Saturday, October 13, 2012

Off with her sleeves!


A J. Jill blouse purchased at a huge discount over a year ago stayed unworn in my closet for too long.  Something about it didn't work for me.  Along came The Sorbetto Top from Colette Patterns transforming the blouse into something I would wear.


The tuck is the original from the blouse and the bias strips were cut from a sleeve.  The hem is original from the blouse too.  Alterations to the pattern were a small bust adjustment with the remaining dart converted to gathers at the side seam and the addition of a center back seam for shaping. 

Colette Patterns offers The Sorbetto Top as a free download, hard to resist with all the rave reviews it has in the online sewing world.  The pattern is ok and can produce a nice top.  

The good
  • It is simple and easy to sew.
  • The neckline shape and front pleat are good for this style top.
  • It's free.

The not so good
  • The darts are huge and really long.
  • The pleat size does not grade with the pattern size.
  • The side seams wing out at the bottom.
  1. So with the dart already changed by my SBA I made the pleat smaller for the size 6 I was using and reshaped the side seams to be more bell shaped than flared at the bottom and things went well in the next top I made using a cotton lawn.   
  2. Then, since I don't like wearing woven tops much, they feel restrictive to me, I eliminated the front pleat and made the Sorbetto in a cotton jersey with ribbed binding.  Not bad but it seemed a bit baggy and saggy in that fabric.
  3. Then, continuing my usual variations on a theme method, I made the now pleat-less top in a cotton lycra that has some weight and crispness and simply turned under the neckline, armscyes, and hem stitching them down with the coverstitch machine.
Number 3 works really well for me, quick to make and easy to wear.  Perfect with yoga pants and knit skirts for casual wear in warm weather.  Thanks Colette Patterns!