BabyJune Posted July 29, 2013 Share Posted July 29, 2013 Just because it's summer, there is no reason to let the sewing machine remain idle. I've been busy sewing up a storm of great dresses from patterns and pictures found online. Follow the link below to see my latest photos in the photo gallery section. NOTE: There are 2 galleries of Baby June clothes; the link below is for the most recent gallery. Link to comment
Little BabyDoll Christine Posted July 29, 2013 Share Posted July 29, 2013 No babydolls? I see you have joined the Little Girls Link to comment
Valisia Posted July 30, 2013 Share Posted July 30, 2013 Very Nice. I really need to learn to sew Link to comment
BabyJune Posted August 4, 2013 Author Share Posted August 4, 2013 No babydolls? I see you have joined the Little Girls I always thought of "babydolls" as nightwear, and I like to wear Onesies or blanket sleepers to bed. Still experimenting with styles, though, so you never know... Link to comment
Little BabyDoll Christine Posted August 4, 2013 Share Posted August 4, 2013 Traditional "old school" babydolls , like I am in, were also "loungeware" or put on very little girls, depending on the kind of material they were made of. They weren not really any shorter than tennis dresses Pettpond had a link to a traditional babydoll site. It is a pity that disappeared It is only recently that babydolls became so trollopy Babydolls are a lot less trollopy than those outfits that were big in the 1970's that were made up of the frilly panties lined with paper=thin grainy plastic and the so-called "dress"that did not even cover them. Grandmothers used to have fits over them saying that they were not "decent" In the mid=1950's there came out "babydoll" dresses for little girls.These were full-out dresses but the waist was just under the arms and the dresses were almost to or at the knee I would not feel like a girl in a onesie or sleeper. I would need somjething with a skirt. Babydolls are not as confining Also, they are versital and can be worn with a blouse under them, an overgrament like a sort blouse or a pegnoire, I also have fairy capeliets or an underskirt or slip that is a smidgeon longer and the shape to them is very feminine Link to comment
BabyJune Posted August 4, 2013 Author Share Posted August 4, 2013 Traditional "old school" babydolls , like I am in, were also "loungeware" or put on very little girls, depending on the kind of material they were made of. They weren not really any shorter than tennis dresses Pettpond had a link to a traditional babydoll site. It is a pity that disappeared It is only recently that babydolls became so trollopy Babydolls are a lot less trollopy than those outfits that were big in the 1970's that were made up of the frilly panties lined with paper=thin grainy plastic and the so-called "dress"that did not even cover them. Grandmothers used to have fits over them saying that they were not "decent" In the mid=1950's there came out "babydoll" dresses for little girls.These were full-out dresses but the waist was just under the arms and the dresses were almost to or at the knee I would not feel like a girl in a onesie or sleeper. I would need somjething with a skirt. Babydolls are not as confining Also, they are versital and can be worn with a blouse under them, an overgrament like a sort blouse or a pegnoire, I also have fairy capeliets or an underskirt or slip that is a smidgeon longer and the shape to them is very feminine Some of what you described sounds like the Empire waist dresses I like to make. The waistline (as you already know!) is above the standard waist. I also make split waistline dresses where the skirt top actually has the bottom half of the armhole (armscye) opening on it and attaches to a half-bodice or yoke. There are also Bishop's collar dresses that are roomy. The fit can be compared to an adult caftan--a loose-fitting dress. I guess I probably sound a bit "torn" about my age. When I sleep, I'm more of a one-year-old; thus the Onesies and blanket sleepers. Awake, I'm about three. (Amazing what a good night's sleep can do for you). I can also say from my extensive overnight Link to comment
Little BabyDoll Christine Posted August 5, 2013 Share Posted August 5, 2013 In the fifties, I never saw any bloomers. You just leared how to carry yourself. Bloomers seem to have been from a much earlier period. Tights were not even in common use. The picutes in my sig are common babydoll designs from that time http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Babydoll It was quite a thing when you got your first knee-length dress or skirt I have posted about babydolls in this forum, you might wat to see those posts I am not "torn" it was at about 5 5that I started to like girlish things: Dolls, tiaras, Christine and most of the literature says that gender-identity sets in between 3 and 5. I was in my mid-4'swhen I became aware of myself as boy (I am bi-gender) I do not feel "trapped in the wong body) It is explained in my blog http://www.dailydiapers.com/board/index.php?app=blog&module=display§ion=blog&blogid=273&showentry=1578 and about not being a sissy http://www.dailydiapers.com/board/index.php?app=blog&module=display§ion=blog&blogid=273&showentry=1533 Back in the days of GirlTalk, one of the main members. Taffy Cheerful said two things: "Sex is physical. Gender is between the ears" "the best thing to do is find one age and stick to it I cannot even guess what it really is like to be 1 year old and I have so few memories of being 3 and none of them relate to gender at all so I think those kinds of things are mostly made up from what you learn and see later and superimpose on the age Also I can not abide PEVA and PUL panties. They are like noting from then. They had softex but I never saw it.It was always "rubber panties". Anything esle does not register on me as appropriate. It would be like playing with Chatty Cathy or Suzie Smart dolls; or even Barbie Link to comment
Katelyn Ann Posted October 1, 2013 Share Posted October 1, 2013 Adorable <3~ I need to get sewing again. Its so much fun, and the things you can create~ Link to comment
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