Tag Archive for 'Sewing'

Cinch It

This year, some of my bags will be sold at the Governors Island Treasure Chest boutique brought to  you courtesy of The {NewNew}.

My friend Kimm of KimmChi came into this funky fabric, and we thought we’d make it into a unique Governors Island souvenir for the store. Tada:

If you can’t make it to the Island, but are longing to transform a special fabric into a bag like this, you can find the tutorial I wrote up for the bag on the {NewNew} blog here.

By the way, don’t use this map to find your way around New York. Williamsburg is NOT next to Chelsea.

Executive Purse

Some of you may have already seen this on Thing-a-Day, but here is my newest foray into the repurposing world:

My husband recently pitched this suit and shirt. I loved the fabric and now it shall live on as a small purse to be tucked under your arm. I think I’ll use the jacket pockets to make a cross-body bag.

The Year Of The Rooster

For me, this year has been the year of the rooster. Here are 3 renditions of the same design:

The First Rooster

The White Lace Rooster

The Purple Rooster

I love how the different colors and fabrics give each rooster a completely different personality. I think I’ll try a black, white, and red rooster next.

Last Minute Present

This one is for my daughter’s buddy. A stocking made from a sweater his mom wore when she was pregnant.

His name is on top in Unown language.

His favorite childhood friends Pijon and Bunny are peeking out of a pocket. The only design flaw of this stocking is that the top doesn’t stretch out for those really big presents. Oh well, next year.

Teacher’s Pet

My friend told me that teachers prefer to get a bottle of wine or cash instead of the homemade kid art picture frame with the class picture, but I think this is a pretty cool end of the year gift:

My daughter has a favorite art teacher she’s been following from one class to the next. As part of the animation class she made this bird.

I scanned it and printed it on a silk inkjet fabric sheet. Cotton would have been better, but this household is currently out of cotton.

Then I attached fusible web to birdie and ironed it to the flap of a canvas bag. Birdie was further secured with zigzag stitches and embellished with a few outline stitches.

Two vintage buttons finished it off and there’s a cool to-go bag.

This would also be a good grandparent, or cool cousin gift.

Dry Feet - A Towel Mat Tutorial

We recently had to rethink our bath mat strategy after one too many cat accidents on the bath room rug. And here is the solution: a towel mat made of two older towels with colorful binding.

Materials

To make this mat, you need:

  • two bath size towels
  • a resident artist to draw the picture to be quilted on the towel using a washable fabric marker  (optional)
  • blanket binding or fabric remnants

Steps

  1. Cut the towels to size. This particular mat is 37″ by 27,” but the size depends on your requirements.
  2. Draw your design on the towel. I commissioned robots from my 7-year-old, but if flowers are your thing that would be a nice choice as well.
  3. Baste or pin the two towels together so they won’t shift when you “quilt” your design.
  4. With a wide zigzag stitch sew the towels together following your design. You may want to experiment on a piece of scrap towel to find the setting that works for you. That leaves you with two pieces of fabric sewn together.
  5. Finish off the edge of the mat with some binding. If you decide to make your own, measure the circumference of the rug and note that down. To make 1″ wide binding, cut 3″ wide strips of fabric.
  6. Sew the strips together until you reach a length equal to the circumference of the rug plus a bit just in case.
  7. Fold the binding in half lengthwise and iron it.
  8. Open up the binding and fold in the left and the right sides of the binding to meet in the middle. Iron this. You should now have a long strip of binding with three ironing marks going down the length of the binding.
  9. Right sides together fold over the short edge of the binding and sew the length of it to the mat following the line closest to the edge. I like to begin in the middle of a side rather than at the very top so I don’t have to deal with the corner and the matching of the beginning and end of the binding at the same time.
  10. Stop about one inch before the end of the side of the mat and make a mitered corner following Alicia Paulson’s Binding Tute on Posie gets Cozy. Continue all the way around.
  11. Fold the binding over the edge and fold under the quarter on the other side of the binding. Now you can either machine stitch or hand stitch the binding to the other side of the mat. Hand stitching took me maybe an hour or two and involved a lot less swearing.

That’s it. Enjoy your bath mat and keep your kitty off it, unless you decide this is the perfect kitty blanket.

Great-Aunt Erlene’s Treasure

These sweet girls are my mother (standing) and my Aunt Bonnie around 1944.

