Thursday, March 29, 2012

Fabric-Covered-Button Rings


I've been on a big accessory kick lately.  I think it's because now the girls are older, I want to move out of a yoga-pants/stained-shirt look to something more polished. Well, at least when I leave the house.

I found a tutorial for some great fabric rings, but my execution was sorely lacking.  The ones I made looked really "home sewn", and didn't give the right "punch of color", if you understand where I'm going.

I was still intrigued by the whole "fabric ring" concept and, some searching on Pinterest led me to fabric-covered-button rings. I found success!

From Minus Minions
I used fabric from a couple fat quarters, I tried to find fabric with smaller prints that would translate well onto such a small surface.  I had a bit of a hard time finding ring blanks with pads, neither JoAnns nor Michaels had them, but I found some at Hobby Lobby.

I didn't use the extra button in the linked tutorial since the button fit snugly over the ring blank pad.  I also brushed a couple coats of Modge Podge on the buttons as a last step, to keep the fabric clean.

I absolutely love them.  I might make more, or even try making a bracelet or a necklace!

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Homemade Princess Dresses

The girls are almost 3 and 4 , so it's natural they're starting to hit The Princess Phase.  They've always loved all things shiny and fancy and I think "princess" is an extension of that.

The Bean got a blue Cinderella dress for her birthday a few years ago and it's definitely showing signs of wear.  In fact, it looks like Cinderella's mouse-made ballgown after the evil stepsisters got their hands on it.  I wondered if I could make them each a dress, without going overboard, of course.  Something a little sturdy, but with enough razzle dazzle to be princess like.

Armed with ambition and coupons, I went to the fabric store.  I found Simplicity 5695 and thought view F, with the overskirt, would work nicely.  Some pink and purple cotton fabric, tulle, ribbon and rosettes and I was good to go.  And all for $25!

I had a happy accident when I was cutting out the cotton.  Since it was quilting fabric, it was narrower than I thought, so I didn't have enough to cut out the sleeves.  However, the tulle was 60" and I'd gotten a little extra, so I cut the sleeves out of that fabric and it added just a bit more of the fanciness I wanted.

The dresses were incredibly easy to sew.  There's no zipper, buttons or velcro, just elastic around the whole neckline.  The gathered skirt is very forgiving and a even easier if you have a narrow hem foot.  You could customize it any way you wanted with trimmings.

Both girls love their dresses. And thy love to wear them while they're running, jumping, and playing with dinosaurs.  Just what the best princesses do.

Monday, March 5, 2012

Rumi Quote Quilt

I got the inspiration for this quilt from Denyse Schmidt's Proverbial Quilt pattern.  Instead of making the quilt elements into geometric shapes or houses, trees, etc., the quilt design is a quote (or series of quotes), proverb, whatever words strike your fancy.

My friend, J, loves the writings by the poet Rumi, so I went through and found a quote that spoke to me, and that seemed like it would fit onto the size quilt I wanted to make.  The full quote is "Let yourself be silently drawn by the stronger pull of that which you really love."

 I didn't want to piece my letters together and quilt over them, so I made each letter an applique and quilted in the leading spacing.  I cut out the letters in freezer paper using my Silhouette, ironed the paper onto starched fabric and cut them out, including a seam allowance, as I needed them.
The quilted sections were just randomly sewn, I changed direction every few stitches and made sure to wander back and forth in the space.

It was definitely a lot of work.   I did all the applique and quilting by hand, which was fun, but next time I do this (and I certainly will), I think I'll cut out the letters on the Silhouette with fusible webbing on the fabric and quilt the outlines of the letters.

Happy birthday, J!

Friday, March 2, 2012

iPod Case Stand

I'd been wanting to upgrade my iPod nano to an iPod touch for a long time, even more so when I saw this tutorial on All Free Sewing for a case stand.

It's a great way to use up scrap fabric and batting.  I had a bunch of this Eiffel Tower and black/pink polka dot Michael Miller fabric from another project.
 I made one change to the pattern--instead of using triangles for the corner holders, I made an elastic casing with pink bias tape.  I wanted to be able to plug my iPod into my audio jack in my car without taking it out of the case.
 I also made the snap tab out of the bias tape.  Partly for design cohesion, partly because I'm lazy.
This was a really easy project, especially after watching the video at the bottom of the tutorial.  I might find some more cute fabric, maybe some fat quarters, and make another one.