"... Sure to be Popular. Notice the Absence of Openings, and Hooks, and Buttons"
By the 1920s The Girl's Own Paper had become The Girl's Own Paper and Woman's Magazine. At this stage it was aimed at a readership of young women, whether married or single, and carried a mix of fiction and articles on homemaking, potential careers, cookery and crafts. It also advertised its own dressmaking patterns in each monthly issue.
One pattern would usually be singled out for description in detail. The chosen pattern would not necessarily be for the most fashionable of garments, but for clothes the editors of The Girl's Own Paper thought its readers might find useful. The picture and the description below is for a "house dress", or the working costume of an ordinary housewife.
All home-dressmakers on the look-out for a really practical design for making a comfortable house dress will welcome with pleasure this pattern we are illustrating on this page.
Besides being easy to make and easy to put on, this little design combines all the essential qualities necessary to the comfort of the housewife when engaged in household tasks.
The dress slips on over the head, has no openings to get untidy, no gaps at the waistline, no tight belt, and no pinning or hooking to keep bodice and skirt decently joined.
The back is cut straight—hanging from the shoulders, and the front is made like a bodice and skirt joined with a belt at the waistline; the belt then extends free across the back—holding in the fulness to the figure—and fastens at the underarm.
By this means the bodice is able to be given the requisite fulness, without giving the bulky appearance below the waist-line, unavoidable in in the ordinary straight one-piece dress. Another advantage this gives over the ordinary frock is, that when stooping, the belt adjustment prevents the skirt from dropping and getting under the feet—a great gain for a working garment.
The dress is also an economical one, as it only requires 3½ yards of material 36 inches wide. Poplin, gingham, print or cotton crȇpe would all be good fabrics for the making.
The collar can be made of a contrasting material to the frock, if desired, and would look well in white if the dress itself is of dark fabric. Saxe-blue with a white collar is a pleasing combination, or some of the pretty striped fabrics now so popular would be becoming for this design.
If the collar is white, it should be made detachable from the frock, so that it can be removed when the dress requires washing. This can easily be done without much extra work, and as the neck of a dress is always the first part to get soiled and crushed, it is always an advantage to have the collar detachable and able to be laundered apart from the frock. All that is needed is to bind the neck edges of the dress and collar in position instead of neatening the two edges together. Half a yard of material will be sufficient for the collar.
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