Friday, September 25, 2009

To DIY For: The Bleached Mini Dress

Posted by on Fri, Sep 25, 2009 at 1:44 PM

Finished bleached dress
To DIY For is back! I figured you had enough fashion tips and advice to digest during Fashion Week without my forcing more clothes down your throats! It's officially fall now, so I will be cutting you no more slack and will expect nothing less than full completion of weekly assignments.

So, I hope everyone had a fabulous and enlightening Fashion Week. Almost as fun as watching the fashion shows themselves is looking at what the fashionable attendees of said fashion shows are wearing. It's a great barometer of what the trends will look like this fall from fashion insiders. As the folks over at Fashionista quite observantly pointed out, the long-sleeved mini dress was everywhere. Here, I created my own version of this versatile fall staple that can be worn for almost any occasion, and it will look great with tights when the temperature begins to dip. I also incorporated another fall trend, strong shoulders which, as Laurel already told you in our Fall Fashion issue, are, well, BIG.

TOOLS
—long-sleeved mini dress
—bleach
—shoulder pads
—plastic bucket
—rubber bands (about 40)

Step 1

Start with a long-sleeve American Apparel dress—I know you have one. I bought this little double u-neck number; I went for the black because it's pretty classic and simple, but I think this would also work really well in other colors. I'd love to see how a purple one would turn out!

Original dress


Step 2

Gather the dress into a vertical strip with the sleeves aligned with the body of the dress. The overall effect we're trying to achieve with this is horizontal bleached stripes. You'll need a lot of rubber bands to ensure the bleached and unbleached portions are even. Those really thick rubber bands; the ones that crush paper and posters, as it turns out, are perfect for this project. The finished product should look something like a sandworm.

Rubber bands


Step 3
Dilute bleach in two parts water and pour to cover the dress. Let soak until the desired color is achieved. I wanted to bleach out as much of the color as possible so I let mine sit for about an hour, but it bleached all it was going to bleach in the first 20 minutes or so.

Dress in a bucket


Step 4

I had a pair of shoulder pads lying around from a shirt I bought at a thrift store, but you can probably purchase a pair from any trimming store. They come in a variety of sizes and shapes. These are on the conservative side. To attach, simply sew along the edge of the neck. This should keep it in place, but I would recommend you make a small stitch at the tip of the shoulder pad to prevent moving .

shoulder pads


There you have it! A great fall party dress. You know what would go really well with this? A chunky, shiny statement necklace! Stay tuned next week when I attempt my first accessory!

finished.jpg

Tags: , ,

Comments (1)

Showing 1-1 of 1

Add a comment

 
Subscribe to this thread:
Showing 1-1 of 1

Add a comment

Most Commented On

Most Shared Stories

Top Viewed Stories

Top Topics in The Measure

Film (46)


Music (30)


Art (23)


TV (23)


News (22)


Sex (16)


Media (13)


Books (10)


Theater (7)


Nightlife (7)


© 2013 The L Magazine
Website powered by Foundation