Last week: Basics week - cotton, wool and silk. Cliff the retired Buddhist prison chaplain
said goodbye to the competition, Tamara gypsified a woolen skirt and Julie won
out with a purple silk diamante nightie and general northernism.
Claudia
says ‘go-deT’ again – in your face, Julien MacDonald.
This week: Pattern week
(That’s
material pattern, as opposed to dotted lines and scissor images pattern. Honestly, imagine if baking was this
confusing?)
Turns
out we aren’t in Shad Thames, but Wapping – t’other side of the river. As a committed South Londoner (I tried the
North, it wasn’t for me), I’d assumed they’d gone for the superior bank, but
there you go. But Wapping’s ok, so I’m
appeased.
1. The Pattern Challenge: a skirt on patterned material with box pleats at
the front and back. “Simon looks
nervous” says Claudia. He also has a
floppy fringe this week – he must have left the Brylcreem in Bradford.
This
week Julie is dressed as a City Banker, in shirt, tie and braces. She looks awesome. Julie is officially my current fav.
Tamara
likens matching patterns up to wallpapering.
Uh-oh, warning bells: basically, Mr Cad and I had the biggest, longest, most
emotionally fraught and existentialist-est row of our relationship whilst
wallpapering – AND THAT WAS PLAIN LINING PAPER WHICH INVOLVED NO MATCHING. So I think I’ll leave this one to the
sewers.
(Hahaha
– like I’d be able to attempt *any* of this stuff. I can handle a hole in the toe of my tights,
but that’s my limit.)
Anyway, good times ahead - it’s that time of the series
when we start to nose into the private lives of our competitors. First up, Jenni/Kate Nash, who – would you believe it – actually is a singer in an indie band. Her hubby, Kirk,
also in the band (couples in a band: that’s bravery right there), is fully
celebrating pattern week, by wearing a rather special turquoise and orange
dotted shirt. He also has the same hair (head and facial) styling as Jesus. We learn that Jenni
likes to make clothes for the band out of curtains. A family-based musical act wearing
curtains...? Now who does that remind us of?
Anyway, back in the sewing room, Sister Jenni von Trapp is making a
skirt out of a funky orange-y mustard and white pattern.
Next
up: Tamara. Tamara is a children’s
entertainer - you know, there is something quizzically cartoon-y
about her expression which would lend itself well to clowning, now you mention
it. Just like Mr Jenni, Mr Tamara (Matt)
is also in a loud patterned shirt – I’m sensing an interesting spouse-forced-to-wear-partner-made-produce trend here. As for her own outfit, Tamara has swapped her kimono and
tie for a plain top, but she’s sporting a giant yellow ring watch (yes, a ring which is a watch), so she is
sticking with ‘interesting fashion choices’.
Her skirt is a bit more sober: pale blue and white.
Heather
is taking a tactical approach – her pattern is tablecloth ivy green, which has
strong repetition so that should make the matching up more straightforward - or
something. More home nosiness as we
learn, and see photographic evidence, that Heather made her own wedding dress and fancy scarlet velvet dress
coat – think demure Adam Ant. Heather,
as well as enjoying buckets of wine, seems to like gardening, or perhaps just standing in her garden wielding secateurs. Her husband (essential look: ‘dashing Tory’, if that’s not an oxymoron) approaches and offers
her a flower head. She says ‘aww’, takes
it and throws it back in his face. That’s
love, that is. Mr Heather then tells us
how Heather rustled up a top (“in three hours”) before an early date and that it
basically turned him on a bit. (I paraphrase.)
Heather also has a sausage dog pin cushion, which I hugely covet, even though, in the grand
scheme of ‘things that I need’, a pin cushion ranks in the bottom 3%.
Julie’s
lost her pen, so she borrows Tamara’s.
She then likens it to a bingo pen.
Heather admits she’s never been to bingo. Julie is not surprised. I would like to see Julie and Heather go tut
bingo though – I reckon they’d have a total ball. Wine, numbers, excellentness.
