Showing posts with label tutorials. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tutorials. Show all posts

Saturday, March 31, 2012

Owl burp cloth tutorial


You know how when you're pregnant, you're not really supposed to say if you want a boy or a girl? The correct stance is: as long as the baby is healthy, I'll be happy. As a mom of a baby who was decidedly not healthy at birth, I get this, totally. That said, I'll admit: the first time I found out I was having a boy, I felt disappointed. I think to some degree, we ladies all want a baby girl, a daughter who will grow up and share things with us that boys just can't. I'm totally happy with the way things worked out for me with two adorable, sweet, smart little boys. But the wanting-a-girl thread is still in there something deeply buried. I know this because when I found out my sister-in-law is pregnant with a baby girl, I squealed and basically skipped around the room in excitement. A girl! A niece! My first. I'm so very excited. 

It's fun to make little girl things at the sewing machine. Here's my first project for my niece, due in May.
An owl appliqued burp cloth! I guess some people never use burp clothes because I suppose their children are perfect little creatures who never regurgitate anything. Mine were quite the opposite. I went through at least one a day. I suppose I hope it runs in the family!


For this project, first I cut three rectangles of fabric and sewed them together with about a quarter inch seam. Iron those seams flat and then fold the new long piece of fabric down the middle. I use another burp cloth I like as a pattern. I love burp clothes in this oversized bone shape. They fit on your shoulder well and cover a nice portion of your back, which is nice when the adorable baby really lets it fly. 

After getting the top done, I turned to the owl applique.


I freelanced a pattern by cutting and play with the pieces. For mine, you need an ovalish body, a smaller oval for the belly, a half-circle for the face, two oval-shaped eyes and the wings. I cut the shapes and then ironed them onto medium-weight interfacing and cut them out. The interfacing makes the applique process a little sturdier and also, I hope, will prevent from fraying of the ends.


First I sewed on the body around the edge with a straight-stitch. You could also use a zig-zag, but I went for straight stitch with everything on my owl. After the body, I sewed the face on top, overlapping the body slightly.


I then placed the wings and sewed them only along the inside edge. You'll sew the outside edge down when you attach the owl to the burp cloth. 

 

Finally, I sewed on the eyes. The left one looks better because I took it really really slowly, hand-cranking the stitches for the most part and rotating the fabric every two stitches.


Here's how our little owl looks ready to be appliqued on!


Then it's simple. Place Mr. Owl in the middle of the burp cloth and sew around him using an edge stitch. And the top is done!



I backed my cloth with white terry cloth. I used my top as the pattern, placed the two pieces right sides together and sewed, leaving a hole for turning on one end, with a quarter-inch seam. Turn right-side out, iron very well, and then top-stitch around, being sue to close your turning hole. And you're done. One cute owl burp cloth for one, I'm sure, very cute niece.


Friday, September 2, 2011

Easy taggy blanket carry-along

Continuing with my theme of making JJ items that he's really too old to care about, I whipped him up a simple mini taggy "blanket" last weekend.



 Oh sure, it looks like he's loving life with his taggy blanket in that first photo. Lies! I mean, he might be loving life but it has little to do with his taggy blanket. I guess he is beyond the age of caring about tags sticking out of things. They grow up so fast! Sniff!


He spent most of the photo shoot like this, ignoring the taggy friend and trying desperately to inch himself to the edge of the blanket, where he could shove fistfuls of grass into his mouth.

Babies. What can you do?

I appliqued it with his initials, since that's what we call him. You could do one initial or something else. (I really want to make a moustache version. Wouldn't it be awesome?) I sized mine like this so it's something the baby can play with in a car seat, and it's easily thrown into a diaper bag. Usually, you see full-sized blankets, and those are great, too. I just thought it'd be nice to have something small and portable.

If you'd like to make your own, I didn't take photos for a full tutorial, but I can walk you through. It's really easy. Takes about 30 minutes and is great for a beginner. And I think it'd make a nice baby gift.

You need: 

      2 large scraps of fabric. I used cotton on one side and minky on the other.       8-10 pieces of ribbon or other trim cut into 4-5 inch pieces
      General sewing stuff: thread, sewing machine, scissors, pins, etc.
       If you want to applique like I did, you'll also need a scrap of fabric for that and some iron-on interfacing.

