This holiday season, I have a rather large project I'd like to try my
hand at. Instead of doing one grand reveal, I wanted to try breaking
it up into smaller pieces and posting about my progress as I go. This
could go really well or the project could go disastrously and then I've
documented my failure for you all, but either way, it will be a learning
experience. Also, this way I hopefully won't put it all off until the
last minute. If I need weekly content, I'll presumably have to work on
it a little here and there so that I can share something with you.
As a kid, I loved Barbie. I remember seeing Holiday Barbie in stores in her beautiful dresses and wanting a doll of my own, but I never actually had one. I also loved the holiday Barbie ornaments, but again, didn't have one. Well, I ended up stumbling across images of Holiday Barbie 2021, and I was in awe of her dress. I'm like, I'm a grown adult, I can buy myself a Holiday Barbie AND Holiday Barbie ornament and fulfill a childhood dream. But then I thought to myself that it would be even cooler to become Holiday Barbie.
I scoured the internet for a
dress like Holiday Barbie's, but to no avail. And then I thought, maybe
I could make myself a Holiday Barbie dress. I spent hours combing the
internet for the perfect supplies. I debated and debated whether it was
actually a good idea to take on this project, and eventually I hit
submit. And here we are.
Now I know what you're probably not thinking, but absolutely should be: But Amber, you hate sewing. And I kind of do. I don't make a point of this, and I love what sewing can do for me, but the actual sewing process I do not really enjoy. So why make myself a dress? Well, once I have an idea in my head, sometimes it's very hard to nix it, and I just could not get over the idea of how cool it would be to have Holiday Barbie's glamorous dress. This may prove to be a spectacularly bad idea. Or a great idea. I'm leaning toward bad idea, based on preliminary results, but only time will tell.
Holiday Barbie's dress has a beautiful silver bodice. To
minimize the amount of sewing I would have to do, I picked up a corset
which I will be modifying to make the bodice. I could not find an
affordable silver corset with either a back or side closure, so I ended
up buying a white one that I could paint silver. Today we'll be
focusing on that part of the process.
Materials:
*White corset
*Silver paint
*Textile medium
*Paintbrush
Directions:
*Cover your workstation in newspaper or some other protective layer to keep it from getting covered in paint.
*Lay the corset down on the newspaper.
*Mix together the paint and textile medium in the proportions given on the textile medium bottle. Mine was two parts paint to one part textile medium. This will essentially turn your acrylic paint into fabric paint. You're supposed to iron it to set the paint, but I don't think this corset is ironable, so I'll just use the corset very carefully. Once the rhinestones are on, it will be a challenge to wash anyway.
*Once the front is dry and has been set, paint the back.
*Optional: Paint the inside of the corset. I painted the inside of the straps, since I was worried about that portion being visible.
Now we have a silver corset. It's kind of pretty, but it's not very Holiday Barbie. Next I'll be adding some rhinestones in hopes that this will make it a little more like Barbie's dress.
The big issue I'm having at the moment is that the corset arrived folded in half, and there is a significant crease in that location. I should have tried tackling that before painting, but I didn't, and so now I'm trying to press it out using a heavy textbook. But I have a feeling it's there to stay. So not super optimistic, but we'll see how that goes.