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Friday 24 September 2021

1770's Werther's Wrapper Waistcoat (Video)

A few years ago I read The Sorrows of Young Werther (1774), and while I didn't particularly like it, I thought it was a neat coincidence that young Werther famously wears a yellow waistcoat, and I though "huh, wouldn't it be funny if I drew a picture of a 1770's man and glued a lot of Werther's wrappers to the waistcoat part of it?". 

But then I realized I could actually make a real waistcoat covered with wrappers, which is a terrible idea, but the thought that it would make a funny video is what prompted me to actually do it. Here it is, it's 18 and a half minutes long.


I held off posting pictures of this on social media until it was finished because I think it's best to see it with full context so it makes a bit more sense.

Because this is the first complete sewing project I've filmed, I ended up forgetting to take still photos of most steps, so this post won't have as much information as the video itself.

The fronts of the waistcoat are made of thin pale yellow cotton and the wrappers are fused on with heat n' bond. I did several samples before doing the actual waistcoat.

I saved up a lot of Werther's wrappers over a few months (it took 128 in total), washed them, and ironed them flat on a low setting under an organza press cloth. I wanted the gold stripes to be wider than the yellow ones, so I cut the transparent edges off half the wrappers.

I also tried to line up the cut up text on the wrappers
as much as I could.
I stuck front and pocket flap shaped pieces of heat n' bond to my yellow cotton and carefully fused each wrapper to it, again using the organza press cloth, and then cut out the fronts and pocket flaps. They were fairly well stuck, but still possible to peel off, so did a lot of lines of machine stitching to secure it. Pale yellow on the pale yellow stripes and dark brown on the gold stripes.


The resulting material was stiff and not very nice to work with. I put very thin buckram in the pocket flaps, much thinner than usual on account of the fabric being so stiff.
The lining is cream coloured cotton sateen, and the construction methods are mostly the same as I usually use. Aside from all the stitching on the stripes, the only machine seams are the two on the pocket bags.

I go over all the construction in the video but will also link to my 1730's waistcoat post (which is a bit different, and I did the buttonhole linings more nicely) and my brown wool 70's one (which is very similar in construction to this one, except for the fact that the back is lined) if you want to read more.

Buckram tacked in.

I made death's head buttons in cotton pearl, with yellow to match that little stripe on the wrappers, and dark brown to match the writing on them.
I did the buttonholes in the same yellow, and regrettably decided to do the thing where you line them after sewing them. The cotton sateen lining frayed more than expected and I wish I'd sewn them after lining. 
If this were a waistcoat made of nicer materials I'd probably do piecing to line the buttonholes like I did with the 30's one, but I put far too much effort into this already!
Not quite my best, but I am pleased with these buttonholes.

I don't like the way these look on the inside!!


The back is a fairly coarse unbleached linen twill from Pure Linen Envy, and is unlined. The centre back seam is hand stitched and felled with grey linen thread.
The top of the back is reinforced with a little scrap of medium weight off white linen.




Here are some badly lit pictures of me wearing it. I went to the trouble of powdering my hair for the video, but didn't want to move half my furniture like I did for the 1730's getting dressed video so I'm just in between the sewing table and the big filing cabinet.
Hopefully someday I will get better photos of me wearing it. For now, I haven't got any 1770's coats to go with it, and 1770's isn't high on my list of priorities, but it's short enough that it could work with an 80's coat. 
(The stripes and multicoloured death's head buttons aren't fashionable for the 1770's anyways.)







It's a very stiff waistcoat and the gold rubs off the wrappers every time I touch it (I think the heat from the iron weakened the print) so I don't imagine it'll get any actual wear. But I am pleased with it and I think the video was worth the time and effort of making it.

Update: The Werther's website has a contact page and I sent them a link to the blog post because I thought they might find it interesting, and they sent me a bunch of candy!

I am pleasantly surprised!

9 comments:

  1. Wow, this is an amazing waistcoat!!! Too bad the print is so fragile. You should send a photo of it to Werther Original>
    Hugs, Mamoo

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    1. Thank you! I have sent them a link to this post through the contact form on their website.

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  2. You absolute madlad, this is both terrible and brilliant♡ You've put a lotta work into this bit, and I respect you for that.

    Now I'm inspired to make a shiny candy garment ... maybe a corset made from those hard candy strawberry wrappers? (I feel like the structured nature of a corset would be more suited to a project like this since the wraperfabric is already pretty stiff)

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    Replies
    1. Thank you! Agreed, a stiffened garment like a corset would probably be much better suited to this sort of material.

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  3. It's me again. I had time to view the Werther's Original wrappers waistcoat video. Another professionally made video.

    Hugs, Mamoo

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  4. WOW, what a great idea, and such a lovely garment. (I follow you for a while now on Fb and insta, but only found the blog as I am digging more deeper into man's clothing).

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  5. https://countryclothesline.ca/search?type=product&q=dutch+heritage
    If you want a floral waistcoat like your first inspo pic...

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  6. I just painstakingly typed a comment in my phone and then the google log-in process ate it. Alas! TRying again. This is an amazing project! I can't believe how precise and accurate your work is (so envious btw) even with this,eh, unusual material :) Werther/Werther is absolutely the type of idea to keep me up at night, but that you actually followed through AND made such a delightful video about the whole process is just mindblowing. It totally made my morning (and in 2022 good mornings are hard to come by). I may need to spend the rest of my day looking at your whole blog for more endorphine hits :D
    Also, it isn't really handmade until there's drops of blood on the fabric, right? (I am glad you got them out anyway though). I am not sure anyone said this already or not, but your German pronunciation is very good :) With love from Hamburg, Germany, JWM

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  7. I saw the video originally and I'm SCREAMING with delight over that casual mention of jeeches, and had to click onto your blog to look at them. But I'm also so happy that the Werther's company sent you candy for sharing your blog post, that's so lovely! This was a really fun and cool project, and I hope you enjoyed making it, even if you won't be able to get a lot of wear out of it because of the gold foil flaking, sadly.

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