We
are treated to a snoop of Julie’s home life in Yorkshire, where she's styling it out in
flat cap and waistcoat with cream chinos and boots. It’s the country gent
look again and she’s foxing it, to be
honest. Mr Julie, called Stephen, is ALSO in a
patterned shirt. That’s three of ‘em now
- THEME AHOY!?!
Well, no, not
really, as Mr Cerina (Peter) kicks the theme to the curb by sporting a pattered
hoodie and Judge Jules glasses. He tells
us that Cerina sews mainly after midnight – which sounds like a cover up for a secret smoking habit to me. Claudia comes over
and coos over Cerina’s powder blue metallic sewing kit. AKA a toolbox.
David
just wants to “stay out of the relegation positions” this week – that’s a
football reference, ladeez. Mrs David (Vicky)
prefers drinking and Yahtzee to sewing and swiftly mocks her husband for preferring to hang out dressmaking with his mother-in-law. (I’d like to report that Vicky is secretly proud,
but nah, she’s ripping it.) David’s gone for an electric blue and white
check, but isn’t sure how small to make his pleats, as he wants them in line
with the check. May raises an eyebrow –
I SENSE DISASTER!
Chinelo
is also having pleat size issues, as her material’s not matching up. She decides it must be her fabric, so sets
out to find the one fabric in the haberdashery which has a swirl at the size which is perfectly
pre-adjusted to exactly fit the pattern May gave all the sewers. That is quite some optimism. Despite Claudia’s attempts to ‘help’, it’s a
fruitless search. Chinelo decides to
turn her material at a right angle instead.
Well that was a good ten minutes spent.
Mr
Chinelo, Tunde, tells us that Chinelo goes on dressmaking binges, which can last a
good forty-eight hours – she and Cerina should get together, as they both seem
to enjoy late-night ‘sewing’.
It’s
worth noting that Tunde and Chinelo are also both too good-looking for it to be
really fair to the rest of us.
Animal shot: blurry seagull on a boat.
Fashionistory: OK, GENUINELY INTERESTING ONE. Please sit comfortably.
So
during the reign of Charles II, the posh hoity toity court ladies all wore
slinky silk dresses, which were waaaaay too costly for plebs - much like how
Victoria from Made In Chelsea generally wafts about wearing something that only
she and Cruella de Vil can afford. Deprived of costly silk, plebs
had to put up with wool and linen (much like we have to shop at HnM. Or Zara on
payday), but that all changed in 1631 when the East India Company docked up, probably at that DLR station, and were granted permission to import patterned chintz (that's printed, affordable cotton - which did start out life as sofa upholstery, but then got gifted to servants after it had worn out). It basically meant the plebettes could absolutely start wearing fancily
decorated clothes, just on a different - and affordable - kind of material. It was probably exactly like T K Maxx opening a new
store in your town.
*Interlude whilst a man called Giorgio tells us
about how to make Indian patterned chintz – it’s essentially cotton decorated
with paint and potato print stamps, only, you know, gorgeous.*
Anyway,
everyone was delighted with the new state of affairs, except the wool and linen
producers – everyone wanted some chintz, so wool and linen sales went down. (I imagine this was like when Primark came on the scene and everyone was like,
why the hell would anyone pay a billion pounds for Versace jeans, when NOW I
can get stretchy jeggings for £3?) So the government took action - and banned Primark! I mean, it banned cotton
imports.
The ban was put in place in
1701 and that would have been that – save for a handy loophole which still allowed
the import of chintz to England if it was for the export market. That meant that ships could dock at the DLR
station and say ‘oh yes, here is my chintz, but we’re just stopping here to
change on to the Eurostar, as we’re not selling any chintz here, OH NO, it’s
off to somewhere else foreign, so nothing to see here, thanxbyeeeeee’. They promptly only legged it to Ashford
International and set up a dodgy black market stall for the fashion desperate,
who all rushed off to Kent get some contraband chintz. (Imagine the cast of Towie leaving Essex to
get kitted up at the black market chintz stall, only by horse and carriage
rather than Southeastern Rail.) It all
went a bit dark in 1712 when the weavers got a bit fed up at seeing illegal
chintz galore and went on the rampage – throwing ink over chintzily dressed
ladies or even ripping the clothes from their backs. NOT COOL WEAVERS. The law was lifted in 1759, which seems....
some time later.
