Tuesday 10 April 2018

Learning: Crinoline Veils

Last year's learning streak continues this year, and I am still loving my online millinery courses through Hat Academy, to keep my skills moving forward even when I don't have much free time for my craft. Although actually I started this course last year, but I've just bought a couple more and I have a gift voucher from Christmas, so it's definitely ongoing!


This is my first piece using the skills from the Veiled Crowns Deluxe Course, taught by Rebecca Share. The trim is taught in the Leather Flower Crowns course, which I took even though I don't use leather, because I love the style of the halo crowns, which you saw combined with lace millinery in my lace garden collection. And the techniques are proving useful in other ways and with other materials, so I'm really glad of it.


I had hardly even handled crinoline before taking this course, and I loved learning so much about the material. Even though I hadn't yet finished this piece, I used the confidence with crinoline to make a custom hat for Melbourne Cup last year.


The second half of the course is making crinoline spirals, and I think I like that look best, but I'm still working on blinging that piece to the moon and back before you get to see it!


I am looking forward to trying out some of the leather techniques on some alternative vegan leathers, but in the meantime, I tried this technique on a scrap of fake snakeskin that I had been keeping for approximately a million years. I like the texture it brings and I'm happy to have finally used it.

Although there's still more left.


It's far from perfect, and if you've been following along on Instagram you would have seen that this took a few goes to get just right, and it spent a long time sitting on a mannequin before I decided what to do, but it's been a great learning experience. I look forward to sharing more of them with you!

So what do you think of this alternative take on the face veil?

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12 comments

  1. WOW whether it's still far from perfect it's still totally awesome. Love it! And good for you on continuing to work on your skills, it's always so important to always be learning :)

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    1. Thank you! I love learning new things and it makes me feel like I'm moving forward.

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  2. This is lovely. You did a great job.
    Marilyn

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  3. It's very sculptural, it has a touch of surrealism about it (did you see the face masks for the Dior spring couture show??). You are learning so much! Xx

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    1. Thank you, I love sculptural work. I hadn't seen those, they are really cool!

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  4. Did my previous comment come through to you? If not, this is amazing! It looks so couture and I can just imagine it being part of a millinery competition. I'm so impressed with your ever growing skills. xx

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    1. It didn't, thank you for commenting :) And thank you! I'm really happy to be learning so much at the moment and it really feels like I'm improving so thanks for saying so.

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  5. It is stunning, I can imagine it in a fashion shoot. How exciting to be learning all this.

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    1. Thank you! That would certainly be cool.

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  6. I love how it turned out Tanith, it's beautiful!

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