Friday 24 June 2016

Monk's Habit

My second post for today...

Another client commissioned me to make his habit. This was a cool project to work on! I got to draft a pattern, source the fabric and sew the garment.

My client told me that his community wears dark blue. I checked out the local fabric stores and was able to purchase a navy poly-cotton knit at Atlantic Fabrics.

The garment itself went together quickly and easily. I did have to remove and redo the collar, but that was because I had purposely made it big (so as not to choke  a monk when he sat down), and then found out that it is a no-no to see the clothing that they wear under their habit.

Completed projects: 23
Remaining projects: 29

Chair Cushions

I've fallen behind on my project blogging. Sorry. I hope to catch up with two posts today. 

This first post will cover (pun intended) two projects that I did for a client. She had two large chair cushions that needed recovering. She brought me the cushions, the new fabric, two zippers and even the thread. The cushions belong to two, large, differently styled chairs. She unifies the look by keeping them covered in the same fabric. This is a lady who knows what she's doing!

Monday 30 May 2016

Pincushions

Perhaps it's leftover from my days in the IT sector, but I always feel like if you're not learning, you're falling behind. So, I watch a lot of YouTube sewing videos. Usually, even on the most basic of videos, you can learn something, refresh your memory, or gain a new appreciation of something. Yesterday, I was watching Gertie make a gathered skirt and I noticed that she had a wrist pincushion. What an awesome idea! Who ever thought of wearing a pincushion is a genius! I wanted one.


My thoughts went like this... Gertie's wrist pincushion looks like it's got a metallic bracelet, which isn't good for me due to my metal allergy. But a fabric bracelet would work.  And Gertie's bracelet looks a little too big for her, she had it half way to her elbow. An elasticized fabric bracelet would probably be perfect. And, Gertie's pincushion isn't very pretty...

So I made this one...

Wrist Pincushion

Here it is, on my arm. It has a cardboard circle sewn into the bottom of the pincushion so that I won't stab myself with the pins. It's actually quite comfortable. I put it on to show my husband when he got home from work and I got sidetracked, forgetting that I was even wearing it. He says it looks like a wrist corsage. I think it looks a little like a water lily.

Wrist Pincushion

Once I remembered I was wearing my wrist pincushion, I went back to my sewing table to take it off and I remembered that Diana's pincushion has been missing for a number of years. So I decided to make a little one to replace the one that's missing from her neck.

Dressform Pincushion

Completed projects: 20
Remaining projects: 32

Thursday 26 May 2016

Going Into Business

About a year and a half ago, I bought Nina (my latest sewing machine). In the back of my mind was the idea that someday I would start my own business with her. At the time, I didn't tell anyone because I was afraid that I'd be held to it. It's funny how fear can affect you... Anyhow, after mulling it over for the last while, and making sure that my skills are up to snuff I have finally taken the plunge!

Wednesday 11 May 2016

Purple Hearts Bow-Tie

"Thing 1" landed a job at the casino. On the shifts that she is serving food and drinks, she is to wear a "kitchen staff" type of uniform. They provided her with a white shirt and black vest. She gets to wear her own black pants and her own tie. She had been wearing a tie from dad's closet, but she said she wanted a bow-tie. So, I made her one.

Friday 6 May 2016

Pink Sparkly Leotard: Take 2

Here it is! It's two sizes bigger than her measurements, but this one fits!

Jalie 2792, View A

I've decided to count this scrunchie as a separate project because by the rules that I set out last year, it is. It's a brand new make, albeit a small one. But, I'll take it.

Pink Sparkly Scrunchie

Completed Projects: 18
Remaining Projects: 34

Wednesday 27 April 2016

Pink Sparkly Leotard

How cute is this?! "Thing 3" wanted a leotard to wear to gymnastics. Have you seen the prices of children's leotards? They are expensive, so I decided to try making one instead. It turned out pretty cute, and it came in at a much lower price than the store-bought ones. I think that's a win. 