Anyway, the moral of
the story is that the weavers diversified into cotton and we still get to buy
new Primarni tops for 50p.
Back
in the sewing room, we see that Julie is making a skirt out of elephant print
fabric - WANT. She is relieved to note
that her elephants match up and are marching in the right direction.
Remember
how a million years ago, before I went off on one about chintz and TK Maxx,
David was matching up his blue and white squares? Well, to do so, he had to ignore the pattern
and the outcome is that... well, the waistband of his skirt is teeny – like,
even Claudia couldn't fit in it teeny.
Oops.
The
judges have requested a lap zip (no idea), because it will test hand
sewing. No-one's too happy about it and
Julie has outright decided not to bother and is going for a concealed zip,
which the machine will do. Lynda admits
to Claudia she's done the same. Claudia
initially heavily hints, then outright tells Lynda that she needs to follow the
judges' bidding or face their wrath.
Lynda unpicks and re-zips. Julie is opting to face the wrath, putting it down to her usual destiny of always being told off - almost like it's not dependent on her actions. (Erm...)
Heather,
half smugly, half delightedly, admits she's basically done with half an hour to
go. This will no doubt afford her time to plan her afternoon drinkie of choice. Sauvignon or pinot or chardonnay? Tough call.
Tamara
has accidentally lined up the back of the skirt, not the front, so needs to
unpick and re-sew – she says she's a bit stressed. If a woman who makes a professional living
keeping children occupied and entertained finds speed sewing stressful, then
it's fair to say it must be.
Ey oop, more problems in the
final minutes - Julie's mannequin must have been chomping the pies, as her zip
won't go up all the way. Mind you, David
can barely get his up at all. The skirt
I mean. On the mannequin.
Time to judge – a mixed
bag, though they look good to me. The
judges pull Julie up on her concealed zip, May explaining they wanted to see
her hand-sewing. “Oooooh, I would've
done it fantastic!” Julie says, dead serious, before collapsing into infectious
giggles. HEART HER.
But Julie still comes
last, just below Simon, whose pattern-matching wasn't quite there. Jenni takes seventh, David sixth (lots of
good work, only far too small), with Lynda and Chinelo fifth and forth, which
means we once again have a podium of posh: Cerina takes bronze, Tamara takes
silver and Heather wins the pattern challenge again. She's beaming - I imagine she’s enjoying a
celebratory sherry in her 'posh totty' mug.
She calls herself lucky. Yes,
that and SKILLED, Heather. Tamara
cackles that she is “right behind you Heather” - it's actually quite chilling.
2. The Customising Challenge: pimp my two shirts.
Well, less pimp and more de- and reconstruct. The sewers are presented
with a rail of fifty charity shop cast-offs, and have to pick two, seeking to
avoid the vilest prints. It’s a bit like
America’s Next Top Model when Tyra makes the models ‘style’ themselves and they
go insane and rip each other’s hair extensions out to get to a snakeskin
designer belt and one poor sucker is left with a crappy old pair of jelly shoes
– only our sewers are far more polite and restrained about it. The sewers need to pick two patterns that
will work well together to make a whole new garment. The judges are hoping for bold changes.
Lynda is going to turn her
two shirts into a little dress for a small girl. Cerina is doing the same, but it's going to
be a sailor's dress. It's not the first
time Cerina has done this sort of thing – her wedding dress became a dress for
her then 18 month old, who promptly sicked up on it. Kids. Awesome
work.
The judges reiterate that
they don't want to see just a shirt again. (KEY INFO VIEWERS!) Claudia then
asks Simon what his plans are - and his plans are - yup, just a shirt. Though he backtracks that it might be a dress
too. Heather and Julie are also keeping
it shirty – they are going to feminise their shirts with frills or, in Julie's
case, 'scallops'. She's worried that her
scallops look more like “tut Loch Ness monster”, which helpful indicates to me
exactly what the heck scallops are (a wavy bit of décor along the button holes).
