Tie Bustles – Not just for brides

One of my favorite ways to bustle a wedding gown is with ties. This is often called a French Bustle, Victorian Bustle or Under Bustle. It doesn’t work with every style of dress but if you want a poof of fabric that falls over the bottom of the dress this is a beautiful way to bustle.





It’s the kind of bustle I had on my wedding dress that my mom made for me all of those years ago. Let me show you the dress:





[image error]Here is the dress with the train in place. This is me 24 years ago, June 1995.



[image error]That’s me and my dad. But you can see the bustle tied up there.



[image error]Here’s the underneath. I just have my dress hanging in my closet so it was easy to take it out to show you. This has three tie ups in the center and then a couple of ties at lower levels on each side to even out the hem



A few weeks ago I started thinking about bustling (it might have been because I was looking at my wedding album) and I remembered a skirt I wore until I wore it out that had a similar bustling option but it went all around the bottom of the skirt to make a drapey effect. There were some draw backs to how this skirt was made so I started pondering some better ways to do it.





There came a point last week where I decided to stop wondering about things and just do it.





I began with my favorite skirt of all. A full circle skirt, maxi length, with a waist band with a finished width of 4 inches.





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I decide to use a clear button to strengthen the spot where the ties would be holding the skirt up.





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I used 1/4 inch plastic rings from the drapery section of the fabric store at the lower part of the bustle. Often there is a tie at the top and the bottom but I wanted to have the bustle stay in place for a long time and not have to be retied over a day of wearing and so I thought a ring would be a better choice with both ends of the ties at the upper part of the bustle.





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I alternated the levels of the bustles so they were higher and lower around the legs but I made the rings and ties the same distance from each other so that the lowest part of the hem, when tied all around, would be mostly even.





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But I also love the high low look when just the front is tied up.





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So, of course, as with all of my projects, I have new ideas and questions. What if I tie the bottom of the hem up evenly around rather than alternating? What if I do this with a gathered skirt rather than a circle skirt? What if I use a few loops and pull the ribbon through – what would be the effect?

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Published on June 17, 2019 06:35
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