Step 1: First, cut everything out. For the circle, I traced a large bowl with an air-erasing marker onto the wrong sides of the fabric. Cut one circle for the front and one for the back.

Step. 2: Iron your iron-on backing to your scrap fabric. Then draw your applique shape right onto it. For letters, print a letter in the font and size you like from a word processing system, then cut it out and flip it over to trace backward. Once you've got it iron on and traced, cut your shape out. Then iron it onto the middle of the right side of your circle. I then secured around the edges by sewing with a zig-zag stitch. The key to a zig-zag stitch is to play with your width and length on a piece of scrap fabric to get the size you want. I used a fairly big and long zig-zag.

Step 3: Pin all the ribbons into place. First fold them in half, then pin on the right side pointing toward the middle of the circle with the ends sticking over the end of the fabric. Once all the ribbons are pinned into place, pin the second circle, right sides facing, on top.

Step 4: Sew around the edge with a 3/8 inch seam. Leave a three inch hole for turning. Trim seam allowance, notching so the curve lays nicely. Leave the turning hole untrimmed.

Step. 5. Turn rightside out. Remove pins. Iron well, folding the fabric where you turned under. Then top stitch around the outside close to the edge.

Donzo!


Behold baby, you are mesmerized by the wonderful, portable taggy goodness! Or maybe not. But it's still cute.


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Weekend Bloggy Reading

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Tutorial: Monogrammed Pillow from a Button Down shirt


 In case you missed it, I contributed this tutorial for a monogrammed pillow made from a button-down shirt as part of the Button-Down Rehab series over at My Own Road. Thought I'd post it here for those who never saw it. The idea was to take a button down shirt and guess what? Rehab it into something else! Cheers!

When I thought about what to make for this challenge, my decided on two things. It needed to be easy. And it needed to get this worn-out shirt out of my husband's wardrobe rotation.



Dingy feel, holes in the collar, weird old-man cut -- check, check, check. Ugly, right? I thought so, too. Time to be reborn!

But when I told my husband my plans, he shared something I'd never known -- the ugly shirt I was turning my nose up at was his grandfather's. I can remember my husband tearing up when his grandfather -- the only grandfather he ever knew -- died back in 2000. It was the closest I've ever seen him come to crying (men, right?). He didn't mind me turning the pillow into something else, but he wanted to make sure it would somehow continue to honor his grandfather.

Wow, no pressure, right?

Well, here's what I came up with.


It's a monogrammed pillow with the letter and the entire back made from the hand-me-down shirt. And it has just a few special touches, enough to make it a great belated Father's Day gift! We ended up giving this one to my father-in-law. I hope he loves it.

OK, enough lead-in, let's make this thing!

Here's what you need:

-- A cut-up man's button-down shirt. Mine was a size L. Cut up both side seams and across the shoulder seams to get two pieces.
-- Contrasting fabric square 17 by 17. I used a thrifted sheet. Quilting-weight cotton would work fine!
-- 16-inch pillow form
-- Two yards of coordinating lip cord
-- Scrap of medium-weight interfacing
-- Scrap of tear-away stabililzer
-- Zipper foot
-- Sewing machine, and all the basic sewing supplies.
-- Optional: A computer, word processing program and printed to create your monogram template.

Let's get started.

Step one: Create your monogram template.

There are a number of ways you can do this. If you're handy at drawing, you could simply draw a letter in the size and style you prefer, cut it out and be on your way. I am terrible at drawing, so I turned to trusty old Microsoft.

First I downloaded a font from the Web site Kevin and Amanda. They are free to download and the instructions are simple. The one I picked is called Amazing Ruler. Once it was installed, I opened Microsoft Word, typed a "J" for our last name, and sized it to 500. I printed it out, cut it out (Since my font is a skinny one, I cut mine a little wider to give it more oomph), and had my monogram ready to go.


Make sure you place it on your square to be sure it's the size you want.

Step 2: Create the monogram for appliqueing.

Place your monogram on the right-side of a corner of the back of the shirt. Cut out a chunk around your monogram. Cut a similar sized scrap of medium-weight interfacing and follow the package instructions to iron it onto the wrong side of the fabric.


Now place the monogram template right-side down on the interfaced side of your fabric. You want the monogram to be backwards when you draw it on the wrong side, so when you flip it over it will be facing the right way. Make sense? Carefully trace the template onto your interfacing. I used a water-soluable fabric marker, but you could use a pencil, too. 


