MadelienneBlack
One of the Regulars
- Messages
- 107
- Location
- Pennsylvania
My own dumb fault.
It's not something I ruined directly, but I suppose in a round-about way it's my fault.
I do a lot of theatre, and my most recent show was West Side Story. Since it's set in 1959, or there about, I thought I'd be really nice and allow the costume department to borrow 4 of my vintage 1950 cocktail dresses for the dance at the gym scene. Real always looks better than repo, right? I gave the costume master specific instructions on how I didn't mind if they used the dresses, but please PLEASE be sure to hang them up each evening, and be extra careful with buttons and zippers and such. I also noted that they were not to be altered under any circumstances. You had to find the girls to fit them, not the other way around. He gladly agreed, so I thought it'd be fine.
Well, when I walked into the dressing room a couple days later and saw them laying in a heap I almost died. But not as much as when I saw one girl who was wearing my 1950's vintage blue lace prom dress rip off the sleeves and make spaghetti straps because "the sleeves were too tight". She claimed she didn't know it was my dress, or that it was original. I could have throttled her.
Needless to say, the dresses came back in terrible shape. I have to sew a strap back and fix a hem on one, and fix a zipper on another. There's not much hope for the prom dress now. Plus, I'll have them all cleaned professionally.
Lesson learned.
It's not something I ruined directly, but I suppose in a round-about way it's my fault.
I do a lot of theatre, and my most recent show was West Side Story. Since it's set in 1959, or there about, I thought I'd be really nice and allow the costume department to borrow 4 of my vintage 1950 cocktail dresses for the dance at the gym scene. Real always looks better than repo, right? I gave the costume master specific instructions on how I didn't mind if they used the dresses, but please PLEASE be sure to hang them up each evening, and be extra careful with buttons and zippers and such. I also noted that they were not to be altered under any circumstances. You had to find the girls to fit them, not the other way around. He gladly agreed, so I thought it'd be fine.
Well, when I walked into the dressing room a couple days later and saw them laying in a heap I almost died. But not as much as when I saw one girl who was wearing my 1950's vintage blue lace prom dress rip off the sleeves and make spaghetti straps because "the sleeves were too tight". She claimed she didn't know it was my dress, or that it was original. I could have throttled her.
Needless to say, the dresses came back in terrible shape. I have to sew a strap back and fix a hem on one, and fix a zipper on another. There's not much hope for the prom dress now. Plus, I'll have them all cleaned professionally.
Lesson learned.