Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Toddler Thanksgiving Outfit, Part 1

Shirt

Grade: A

Difficulty: Beginner

Pattern: Described below




To start with, this is a two-part project, the shirt here, and a skirt. The skirt will be in it's own upcoming post, so you don't have so much to read/ wade through at once. I'll put a picture of the two together on the second part.

So I've seen shirts for sale with this saying on it, and decided it would be really really simple to make my own! The saying is simple to do, and you can pretty much do anything you want. Here's how I did it, and the supplies you need.

 Supplies
 -1 shirt, desired size. Mine started white. I used some orange Pekoe tea to dye it a cream color.
- Fabric scraps to make applique
- Heat n Bond Lite (Make sure to get the lite if you plan on stitching the fabric down. If you don't want to stitch, you can use the Heavy Heat n Bond, but in my experience it will peel off after several washes)
- Diagram of your saying, if you want to use the same fonts I did, here's the document: Gobble doc
-Matching thread
-Sewing machine


Since I dyed the shirt, I had to thoroughly rinse and dry my shirt. If you do something similar, you want to use as little laundry product as possible  (No soaps or softeners). This will help the glue in the Heat n Bond stick as much as possible to the fabric.

In the process of tracing. I like to have a stack of pens next to me, so I don't have to move anything if (and when) the pen stops working on my cold windows. Also, if you want to thicken any of the letters, this is the perfect time to do it!

All traced, backwards!
 After prepping my shirt, I traced my words onto the Heat N Bond. Remember that you want to put the Heat N Bond on the back of you fabric scraps, then on the front of your shirt, so you need to trace the letter BACKWARDS onto the paper side of the Heat N Bond. The easiest way to do that, is to put your paper right side away from you on a window, then put the Heat N Bond sheet paper side facing you on top. Then trace.

After tracing onto the Heat N Bond, cut approximately around the letters.


Follow package direction to apply the Heat N Bond to the back of your fabric scraps.


You will notice that I left the dots for the 'i' and the exclamation point attached. I cut them out last thing before I ironed the pieces onto the shirt.  Also, if you are using my template for the words, I highly recommend starting your cutting with the holes in the centers of the letters. I cut mine entirely with a pair of scissors. I suggest borrowing or buying and Exacto knife.
Cut carefully on your traced lines on the paper side of the Heat N Bond.


Place fabric as desired on front of shirt.

Follow packages directions to apply fabric to shirt.

Stitch fabric as desired with matching/coordinating thread of your choice.  The nice part about this, is that your letters are essentially glued down, so they don't move while you stitch, and you don't need 1000 pins! Beware that the Heat N Bond may eventually come undone from the shirt or the fabric. If you want the letters to stay exactly as they are now, you will need to stitch as closely as possible to both edges while still staying on the fabric. I thought about trying to use my darning foot on this as if I was doing free motion quilting, but the knit shirt was just too stretchy for that to work! So I used my regular foot and did lots and lots and lots of pivoting.


Voila! A custom shirt, for whatever your little heart desires! All you really need for this is a good font to use that fits the project, and those are easy to find for free! There may even already be some goodies living in your computer! After that, it's just picking the colors you want, and knowing the easy steps to do it! This is also very, very simple to do with shapes!

A close-up of the finished stitching.

Friday, November 15, 2013

Toddler Dress

Simplicity Toddler Dress

Grade: B

Difficulty: Intermediate

Pattern: Simplicity 2461


So I bought this pattern one of many times that JoAnns had them on sale this year, for $1. Can't beat that! The fabric is a 100% cotton, from Fabri-Quilt Inc., circa 1995. It's kind of old so you aren't likely to find it anywhere, sorry.

Pinafore and dress together, from the front

I gave this pattern a B for a couple of reasons. Overall, it was fairly easy to sew. There were a couple of times that I read through the directions, and wished I had a translator. Luckily, I actually found the pictures in this one very helpful. I love the way that the pattern directs you to use a piece of bias tape in the inside of the neckline to give it a nice, flat, smooth finished edge. No itchies! Mostly the B grade comes from the overall fit. I know I have a skinny toddler, but I feel like it's way too big around on her!  Maybe if you have a chunky to super chunky kid, it would fit just like you want it to though!


 Together, from the back.

Nevertheless, I will be using this pattern again for sure! The finished product looks very nice without too much hassle! The dress pictured is a size 1 (approximately an 18 month). Next time I'm going to try making a size 2, but only cut it to the size 1 width (if that makes sense) so that it isn't quite to big! the only downside, is that I find I need to iron it after most washes. Bleh. But that's what old cotton will do I guess!

Difficulty-wise, you need to be okay with some curved seams, hems, putting elastic in casings, attaching buttons, and putting in a zipper.


Just the dress, front view.

In case you are wondering, I got this fabric for free from my Grandma's stash. She had a bolt of each of them, which I, ahem, borrowed with permission. That plus getting the pattern for $1, means I bought the zipper, and two little spools of matching thread. So less than $5 total. Yay for Grandma's stash!