There she is, next to my wine glass, all outlined and ready for cutting. Cut it out!

Step 3: Stablizing time!

Newbie note! This is my first time using tear-away stabilizer. I hope this isn't the blind leading the blind here. :) But I tried to do this applique once on my fabric without it and it was pucker city. That can happen when you're doing a satin stitch on a thinner fabric. So off I went to learn about stabilizers. I landed on Sulky Totally Stable Iron-On Tear Away Stabilizer. It did the job well enough, leading to significantly fewer puckers. Next time, I might use two sheets.


Place the stabilizer on your fabric where you plan to put your monogram. Follow the package instructions to iron the stabilizer on. Then pin the monogram in place.

Step 4: Applique on the monogram

You could applique your monogram on with a lot of different kind of stitches. I chose to go with a satin stitch effect. Here's how it looks when you're done.


To get this look, set your machine to a zig-zag stitch. Now increase the width to something around a 5. That's as high as my machine goes. Reduce the length of the stitch down to almost 0. My machine actually clicks when it gets to zero -- I stopped just before the click. Whatever settings you pick, my advice is to play first on a scrap piece of fabric until you get the stitch the way you want it!

Once you're ready, get your needle set by sinking it into the fabric on the outside of the monogram in the right position. You want the needle to go back and forth over the edge of the fabric, encasing it in thread. Stat out with a few forward-then-backstitches to secure your thread.


To get nice, even stitches, go slowly and make sure not to tug the fabric through any faster than the machine feeds it. On curves, slow down even more. At times, you might need to leave the thread in the down position, lift the presser foot and rotate the fabric a bit to get headed in a new direction.


Certainly you'll have to do that at any corners, like this above picture. Be careful to watch closely that you're getting the thread in the monogram on one side and in the pillow fabric alone on the other. You want to make sure that edge is enclosed!

Then just keep on sewing until you reach the starting point. Back stitch! Now, your monogram is sewed on!


Carefully tear away the stabilizer -- it should come right off, as the needle has punctured it all the way around -- and admire your pretty monogram!

Step 5: Basting on the lip cord to the front of your pillow

If you're not interested in this, you could skip to step 6 and have a fine finished pillow. I just wanted a little extra something to make the pillow look special. It is going to my in-law's house, after all. Did I mention my mother-in-law is an interior designer, has impeccable taste and a very distinct style? No? Presssurreeee! So I wanted to punch my pillow up a little and give it a really polished look. Enter lip cord!

Another disclaimer: this is my first time working with lip cording! I'm silly right? But really, it was easy. Like using piping. I bought mine at a local high-end fabric store. I am sure you could find some online, too. It give the pillow this look when all finished.


Fancy!

And easy, too. Really!


I laid mine out with the intention to pin it on. Probably a good idea. But in the end, I couldn't find enough pins (I know, what the heck? I think my cat eats them. Seriously!) and decided to just carefully guide it through my machine. It worked fine. You just want the edge of the "lip" to align with the edge of your fabric. The cord should be toward the inside of your fabric square.

Pick a spot to start (I chose the bottom) and leave a good three inches of cord free when you begin to sew. You'll need this loose cord to work with when it comes time to join the two ends.


First, put your zipper foot on! This allows you to get right up and cozy with the cord. Then set your machine to use a basting stitch -- your machine set to its longest stitch-length, like a 5.

Baste all the way around, keeping as close as you can to the cord.

One recommendation for the corners: make it a bit easier on yourself and cut a gradual curve into your corners. Because this cord doesn't corner for squat! What I did was try to smoosh it down and lift my presser foot to pivot.


Kind of a mess, right? So cut rounded corners. Or be like me, and when you're done basting, turn the lip down and go back and inspect how close you stitched to the cord. In any poorly executed spots, just re-baste stitch closer to the cord. That worked for me.


When you get to the end comes the toughest part. Stop basting when you're about an inch from the beginning. You want to join the ends together so the cord looks seamless on the outside of your pillow. Here's what I did.

On the part you left loose at the beginning, separate the cord from the lip and unravel the cording. Try to keep the three pieces of cord from fraying. Better than I did anyway!

