After seeing two of the original ties from The Eleventh Hour at the Doctor Who Celebration, I’ve been inspired to have a go at making my own, as close to the real deal as possible.
The ties were copies of the original Christian Lacroix tie worn by the Tenth Doctor.
The blue swirly pattern, which is part of a woven pattern on the original, was recreated by embroidering the design onto brown silk fabric and then making it into a tie.
I’m lucky in that I have an actual Christian Lacroix tie, abet in a alternative colourway. Nevertheless, the design is the same size and weave, so I can use it as gospel to match to.
The first thing I did was to scan the tie in using my desktop scanner.
This had to be done in sections, which I stitched together in Photoshop.
I also needed to scan the reverse of the tie so I could catch the sections of the design that wrap around to the back.
Once this was assembled into a single file I then imported it into Illustrator where I could trace the edges of the design to make a vector based file my embroider could use.
It took a bit of jigging around for the embroider to make it work, but finally she broke if down into manageable sized sections to stitch which once joined together create the full design.
I also needed to provide the embroider with a lay down to show how to place the artwork on the fabric.
I used a section of fabric to plan it out, and cut some paper so they laid diagonally across the width of the material.
I laid my Lacroix tie in place and traced around its shape.
Next I put the tie under the paper and traced the design to show how it fits in place.
I then passed this to the embroider to help her place the design on the diagonal and with enough space around it to cut the finished tie.
We didn’t know how well it would work or how hard it would be to make the fabric up into ties, so we sewed half a dozen to give me some spares in case of problems.
Here’s the finished embroidered fabric ready to be made into ties.
I’m very pleased with the result, and it’s made my Christmas getting it done so well.
Check back and see how things progress.
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