Pinafore, from the front.

Lastly, Miss E loves it! Lately she wants to wear dresses almost every day of the week! This one looks cute with her little leggings, that help keep her warmer now that it's decided to get cold, or with her tights if she wants to wear it to church. Or I've even put it on her with pants. She grew a little after I cut it out. It's not tunic length on her yet, but given how big around it is on her, she can probably wear it that long! I love that it looks cute with or without the pinafore too! If it still fits her next spring, we may try the pinafore over a short sleeve shirt with some bloomers or a diaper cover.

Pinafore back. Hard to see, but it is split down the middle. Also, no buttonholes! You make loops of fabric to button them through! So far the loops have worked just fine to hold the buttons.

Let me know what you think! Also, if you try this one out, I would love links to see pictures, or to hear what you thought of this pattern!

Sunday, November 3, 2013

Nine Patch Quilt

Nine Patch Quilt

Grade: A

Difficulty: Advanced-beginner

Pattern: None!


The whole quilt in all it's craziness! Not sure if you can tell, but I tried to do diagonal rows of color to give it a little bit of unity. I also tried to alternate the darker and lighter colors.

So this one, I'm kind of not sure how to review for you, because I didn't use a pattern!

The best I can do, is share and explanation as well as some approximate measurements.

A close up of some of the blocks.

Firstly, I chose to do this quilt with solid blocks, no sashing, so the numbers I give you will be based off of the same. If you want to do sashing on your particular quilt (less cutting and piecing!), with nine patches, take a look at one of these: Crazy Mom Quitls Nine Patch
Alternately, you can stagger nine patch blocks with blocks of solid fabric like this: Staggered Nine Patch

Secondly, if you want to do bigger blocks and pieces, you are going to have to do your own math to figure it out! My numbers are only for the top, so nothing for backing or batting.

Another close up.

I cut each square of the blocks 2.5". You then sew three pieces together into a row. You sew three rows total, then sew the three rows together into a block. You can make it so that you alternate your colors, giving each block a checkerboard look, or you can make them totally random! Once you sew them together into a nine patch  (3x3 squares), the block is 6.5". Finished, the blocks are 6". This means there are tons of individual pieces! I can't tell you yardages, because as you can see, it's very, very scrappy!


I did do one 2.5" border around the edges of mine, just to give it a little bit of balance so the eye had somewhere to actually rest. The numbers below will give a yardage requirement for the same size border, as well as the finished size listed will reflect how big the quilt is with the border added.


If you need more specific help on assembling the nine patches, try doing a Google search. It's a very common quilt block, so you should be able to find lots to help you!
What a stack of 224 quilt blocks looks like before they are sewn together.

Queen size quilt:

14 blocks across x 16 blocks down
224 blocks total
2016 pieces
Border requirement: 7/8 yard chosen fabric.
Approximate finished size: 81.5 Wide x 94" Long

Full size quilt:

13 blocks across x 14 blocks down
182 blocks total
1638 pieces
Border requirement: 3/4 yard chosen fabric
Approx. finished size: 82" W x 88" L

Twin size quilt:

11 blocks across x 14 blocks down
154 blocks total
1386 pieces
Border requirement:  3/4 yard chosen fabric
Approx. finished size: 70" W x 88" L

Throw size:

10 blocks across x 11 blocks down
110 blocks total
990 pieces total
Border requirement:2/3 yard chosen fabric
Approx. finished size: 64"W x 70"L

Soft Book of Colors

Soft Book of Colors

Grade: A

Difficulty: Beginner

Pattern: Baby's Soft Book of Colors


Front cover. I thought about doing my little's name here, but decided to just make it generic girl. That way, if there are more, I don't feel obligated to make one of these for each of them if I don't want to!

So I started this cute little book for Miss E, intending to give it to her for Christmas. And then she went and started learning her colors on me, so I pushed it way up, and she is currently loving it! There are a couple of other blogs that have used this same tutorial. I added one extra set of pages so that I could do more colors, and omitted the ribbon closure. Miss E has a quiet book that has a velcro closure, and while I love that it closes the book up tight, she hates it!




 


The pattern really is simple, all you do is sew straight lines! I loved it because it ate up some of those awkward scraps I had! I also made sure to put lots of different textures in, just for fun! You can use piece of fabric however big you want, if you only want three pieces per color, that's fine! If you want to do 20, go for it! It's totally up to you!
Other than the minor adjustments mentioned above, I really didn't do anything else.

On the Blue-green, if yours will be next to each other, I recommend doing a definite piece of each color on what will be the seam line between the two, so they don't 'blend' together. Otherwise that distinction can be hard for little eyes to make out!



As with most things, I'm a little bit more OCD than you probably suspect, so of course mine is in color order! Go bust out your scraps though and make one of these for your little cutie!