archer_buffalo7

My recent adventures led me to leave North Carolina to move to Boston with my husband… well for the half of the year when I won’t be in France working on Deer&Doe’s many projects, that is! The consequences of that move were quickly noticeable: no more of this stifling carolinian heat, Boston is COLD. As soon as I arrived, I instantly felt the need for a warm, cosy, flannel shirt.

archer_buffalo2

This shirt reminds me of Boston in every way: I bought the pattern when I visited the city for the first time ever, at Grey’s Fabric and Notions back when the store still existed. Two years later, I bought the buttons to finish it at Mercer’s Fabric, the store that replaced it, when I moved here for good. I suppose the fabric is not really from Boston, but I bought it at Hancock Fabrics and umm… I guess John Hancock was from Boston, right? Okay well nevermind. Anyway now that I’m back in France for a few months and I’m struggling to adjust to my new temporary life, I am glad to have this comfy shirt to remind me where home is.

I already have a few tried-and-true button-up patterns: the Deer&Doe BruyΓ¨re, which I’ve already made for myself in shirting cotton, flannel and as a crop top, and the MΓ©lilot which I made four times counting the ones I made for the online store. I also have in my stash this lovely retro Burdastyle number, which I’ve made for my grandma years ago and I’m looking forward to sewing again. But for this shirt, I thought I could use a change and I looked for simpler, straighter style. So I ended up picking the same pattern as the entire sewing blogosphere: the Archer shirt from Grainline Studio.

archer_buffalo3

Unlike BruyΓ¨re or MΓ©lilot, Archer has no bust darts. The fit is thus much boxier, which for a casual flannel shirt is not necessarily a bad thing. The sides are very slightly curved in, but overall it pretty much hangs straight from the bust. Since it was my first time sewing a Grainline pattern, I just went with my bust measurement and sewed a straight size 8 without any adjustments. The fit is very loose, maybe a bit too much? The shoulders are a little dropped and I’m not sure if that’s the way it’s supposed to fit or not.

archer_buffalo8

I had a blast matching the plaid on the sides and front of the shirt, as well as the back of the collar and collar stand. My trick for plaid matching is to cut everything as a single layer, especially with flannel since it stretches out of shape so easily. Before cutting each piece, I take the time to straighten out the fabric so that the vertical and horizontal lines are perfectly perpendicular everywhere. When I need to cut two of one pattern piece, I lay down the first one face down on the fabric and match carefully every stripe along the edges, to make sure that the two are perfectly symmetrical. Obviously the whole process takes forever, but I think it’s worth it.

I also cut the back yoke, button band, sleeve cuffs and pocket in the bias (I only added one pocket because the shirt seemed busy enough with one). With this fabric there was an extra difficulty level: the horizontal and vertical stripes are not exactly the same width. If you look closely at the pictures, you can see that the black rectangles are slightly taller than they are wide. For the bias-cut pieces, I was careful to cut everything “in the same bias”: for instance on the pocket and button band, the rectangles’ height is on the top-right/bottom-left diagonal. There is just that left sleeve cuff (on the right on the picture) that is cut in the other direction because I tried to have the two cuffs be symmetrical, but now looking at the pictures I regret doing that because it looks unintentional. Yes yes, I know I am the only one to notice these things πŸ˜‰

archer_buffalo5

Back to the pattern: the instructions are very, very detailed. With the sew-along on the blog, it’s definitely accessible to shirt-newbies. Careful though if you are used to patterns with seam allowances included: here they are only 1/2″ instead of the 5/8″ used by most of the indies and Big 4 patterns. I also liked that the booklet includes a cutting layout for interfacing (that’s rare!) even though there were a couple errors: there’s actually no label indicating it is indeed the interfacing cutting layout, and more importantly the figure shows the fabric folded in two when the layout should be on a single layer.

archer_buffalo11

Construction-wise, I loved the infamous “burrito” method for assembling the yoke, which is not actually explained in the booklet but is shown on video in the sew-along. However, I HATED the instructions to finish the collar! It was my first time seeing a collar-stand finished this way: the ends are turned to the wrong side and stitched together, with the button band in the middle – hard to explain in text but pretty clear on video. Counting the button band and all the seam allowances, I ended up with seven layers of fabric, plus two of interfacing, all rolled up in a tiny sausage next to the stitching line: hard to achieve a neat result in these conditions!! Even the shirt from the sew-along has tiny folds on the pictures, where the button band meets the collar stand on the outside edges. After trying a few times I gave up, folded the inside collar’s seam allowances on the inside and finished by hand. I don’t know why anyone would want to struggle trying to do this by machine just to save a couple inches of hand-sewing, especially when the rest of the collar stand has to be hand-sewn, and then topstitched!

archer_buffalo12

Another detail I’m not a fan of, but this one is just my personal taste, is the asymmetrical button bands: the one on the right is a button placket, and on the left is just folded a couple times. I know it’s a classic detail, and I’ve seen it on many RTW shirts, but even though it is pretty when the shirt is buttoned all the way I don’t like it when it’s worn open. With the button placket cut on the bias, I think the shirt looks very unbalanced when the buttons are undone.

archer_buffalo10

That said other than the collar the pattern was a breeze to put together. I didn’t even have to ease the sleeves in: a few pins were enough. I just had an issue with the sleeve cuffs that ended up slightly too big for the sleeves. After going back to measure the pieces on the pattern, I kinda feel like they would have been the right width if I hadn’t folded the front sleeve placket under as instructed. I didn’t see this mentioned anywhere online so the issue probably comes from me… Anyway the shape of the cuffs is pretty cool!

archer_buffalo4

Okay, one last thing I’m not happy about: button placement! When I was about to sew the buttonholes I had a sudden doubt, and I thought about shifting everything slightly so I would have a button on the same line as the bust apex. I decided to stick with the pattern and do the buttonholes following the markings. Bad idea! Of course, since there is no button at apex level, the shirt gapes between the two buttons at the bust, and sometimes it gapes a lot. I also think it would have been more flattering if the second button was lower, or the third button higher, making the neckline a bit deeper when the upper buttons are undone. As is, it’s an in-between I feel very “meh” about.

archer_buffalo9

Looking at the pictures of the finished shirt I’m not sure what to think of it. It’s clearly not the most flattering shirt I own, compared to more fitted one like BruyΓ¨re for instance. Part of it is my own issues with the fit: the shirt is a bit too short for me, and I could probably size down at the shoulders, and move the buttons so that the neckline is more flattering. Part of it is just the pattern itself: with no bust darts, almost straight side seams, and wide sleeves, it’s hard to compare this shirt with patterns that have less wearing ease.

archer_comparaison

When I think about it, the clothes I wear the most are not necessarily the most flattering, but instead the most comfortable. Maybe I’ll wear this shirt a lot: it’s very cosy and soft so I’m going to like snuggling in it this winter. However I might wear it open on top of a black t-shirt, and not buttoned like on the pictures.

archer_buffalo6

I had more fabric set aside for a second Archer, but I’m going to wait to see if I wear this one to decide if I’m going with Archer again or if I’m switching to a more fitted pattern. The fabric I have is a great cotton flannel with green and purple plaid, also bought from Grey’s Fabric and Notions a while ago. Actually I have a question regarding this fabric: it’s brushed on one side only, which means I have one side that is soft and fluffy and another one less soft and looking like shirting cotton. What side would you use as the outside? I’d like to keep the soft side against my skin but I feel like it might not look like a true flannel shirt anymore…

archer_buffalo1
Boston Shirt
Archer – Grainline Studio
Size 8
Buffalo Plaid cotton flannel from Hancock Fabrics

Tagged in:

, ,