Chinelo, however, is
taking to to the next level: BOOB TUBE.
Claudia's eyes light up. It's
going to be sculpted and have a giant flower on the shoulder. Mmmm hmmm.
Elsewhere, David has found
the most hideous silky paisley of all the prints and is gleefully turning it
into a skirt panel – i.e., he is turning an ok skirt into a vile one. Jenni and Tamara are also making skirts –
Jenni is using plain-ish materials whilst Tamara is going boldio – she
admits she thrives on the competition.
Heather is unimpressed
with her own offering: “it's BORING” she pouts, “but at least it will be done on
time”. Elsewhere, Jenni has sewn herself
into the sewing machine.
Time for musical
mannequins before the blind judging: where will they stop, nobody knows!
May is literally
open-mouthed with amazement. She cannot
believe what they've achieved; it's joyous to see her so unguarded and happy, and she can hardly judge she's so impressed.
Mind you, even Patrick's voice goes squealy at Cerina's sailor
dress. He's less taken by Julie's
scallops, but appreciates the work.
That's followed by a brilliant shot of Julie sitting in her braces and
tie, leaning back like a 1930s newspaper editor who's unimpressed by the scoops
he's being offered.
Maytrick put Simon at the
bottom, with Heather next (that's a fast fall), then David, Julie, Jenni and Lynda,
with Cerina in third. Chinelo takes
second, which means Tamara has won the second task again. Two for two for Heather and Tamara – Julie
must be feeling confident about getting garment of the week...
Poor Simon though – “I do
not want to be associated with this garment”, he says. Now now, Simon, where’s that ‘well at least
it covers’ attitude from last week?
3. The Free For All Challenge: men’s pyjamas.
Which
can mean only one thing: male models! In
blue dressing gown robes, no less. Lynda
immediately flirts outrageously with hers, “I'm soooooo pleased, as my fabric
is pink, which will look soooooooooo lovely with your dark hair”. Her model not-so-modestly acquiesces.
David’s model has long
legs ("he's a big boy"), so he’s having to add a couple of inches to his black and white checked
PJ bottoms. Heather, who’s opted for red
and white stripes (a little like a typical apron) decides she’d better check
that her model “doesn’t have arms like orang-utans” – though it’s unclear
whether this would be a pro or a con in the grand scheme of things.
Cerina is using a lovely
blue floral William Morris fabric – schmancy.
It has something of the vase about it, but I really like it. Tamara is also using an ornate pattern – newspaper
print jimjams. AWESOME.
Simon is using the same
pattern as Tamara, by which I mean not the same pattern, but the same
pattern. You see? EXACTLY!
GET SOME NEW WORDS, SEWING!
(Basically, their pyjamas will be the same design, but made of different patterned
fabrics.) Simon has gone for a fairly
dull light blue and white checks à la tablecloth. However, Patrick whispers that he prefers it
to the newsprint, so it’s not all lost.
Tamara looks distinctly unimpressed and tells Simon his print is “very
traditional. Just like you.” He (correctly) surmises this is a backhanded
compliment.
Chinelo tells Patrick she
is making “basic pyjamas”.
Patrick: How basic?
Chinelo: Extremely basic.
Patrick: Collars?
Chinelo: No collars.
Patrick: Cuffs?
Chinelo: No cuffs.
[Chinelo’s voice gets progressively softer.]
Patrick: Fly?
Chinelo: No fly.
Patrick: It needs to be
very very good. [Sub-text: you’re screwed.]
She is, however, making
actually wearable shorty pyjamas, with a V-neck T, from brown stripy material. She also has another amazing pair of
plate-sized earrings on; this week, dented copper. Lovely.
Over to Julie, who has
already achieved an excellent rapport with her model, Roddy, a dapper looking older
gent, by proclaiming that Roddy has “excellent legs” and will “look a dude in
this blue and white stripy number, won’t ya Roddy?”. “Oh, absolutely” replies Roddy, who is even
more well-to-do than Heather. “He’s the
man” chuckles Julie, trying not to piss herself at such a comedy level of posh. She’s also making shorts (good for Roddy’s
excellent legs), with a green collar on the top.
