Category Archives: Needle and thread

Pressure-prompted is an euphemism for procrastination

My recent MBTI profiling exercise  names me a pressure-prompted J. To be honest, I don’t need an expensive test to tell me that. Case in point, the months of June and July where I was simultaneously excited and nervous about the Singapore Mini Makers Faire and *successfully* convinced myself that not doing anything earlier meant I’d have more time since I *always* produce results under pressure.. The Husband had decided a few months before (May?) to have a booth at the Faire  – much work has  been done on Squirty and Beerbot in the last year and this would be a good chance to give them their moment of glory. It’s possible he also had the noble motive to introduce as many kiddywinks to the wonderful world of engineering as possible in hope of preventing the loss of a generation to the murky worlds of law and finance.

Being a good commercial lawyer, I swiftly negotiated the right to hijack said booth, which resulted in the catchy name of Tinker Tailor. However unlike Owen‘s effusive speech Making requires more than a clever turn of the phrase (insert obligatory reference to blood, sweat, tears and needles here).  I had actually started on my quest with the projects below.

Stripey was my first attempt at a cloud-shaped pillow. I’d seen cute shapes like clouds. mountains and whales on the Interweb a while ago, looked up a few images online first, but none of them matched the picture in my head.   Although it looked good on paper, I learnt that the more acute the angle was, the more difficult it became to sew which resulted in more puckering at the intersection of each scallop. I may have been able to compensate by overstuffing the cushion a bit, but the fabric in question was not very stretchy, which meant the seam was more likely to rip than the fabric stretch,  It was neither an abject failure not a resounding success, but like a mother with her delinquent firstborn, Stripey will always have a special place in my craftroom. Stripes and spots Take #2 involved a little more googling where I found this Liberty tutorial. I’ve loved the Liberty store for as long as I’ve known it, so although the shape was not what I wanted, I was confident that the pattern would work well.  I was right!

I used a cuddly soft fleece for this and have made 3 of these so far but still need to work on my blind hem sewing skills. The nicest one has been gifted to a friend’s beautiful baby A, I hope she finds it as cuddly as I do.

The next project involved breaking out my kanzashi flower maker, one of a number of craft-related items I requested for Christmas. In one of those slow-motion “Ohhhh…” moments, I thought it would enable me to make a flower at a time, as opposed to a single petal at a time..  After a little whinge, I realised it was actually quite an easy and satisfying process and made about half  a dozen. I sewed some of them to make baby headbands and have a few extras I will be using as accents on some of the projects in the pipeline. The centers of the flowers  were the most annoying bit as I do not really have any buttons beyond the spares that come with clothes. I broke out my new hot glue gun and experimented with felt, circles of fabric, and miniature fabric roses.  I think the roses look the best as the 3D effect provides additional interest, but they are also the most time consuming.. I really like my hot glue gun, but I think I need to get better at not leaving sticky tendrils everywhere. I also wasn’t sure if the glued headbands would still be washable – a trait that is crucial in babywear. In any event, the flowers looked sweet, although the whole process of trying to encase elastic really did stretch my patience :) I also made one felt flower using this tutorial, and attached it to a wrist corsage but it’s somewhere amongst the flotsam and jetsam of my craft room

The finished product

The finished product

If one is busy avoiding action, it is useful if one can outsource the execution of certain projects so you can still  claim credit for the design process.  Our auxiliary kitchen work surface ( which is really our primary work surface given the comically large stove top in our rental) was showing signs of wear after 3.5 years of faithful service. It is a discontinued Ikea model so I looked into getting a new piece of butcher block or other worktop as a replacement, but they were all more expensive than the unit itself.  I decided the best option was to wrap it in laminate or some other durable and flexible material – the Fabric Gods were kind and I found the perfect vintage-style  printed vinyl tablecloth.  The Husband agreed so it came home with me. Given my performance in the months of  June and July,  if it had been up to me, the roll of vinyl would probably have sat in a corner until I felt it was the “right” time to tackle the project, despite the fact that it really didn’t require much planning.  Thankfully for us, this was decreed a Boy Job and we’ve been happily using our old-new worktop for the last 2 months.

 

The alignment of the scales was a happy accident

The alignment of the scales was a happy accident

I think it stayed like this for 2 weeks?

I think it stayed like this for 2 weeks?

This has shaped up to be quite a mammoth post, so I’ll leave the details of the Faire for another day!

 

Skittles’ Dress #2

Happy 2014!

I didn’t really make any New Year resolutions in 2013 save for the vague notion of keeping a monthly journal (but I managed to skip a quarter of the year..). Looking back, it seems like the first 6 months were dominated by work, and thereafter we had a series of trips with family and friends interspersed with more work and yoga.

This year, I’d like to be more deliberate about setting aside time for creativity and writing, consider this my solemn vow to post at least 4 times a month.  I have a few completed projects on the blog backburner which will help  – I think I need to reinforce the blogging habit as well as work on style and content.

And so it begins…

Christmas and Chinese New Year were not far away  at the time of sewing so it felt right to make a little red dress for Skittles. I started with the same pattern I used for Dress 1, but this time I added a little ruffle at the bottom. I considered adding a pocket and actually made one but the scale was off and I ran out of fabric.. oh well.

Lessons learnt this time are:

1. Technique –  bias tape to finish the collar and armholes before joining up the sides. I also need to work on sewing curves smoothly.
2. Sizing – I need to shrink the pattern to fit Asian toddlers. Although Skittles has since arrived and is not a dainty china princess, I ended up taking the dress a bit down the sides   as the arm holes seemed ginormous.  You can see what a difference it made!
3. Ruffles – I should make a single continuous ruffle instead of 2 separate pieces. The length of the ruffle should be at least double the diameter of the hem to make a flouncier ruffle. A 4 inch width would have worked better with the proportions.

I still have a couple of baby items to post about, then I shall move on to paper..

 

 

Skittles’ first dress

I was browsing Martha’s website one day in search of easy sewing projects and found this sweet pattern.

Sadly I was fresh out of vintage teatowels, but had some destroyable man shirts from my very patient husband (“Babe, I’m never going to wear that shirt again, it must be destroyed.” “But the cotton is so good, it’s a TM Lewin shirt! I’m sure I can do something with it, I’ll just put it in the sewing cupboard black hole.”) Shirts tend to wear around the collars, cuffs or armpits, but often the rest of the fabric is in perfectly good nick and I’m always loathed to throw them away.

Step 1 – Print out the pattern and tape it together
Pattern

Step 2 – Lay the pattern on your fabric and cut it out. I didn’t take a progress photo, but instead of cutting two front pieces, I essentially cut a single front piece since the front of a shirt is already composed of two separate pieces.

Step 3 – Join the sides together. I left the collar and armholes to the end.

Step 4 – Finish the collar and arm holes with bias tape cut from the shirtsleeves. I decided not to add the frill at the bottom since it didn’t seem to go with the clean lines of the dress. Instead, I made a fabric rose by handgathering a strip of fabric. The big one was my first attempt and I think I gathered it a bit too loosely, the littler one was better:)

And done! I really enjoyed this project. We have a little niece due in October (currently referred to as Skittles) so I’m planning to make a few more little dresses for her.