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Category: Sewing Crafts


Nesting Birds for the Little Girls

May 1st, 2012 — 5:30pm

I went to a baby shower recently, and as is my apparent habit, liked the gift I gave so much that I came back home and made another for our house!  This was a sweet little bird arrangement that was originally designed as a mobile, but I think it has so much more versatility on the dresser as decor, don’t you?

Each bird is made of small scraps from my scrap basket, then stuffed and stitched shut.  They don’t take much time to sew, but choosing the fabrics to put together, and combining lots of fabrics for a miniature flock, was harder than I would have thought.  Our little girls have a soft, buttery yellow wall color and a pale, pale pink ceiling, and both of them looooove pink–the two-year-old has begin pointing at pink and saying, “Pretty!” because that’s what she thinks that color is called–so lots of pink and purply-violet seemed to be in order.

Probably the biggest challenge was finding just the right stick.  In this case, I had to make do with two separate sticks that I planted next to one another in a crystal glass.  The glass is part of a set that belonged to my husband’s grandmother, and since the dresser was handmade by his grandfather for his mother when she was young, it seemed fitting.  The dresser needs repainting and I am picturing crystal knobs once that happens, so I really love having these pieces together.  I filled the glass with aquarium gravel rather than sand because it gives more stability to the sticks, and more weight to the base.

When I made the version for the baby shower, I thought I would sew each bird to the branch using clear nylon filament thread, but that was a complete disaster–the birds would sit for a tenuous second, then flip upside down and dangle from the branch, wordlessly.  It was really pathetic and a little sick, actually.  So hot glue came to the rescue.  And it was so easy and so quick that now I want to hot glue everything in sight.

The photos framed on the wall behind the birds were taken when our oldest and my husband and I were living in DC before my middle daughter was born.  We went to pretty much every botanical garden in the District and surrounding states and took photos of the prettiest flowers we found, with the plan of framing them when we came home with our new baby girl.  All three of us took photos here and there, but now no one really knows which ones were shot by whom, which is fine.  I am hoping to swap out the black Ikea frames for white ones, but that’s pretty far down the list of priorities when you still don’t have kitchen cabinet doors.

Some of the birds as nestled between two branches to give them a stronger perch; when I did that, I made sure to hot glue on both sides.  I think it makes them look cool, like they’re hanging out after school, waiting for the pretty girls to walk by.  Both of the little girls super love their new bird friends, and it makes a really great impact when you come into their room from the hallway, next to the sweet yellow walls and the pink ceiling and the soft morning light coming through their curtains:

Now if I can just finish their matching postage-stamp quilts, we’ll be in business around here.

7 comments » | Sewing Crafts, Uncategorized

Tutorial: Manly Travel Power Cord Roll-Up

February 9th, 2012 — 7:52pm

Took a little longer than I anticipated, but it turned out super cute!  I’m delighted to share with you:  The Manly Travel Power Cord Roll-Up, just in time for Valentine’s Crafting!

This tweedy little wrap has space for multiple laptop/phone/digital music accessories and cords, and bundles up nice and tidy to fit in a corner of a suitcase for travel.  Plus, it’s masculine enough to make husbands want to use it, but sweet enough to look good no matter what.  Woot!

I made my version from a pair of thrifted suit pants, but you could make it from a couple of fat quarters with no trouble (which means that if you like it enough, you can make a girly version for your lady friend, too).

Easy peasy steps and sewing!

You’ll need:

  • a piece of wool tweed measuring approximately 18″ x 22″ (or a fat quarter of fabric)
  • a cotton fabric for lining, same dimensions
  • thread
  • one 1/2″ button (I harvested mine from the same suit pants I cannibalized for the tweed)
  • (optional) piece of cotton batting measuring 18″ x 22″

Prep your fabric

Because I harvested my fabric from a pair of pants, I had to begin by prepping it–I chopped off both legs, thinking I’d need two, but settled on just using one.  I slit up the inseam and pressed and steamed as much as was reasonable.  I left the cuff intact–it’s an interesting detail and I wanted to utilize it in the new design.

Square up the fabric.  I began by guesstimating the dimensions of the pocket I wanted to make–by eyeball, but it’s right around 6″ deep.  I folded that up, then trimmed the sides even, followed by squaring off the top.

The obvious selections for a lining might have been white or black, but since both of us have both white and black power cords, I wanted to choose something that would contrast and make them easier to dig out–no point in making a cord tote that makes it tougher to locate your cords.  I chose a soft, masculine blue that reminds me of dress shirts.  This is a fat quarter of Kona cotton.

Open out the cuff of the pants, if you have one.  If not, sew the edge of the lining right side to wrong side with the opposite edge of the main fabric.  In this case, the lower edge of the tweed, which will become the upper edge of the pocket when this is assembled, is sewn to the upper edge of the lining.  Use any seam allowance you like–this is 3/8″.