Then you will lay the bit of uncorded lip over the other end of lip, overlapping them. Fold the end of the cord over the two lips. And then weave the loose cords over the cords from the end, trying to mesh them together. This is tough to describe. I hope the pictures help. Really, it's one of those things that makes more sense when you try to do it. You're basically trying to fake it like the cord is one continuous cord. Play with it, and when you've got it where you like it, get your pressure foot down and baste away.


Here's how mine looks. Not perfect, but not bad, right?

I then trimmed the cord (I had a few inches left over).


Step 6: Assemble the pillow

The final step! And a fast one. You're almost done.


Place the front of your pillow right-side-down on your shirt front, which is right side up. Figure out where you want it arranged. Then pin the two sides together and cut your shirt down to size.




Or be like me and pin after your cut. :)  I'm bad, I know.


Once you're pinned, get back to the sewing machine. Change your length to something more "normal." I did a 2.5. Keep the zipper foot, because you're still trying to sew right up against that cording. In fact, try to sew right through your basting line.




I found keeping my finger on the basting line helped me ensure the cording stayed to the left and didn't creep over into my sewing line.




Like so! Just don't sew your finger. Ouch.



Back stitch at the beginning and end. Lift your foot and pivot at corners. Easy, peasy right?


With the built-in button closure, you don't have to worry about hand-sewing shut or creating an envelope back. Just slip your hand in the shirt and open the buttons up when you're all done and ready to stuff your pillow!




And that's it! A pretty monogram pillow.



Looks much better in this form than it did as a stinky-old shirt, right? And instead of Grandpa's old shirt coming out when my husband runs out of stuff to wear, now it's a reminder of him that my in-laws can have every day.

I hope you liked my tutorial! I will answer any questions you have in the comments.

Monday, June 20, 2011

Monogram pillow tutorial in the Button Down Rehab series!

Today is a little bit exciting for me. My first guest post is live over on Jen's blog My Own Road as part of the Button Down Rehab series! The challenge was to take an old button-down shirt and remake it into something -- anything -- else. Here's a sneak peak at what I came up with!


Go see the story behind the monogrammed pillow and see the full tutorial at My Own Road! I hope you'll come visit me there and maybe say hi in a comment?


My Shirts are in button down rehab_200

I can't wait to see what the other bloggers came up with. I actually snagged a few button downs at Salvation Army over the weekend for $1 a piece. Hoping they turn into some cute new projects!

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Tutorial: Ridiculous easy baptismal bunting

Sometimes I make something that is so easy it seems silly to share a how-to. But then I think back to when I was true beginner, with my sewing machine sitting there on my table like a big puzzle. I appreciated the very simple tutorials then. So this one is for that beginner who wants a super simple project that takes no time at all. It's simple, but, of course, cute, too.


I made this very quickly the night before Jack's baptism, and it made my ugly chain link fence look much cuter at the backyard party we held after the church service.

Here's what you need to do it: yourself:

* A half a yard of vinyl fabric
* A long length of grosgrain ribbon
* Sewing machine, thread, scissors, etc.

That's it!

I found this fabric in the remnant section at JoAnn's. Do you check out the remnant bin? I buy probably as much fabric in remnants as I do from getting it measured and cut. Dig in there, and you'll always find something cute, and JoAnn's often has sales for 50% off the remnants. That's when I go crazy.

So this vinyl fabric looked like a eyelet lace and was shaped in these rectangles already. All I had to do was cut them apart, and I had a stack of rectangles ready to go. I bet your JoAnn's has the same fabric (look in the outdoor section!), but you could also use a bright and colorful vinyl for a different effect. Just measure a rectangle template and cut them all to an equal size.



Then I took my ribbon and folded it in half. I sewed the open length together starting at one end with a stitch length of 3. Once I had about six inches of ribbon sewn shut, I stopped and sandwiched one of the vinyl rectangles into the fold of the ribbon. Then holding it in place, I kept on sewing, getting close to the edge of the ribbon. I used the left side of my foot as my guide.


Keep sewing the ribbon in half, putting a good five or six inches between each rectangle. Then insert another into the fold. Keep going until you run out of ribbon or rectangles. Then you're done. Should take about 15 minutes!



Cute, right? I called this a baptismal bunting since that's what I used it for. And it's white. But I think it would be cute in a little girl's room or for a baby shower decoration, too.



I love it so much that I'm leaving it up for now. It's nice that it is vinyl, so I don't have to worry about it getting wet and sticking to my fence or fraying.

That's it! If you make one, please drop me a link or email so I can see!

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