And this is one of the dresses they are wearing:

It turns out that my Great-Aunt Erlene was well known for her faggot stitchery. To make this dress, she had to cut and fold the strips of fabric into tape and then stitch them together; a Victorian technique popular for embellishing undergarments. I found a description of this process in “Educational Needlecraft” by Margaret Swanson and Ann MacBeth on page 90. This would also look really pretty as a decoration for a summer top.

Book Club Meeting: Stitched in Time

Today’s discussion is primarily a dialog between Emily and I with Theresia piping up at the end. If you haven’t visited with Emily yet, do stop by The Handmade Experiment. Emily has some terrific tutorials and her layout makes me want to redesign my blog. Theresia from the UK makes cute critters. You can visit with her at Minori Design.

The Book

Emily: Our book this time is Alicia Paulson’s Stitched In Time. This was one of my suggested books because I already had it on my bookshelf and had been meaning to find some time to do a project from it. Alicia is a fellow Portland crafter (Yay!) and actually lives in my neighborhood which was one of the main reasons I purchased the book.

Simone: This is a lovely book with a wonderful appendix. Unlike other sewing books, this one delves right into projects (30 of them). The focus of this book is to help you create “memory keeping projects” with which you can surround yourself and your loved ones. The projects are divided into three types: For the Little Ones, For Every Day, and For Special Occasions. Paulson uses a lot of photography in her work. Some of her projects are brilliant like the New Home Place mats; some of them are not really up my alley; the Friend Chandelier would keep me up at night. The photographs depicting the projects have been carefully styled and almost motivate me to clean up my house. (Hmm, watch another episode of Bones on Hulu, or mop the kitchen floor. What a choice.) The projects leave lots of room for further exploration and creativity.

Emily:  To be honest, I’m not sure I would have bought the book if it hadn’t been written by a fellow Portlander. My first flip through I was excited by the photo of a small child’s blouse and another photo of a child’s vintage looking dress. Unfortunately they were for display only. Disappointed, I started a more careful peruse to see what project I wanted to do.

Using general sewing techniques, hand-sewing, transferring photos to fabric, freezer stencils, embroidery, and appliqué, Stitched In Time is full of projects to help preserve memories, make keepsakes, and family heirlooms. I liked several of the projects – the memory game, laundry bag, kid’s drawing softie, and sleepover pillowcase in particular. Other projects, like the recipe card apron, the friend chandelier, farm girl photo pillow, and farm boy picture frame, I had no interest in pursuing.

Simone: I am very impressed with the appendix. It reveals a secret recipe for removing stains out of vintage fabrics, provides excellent step-by-step instructions on mitering corners, and tells you how to make a knotless start with your sewing thread and how to bury it afterwords.

Our Projects

Emily: Once my daughter saw the front cover I was committed to making one of the nutcracker dolls. I thought it would make a great gift for Q’s first birthday coming up on the sixth. I slowly gathered all my supplies and finally started the doll on Wednesday. I knew I was going to be cutting it close with my vacation. I was gone from Friday until Monday and Hubs said NO CRAFTING ALLOWED. That was a tough deal, but really relaxing so no real complaints.

I got the face made, the body sewn to the head, the arms sewn to the hands, and the legs sewn before I left on Friday. On Monday night I stuffed all the pieces. I used a fondue skewer for stuffing the narrow arms and legs which worked really well. This morning I sewed up the hands and feet, attached the arms and legs to the body and started in on the hair. Then all progress came to a screeching halt. Uh Oh. That doesn’t seem right. Let’s take a closer look at those instructions.

sidedollhead

Starting with the list of materials, instead of just telling you how much fabric you need in all, Alicia tells you what cuts you need. Now most people I’m sure can figure out from that how much fabric to buy, but not me. I ended up with WAY too much skin-colored fabric. Luckily the other fabrics I used were just from my stash. Then with the embroidery, (something I’ve never really done before with any instruction), I didn’t realize until the I was almost done that she didn’t want me to use the entire thread, but just sections of it. Probably another common knowledge step, but one I wasn’t familiar with so my doll will be called Angelina Jolie with her puffed up pout.

My next roadblock was the running stitch on the hands and feet. I’d never done this before and didn’t really figure out how to do it until I’d already done the hands and had moved on to the feet. I’m okay with that, though more pictures from her of the actual process would have been REALLY appreciated. I figured out the whip stitch after only two tries and thought for sure I was going to make the deadline until that hair! I know my wool isn’t worsted, so maybe that’s the problem? I’m pretty sure I have the right needle, but it is making HUGE holes in the top of the doll’s head and the stuffing is beginning to poke through. Not good! I also have no idea how exactly I’m supposed to be sewing the hair on. I took a wild guess and chose to do the no-knot technique described in the back of the book. Perhaps that is part of my problem? Angelina and I need help people!!