Although Lynda’s dark
haired model will match the pink, it remains to be seen whether her red pipping will match. Pink and red can be a challenging combo. She’s also never piped before, so now seems a good time to start, you
know, during a nationally televised competition. She admits to Patrick that... oh I can’t call
Lynda a piping virgin, it seems disrespectful, as she seems such a wonderful
lady. She admits to Patrick that this
will be her first go at piping and he tells her that it’s important for a
quality pyjama, so to go for it. I love
these two together – they’re like Bake Off's Brendan and Sue Perkins, only without the
catty faux-hatred. (So nothing like
Brendan and Sue at all.) Lynda’s worried
about sleeve length, which is a bit on the short side, but reasons “you don’t
want them hanging in your porridge, do you?”
There is a new contender against Tamara’s newsprint fabric – which I think wins out, actually. Jenni is using a print with taches and hats
on it. It’s MUCHO cool.
Simon has stitched a wonky
pocket on; he seems fine about it, but May and Patrick discuss it in hushed tones
like he’s just killed a man.
Heather measures her
model’s waist and purrs “good boy”. He’s
in his boxers, with the cameras rolling, so I’d imagine he’s feeling preeeetty
vulnerable just now. David’s trews are a
little snug on his model, so, well, same goes.
There’s apparently not much you can do, other than pray for quick-fire
weight-loss.
Tamara and Simon continue to compare competitive pattern progress notes. Tamara admits she’s just sewn the fly
shut. Simon responds by PERFECTLY
imitating Beavis of Beavis and Butthead fame, face, laugh, EVERYTHING. It’s scary – if he leaves the Sewing Bee this
week, he has a serious lookalikee career option to fall back on - provided he
can find a Butthead.
It’s final touches stage, via the small, but key matter of buttons.
Heather's pyjama top has gone a bit skew-whiff at the bottom, whilst Julie is full of appreciation
at Roddy’s modelling skills of her PJs.
Patrick has thrown Lynda’s pyjama top on, over his shoulders, cape-style. Lynda nearly passes out with the excitement - "Patrick's got my jamas on" - and bats her heart; her and her daughter’s sign for ‘Patrick, oh he so dreamy’ as
I remember.
Chinelo appears to use the
fitting as an excuse to have her model display his abs at length. We are all grateful. Sorry Tunde.
And time!
We get a lot of close-ups
of pyjama tops with hairy chest triangles poking out - Heather’s model has a full
on man rug. On balance, I preferred the
abs, but...
So how did they do?
Jenni has made a “very
good pair of pyjamas” out of her moustache print, albeit too large.
David has matched his
pattern well, but the trousers remain tight – he pretends it was the “model’s
request”.
Heather has perfectly
matched the collar stripes with the rest of the top, but the bottom is still
wonky - she blames the time.
Tamara’s piping is deemed
too big but it is very even. She admits
to sewing up the fly.
Roddy’s fly however, seems
to be a little freer – eh eh Julie?
Patrick agrees – he’s worried about “indecency”. Julie doesn’t seem so bothered. Mind you, Patrick still says he’d wear it,
home or out, so...
Chinelo has done her
simple PJs “very neatly”, but they are too basic.
Poor Simon has uneven
lapels and an unlined-up pocket.
Lynda’s p-p-p-piping is
p-p-p-praised. In fact Patrick thinks
the whole outfit is a “really excellent pair of pyjamas”.
Cerina’s William Morris
jimjams also get good feedback – they might have a big seventies collar, but it’s all
well-matched.
It’s tea time and (for Heather,
pinot grigio time, probably) at Gastronomica.
Garment of the week: Lynda’s pink
jamas.
And leaving this week: Simon.
Claudia asks if they can rub themselves against him, to cheer him
up. It was down to a lack of experience
really, but May and Patrick say some nice things. At least he can seek Butthead and lookalike
fame now.
Next week: I see your camel toe: leggings! Also, T shirt transformations, fancy wrap
dresses and Heather proclaiming she wants to “drown in a bucket of gin”. I BET.
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