Flip the lining over so that pieces are wrong sides together.  Press the seam nice and crisp–use plenty of steam.  You can see in this image that there’s a lip of tweed sticking out–that’s the cuff from the pants, which I’ll be using to make a folded edge on the pocket front.

Fold up the pressed edge to create your pocket.  (If you’ve looked at Stitch by Stitch at all, you’ll begin to recognize this as a distant cousin to the picnic placemat project–not deliberate, but I guess my mind tends to work through problems in similar ways!)  At each side, cut away a small chunk from the top down to about 3/4″ of an inch above the fold.  We’re going to create a self binding, and you’ll need to leave that little chunk behind for the mitered corner.

Press in that little corner with the tip of your finger until it forms a triangle.  Then fold the raw edge in 1/4″ and press.  Fold again another 1/4″ and press again.

As you press, pin the edge in place, heading up toward the top of the wrap.  Remember, you’re folding the edge OVER the pocket, so you’ll want to be certain that the pocket depth is right where you’ll want it later.  Repeat on the opposite side; once both right and left are done, you can do the upper edge.

At the upper edge, fold in the corner again, making a triangle like you did before.  Press in place.

Fold the side in, double folded, until it meets the triangle you’ve pressed.

Fold the upper edge the same way, catching the upper edge of the lining as you do.  Press in place–don’t worry that the tip of the triangle is poking out a bit, we’ll fix that in the next step.

Open the side and top back out, then trim off the tip of the triangle so that you’ve cut it below the creases left from pressing in the sides.

Re-fold the sides and upper edge and pin in place.  Repeat all this on the other upper corner.

Now that everything is pinned and ready, you can stitch!  Begin at one lower edge, backtacking securely, then sew up one side, pivot at the miter, sew across the upper edge, pivot again, and sew down the opposite side, backstitching when you get to the bottom.  Press, press, press.

You’re in the home stretch now!  Time to mark your pockets to sew the channel stitches that will form them.  The upper portion, where the lining is visible, will become a flap to cover the cords and keep them inside the roll-up, so we don’t need to stitch there, just on the pocket itself. I used my Clover chaco liner, because its sharp “teeth” allow it to place chalk on the nubby tweed without pilling it or dragging across it the way tailor’s chalk might.  Use a ruler to help you keep your lines good and square with the lower edge of the roll-up.

As you’re drawing your lines for your pockets, think about what’s going in them.  I made sure to have one that was at least 4.5″ wide, since both my husband and I take our Mac chargers with us when we travel.  Remember that you’ll need more than the width of the object, since these things are all three-dimensional, and will take up more space than just the measurement of their width.  I like having sections of varying sizes, so I mixed it up some.

Head to your machine, and simply straight stitch on top of your lines, backstitching at each end to secure the stitches.

And you’re done!  You can tuck in a cell phone charger, an iPod accessory cord, a large laptop charger, even ear buds.  The flap folds down to cover the whole thing and keep everything secure so it won’t slip out when the baggage guys snatch your bag from you while you’re trying to board the plane and toss it carelessly beneath into the luggage compartment.

I really like the menswear feel of this project, and how the lining genuinely reminds me of a shirt inside a man’s suit front.  Sexy businesswear!  For your cables and cords!

For a closure, I took the tab off the waistband of the pants and repurposed it as a button loop–I loved the feature on the pants, and wanted to find a way to include it in the design.  If yours don’t have one, or you’re working with straight fabric and not thrifted goods, you can make a tab, or you can use a hair elastic stitched through to make a small elastic loop to go around the button.  I filled and rolled up mine before marking the button placement, then hid the stitches inside one of the pockets so they’re not visible from either side of the roll.

It’s traveltastic!  We two are heading to the mountains this Valentine’s Day weekend for a couples’ retreat.  This will be his travel gift (despite the fact that we’ll get no reception up there–at least his cords and cables will have a nice place to rest while the two of us are reconnecting!).

 

11 comments » | Holiday Sewing, Sewing Crafts, Sewing Tutorials

Back to School Lunch Bags

August 12th, 2010 — 3:33pm

We’ve got three heading to school this year:  our oldest is a sophomore (!!), Miss #2 is heading to all-day pre-K, and Mr. #3 will be at preschool three days a week once he turns two.  That’s three lunches most days of the week.  We’ve been sitting pretty on the lunchbox-rescued-from-yard-sales tip for a couple years, but this year, I felt the siren song of a new indulgence: laminated fabrics.

Ever since Anna Maria put out her Good Folks laminates, Westminster/Free Spirit has had the good sense to put some of their top designs out in this format.  These are not oilcloth, they’re the actual fabric coated in a thin layer of PVC laminate, and they’re positively fabulous to work with.  You can pleat and gather them, they’re supple and forgiving, and the prints are amazing.  I pulled from the selection we have in the shop and whipped up three new lunch bags for this new school year.

