorter than desired.Community AnswerOne way to get long flare right is by making the cut even wider in the last 5 inches. Add more volume than usual, like 4-5 inches more than its natural flare, and sew it. The extra bit won't seem out of shape. It will have a decent look with the rest of the flare. Also, keep some extra fabric rolled up in the hem. If you roll the hem twice and sew it and then again roll it a third time and sew it in, you will know that the length is more than required. If it seems shorter somehow, all you will have to do is open the last roll.
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QuestionCan you do this by hand or do you have to use a sewing machine?London225XPCommunity AnswerEither works. Sewing it by hand would certainly be harder and may not give the same result, depending on your skill.
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QuestionIs there any particular cloth to put inside the gown to create puffiness?London225XPCommunity AnswerUse tulle, which is commonly what petticoats are made of to keep them extra puffy.
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QuestionIf the average length of fabric is 36 inches, and the width of it usually varies, how much fabric would you need to make a ball gown that reaches the floor?Community AnswerMeasure from where the skirt starts (usually at the waist) to the floor, then add two inches for the hem. Now for the math: use the waist measurement (the circumference) and divide that by pi and then divide again by 2. (That way you get the radius of the waist.) Add that result to the desired length (plus two inches), and then multiply that number by itself, and then multiply by pi (3.14). Round off the answer to the nearest square yard, and that’s how much fabric you need for the skirt. Hope this helps
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QuestionHow many layers should be in the skirt of the dress?Artemis FarsightCommunity AnswerDepends on the fabric and how you want the skirt to look. If you want a flowing skirt, use a light weight fabric and one layer. If you want a puffy skirt, use tulle underneath and use two or so layers. Just don’t go overboard on layers since it can make the skirt heavy and you don’t want that.
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