I’m hoping to get this project done by Q’s birthday, but for now my Stitched In Time project is not stitched in time. Whoops! And looking ahead to the last instruction, anyone have a clue what she’s talking about when she says to sew the skirt fabric into a loop? Huh? I don’t know, but wish me luck!

doll and book

Simone: Okay, so I copped out and picked a much, much easier project. I made the Monogrammed Stocking using a felted wool sweater my mother had made and some flannel pajamas my husband had given me for Christmas many moons ago. (”Mommy, why are you making a Christmas stocking in July?”)

I used the instructions as an “inspiration,” in other words, I didn’t exactly follow them. Because the wool felt was so heavy, I didn’t use any stabilizer. Instead of the felt patch, I cut off the pocket from the pajamas and attached them as a pocket, not as a patch. The pocket prominently featured the designer’s initials, so I covered them up with a felted flower. To be honest, I wasn’t sure whose monogram to feature on the stocking, so this embellishment was an easy way out.  The other modification is the way I attached the lining. I cut the lining about an inch longer than the stocking, and sewed it to the top the way you would sew lining to a bag (right sides facing with the lining on the outside). And yes, as always, I forgot to leave an opening to turn out the stocking, had to rip open a few inches and then birthed the stocking so to speak. The extra fabric allowed me to fold a bit of the lining over the top of the stocking and to top stitch it down. Did I forget to attach the loop when I sewed the lining to the stocking? You bet. More ripping, but it finally came together in just a few hours.

I think next time I would modify the pattern to make it more of a boot shape. The elven foot shape is very elegant, but boot translates into more loot, yay! Also, did anyone notice the garland in the stocking picture? I love that thing. That’ll be a November-get-into-the-season project for my household.

Theresia: I got the Alicia Paulson book for Christmas and couldn’t resist to make this cute hand stitched horse! Stabbed my little fingers a number of times but worth it, I love this horse and it will be a present for someone special! I used leftover felt that I have lying around in my sewing room! For the mane I used 100% wool fabric, I don’t like acrylic stuff, so yes that is the only expensive thing that I have used making this lovely horse! Don’t forget to use a thimble please, :o) Oh and here is a link to the picture of the horse.

Check out more projects by Bake and Sew, Peppercam, and Paper Pie in the Book Club Flickr Pool.

Summer Wardrobe Refashion - Completed

Remember this garment? I finally finished my refashioning project. (Well, I still have to cut off all the little threads, but technically it’s done.)

I’m quite happy with it. For the interior facing, I cut up the yoke of the original shirt. I then embellished the collar with a bit of rickrack as planned.

I used the original sleeves. To adjust the length, I marked the correct length at the top and the bottom of the arm opening and gathered about 8 inches of the fabric from the middle of the sleeve to match it to the arm opening of the top. After that it was just a matter of inserting the sleeve and sewing it into the arm opening.

For a final touch, I replaced the buttons with something a little brighter.

Now I’m eyeing the remainder of my husbands shirt collection. There’s that little blue and white striped number I’m quite fond of.

Don’t forget, the book club will meet next Wednesday on July 1st to discuss Alicia Paulson’s book: Stitched in Time.

Summer Wardrobe Refashion

I’ve been toying with the idea of repurposing my husband’s shirt and started cutting up this one in this season’s orange. (Went to PTA meeting the other day, everyone was wearing orange. Funny how fashion colors suddenly penetrate the landscape.)

My plan is to make a blouse (top row, left) based on New Look pattern 6808.

I removed the sleeves and the collar,

opened up the side and the shoulder seams, and sewed down the button facing. Then I laid down the pattern. This is the front and back with darts inserted.

I’m planning on cutting down the original sleeves to 3/4 length and embellishing the shirt further with red buttons and maybe some rickrack.

However, this will take a while because:

I was selected for a pop-up store collaboration between The {NewNew} Street Team and COlab Projects for the Brooklyn Atlantic ArtWalk NEXT WEEK. Yikes. Need to sew. Can’t hang out with my blogger and Tweeter friends. Panic sets in. . .




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