Yes, I said three.  Miss #1 loves hers so much she declined to be deprived of its company for the day to allow it to be part of this photo shoot.  Rest assured, it’s faboo.

I used Ellen’s free pattern from over at The Long Thread, and these whipped up in a snap!  I’m especially fond of the leather handles on Mr. O’s bag (the leather came from a salvaged interior designer swatch book).

Loving these, and very excited that all my Twitterfolk gave me excellent suggestions for bento boxes to put in them!  I ordered these via Cool Mom Picks, and also popped for some back-ups here.  Looking forward to whipping up school goodies all year long!

Happy stitching, y’all!

Project details:  Pink lunchbox was made from 1/4 yd of Lindy Leaf laminate from Heather Bailey’s Nicey Jane, plus 1/2 yd of Bite Me quilt-weight cotton from Michal Miller.  Black lunchbox was made from 1/2 yd of Slim Dandy laminate from Nicey Jane and 1/2 yd of Rat Race quilt-weight cotton from Michael Miller.  Handles are in red 1″ cotton webbing and black remnant full-grain leather.

5 comments » | Patterns, Sewing Accessories, Sewing Crafts, Sewing Inspiration

Castle Peeps Travel Play Set

July 22nd, 2010 — 12:00pm

When Lizzy House’s new collection Castle Peeps was released, I ordered the entire thing for the shop sight-unseen–after Lizzy Dish and Red Letter Day, I didn’t need to see it to know it would be fabulous.  And boy, is it ever!

Very few collections have sold so quickly or with so much excitement.  So when Lizzy invited me to create a project for Castle Peeps Summer Camp, I felt like I’d been invited to sit at the cool kids’ lunch table.

Introducing the Castle Peeps Travel Play Set! Soft toys made from Castle Peeps fabrics, complete with a travel pouch to take them along wherever you go.  Includes a keep (reversible, should you change sides halfway through the action), a village (to defend or maraud, depending on your mood), and plenty of peeps of varying persuasions (all in triptych, so you get three for the price of one).  Everything is machine washable, soft (so it’s great no matter how old your kids are, and it grows with them), and folds flat (thanks to the velcro closures).  This project is a breeze to make, and my children couldn’t wait–truly, literally COULD NOT WAIT to play with it.  Since it’s Fairy Tale Week at their preschool, it was a chore to convince them Mommy needed to have the toy today.  Good thing I’m bigger (for now).

I think my favorite part about this project, other than how easy it is to make and how quickly it sews up, is how adaptable it is.  Does your kid need phalanx after phalanx of peeps, but won’t really use the castle?  That’s fine–just make dozens of little men and leave the rest alone.  Do you have three kids and need three castles, so they can war against one another?  The elements of the project each take a fat quarter or less, so it’s a snap to make multiples!  Make it all in one colorway for a matched set, or make a little out of each colorway to mix it up–your choice.  Download the PDF instructions to make one–or many!–of these beauties for your own house!

Happy stitching, everyone!

Additional download: Tower/Village Roof Pattern Piece

21 comments » | Sewing Crafts, Sewing Inspiration, Sewing Tutorials

This Weekend: Dog Days of Summer Events

July 14th, 2010 — 3:27pm

Whipstitch is cheerfully going to the dogs this weekend.  I’m seriously looking forward to it.  Wanna bring your dog down to our place for some fun??

It all starts this Friday, July 16, with a Yappy Hour for the two of you: join us at the shop from 5-7 pm for treats (for canine and hominid alike), drinks, music and meet-n-greets.  Leashes are required, but you and your dog will have the run of the shop!

On Saturday, July 17, it’s dog heaven all day long. Come by at 11 am for a boxed, piped dog bed demonstration & learn all the tricks to making your companion the prettiest place to sleep.  Then, from 1 to 2:30, learn to make a gorgeous martingale collar–with leash to match!  Register online to reserve your seat–space is limited, and they’re going really fast! Follow that up from 3-5 pm with a Doggie Ice Cream Social and free Pawdicures–a sweet treat and a nail trimming just for pup!

On Sunday, July 18, take part in our Dog Treat Swap Social at 3 pm.  Bring some of your favorite homemade dog treats, and trade them–along with the recipe–for new yummies your pet will love!  RSVP for this event so you’ll know how many treats to expect to take home, and tell puppy to save room for dessert!

All weekend long, you and your pup are welcome in the shop.  We’ll have water bowls on hand for heat relief, and like-minded dog-loving souls to help you find the pooch-themed fabric you’ve been craving.  See you then!

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Comment » | Atlanta Sewing Lounge, Sewing Crafts

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