Wednesday 20 April 2016

Running Belts

Lucky me! I get to mark two projects off my to do list. I made two running belts; one for "Thing 1", who actually runs, and one for me, who just doesn't want to have her hands full while walking the dog.

I followed this tutorial at sewbon.com. It is well written and has lots of pictures to explain the steps. Both belts were made from a black, high performance fabric and edged with 1/2" fold over elastic.  In fact, they're identical, other than the size difference. I'm not thrilled with the way the zippers turned out. I think it's because I used chunky sports zippers. Had the zippers been finer, the fabric wouldn't have to pull as much at the zipper ends where it transitions to the seam in the fabric.  I tried to get a picture to show you, but it's all black on black so it doesn't show up. Sorry.

When I installed the fold over elastic, I sewed it all in one step. I've seen many places where people sew it on the back first, then fold it over and sew it on the front. I didn't find the extra step was necessary, however that could be because my sewing machine can crawl along at a slow pace. I't never occurred to me to try using my bias binder foot, though. Darn. Maybe next time.


diy running belt
Running Belt

Oh well! Even if it's not perfect, it'll hold my phone, tissues, id and maybe even my keys. I think I'll try mine out at the park tomorrow.


diy running belt
Running Belt

Completed projects: 15
Remaining projects: 37

Monday 18 April 2016

Green Nightshirt

I wasn't sure if this would count as a sewing project or not, so I went back to my original post and re-read the rules. I didn't say anything about refashioning existing articles of clothing. So, I'm making a call. Refashions count as a project. Repairs and fitting alterations don't.

This is one of my favourite refashions. It's not the first time I've done it. It's so quick and easy and SO CUTE! Every once in a while we get a cute tee (from a friend or cereal box or wherever) that nobody wants. I turn them into nightshirts for "Thing 3". 

Fabulous Fit Dressform Padding Kit

My grandmother was the best seamstress in her village. She could make anything. Every once in a while she would take my mother window shopping to see what styles she liked. Then, while Mom was in school, Nanny would make up the garment from scratch, no patterns involved. And they would be perfectly fitted.

As I grew up, my mother would occasionally sew me something. Although she wasn't as talented as my grandmother, she could only sew from patterns, she knew how to fit. She would say things like "Mom would pinch here," and then she'd add a dart. 

My skill level falls somewhere in between. And like my grandmother, I love to sew. I'm even good at fitting others. But I have a hard time fitting myself.

So, in 1999, while I was pregnant with "Thing 2", adjustable dressforms went on sale at the local fabric store and I bought one. I figured she, Diana, would help me with fitting my creations. But guess what? Diana is tiny. And although I was tiny before pregnancy, I have a more mature looking body shape now. Maybe if Diana had been a larger size she wouldn't be as disappointing to me, but she's tiny.

Sunday 10 April 2016

Baby Alive Diapers

Do you know about Baby Alive? It's a brand of dolls that are more life-like than regular dolls. Some Baby-Alives talk, some eat, drink and soil their diapers, some get a "fever" and their mommies nurse them back to health... You can also buy accessories for them, like food, diapers and clothing. 

"Thing 3" loves her Baby Alives. She plays with them every day. She has received three of the dolls over the past three Christmases. Two of them soil their diapers. In the past, she has had to buy new diapers for them, but those diapers cost more than a dollar a piece! This time when she asked to go buy new diapers, I suggested we make some instead. So this is what I did...

Thursday 7 April 2016

Gingham Skirt

Have you ever had a project that seemed to take forever? I've probably got you beat! Meet my version of McCall's 4783, view C. It was May, 2009, when I started this skirt. I bought the pattern, which I loved, with the intention of making two summer skirts from it. I also bought two fabrics and coordinating ribbons to complete the skirts. I cut this fabric, looked at the instructions and froze. The zipper instructions were not clear to me. I put the skirt aside... for seven years! Hmm, I became pregnant that summer, so that should buy back nine months. And it probably took me another nine months to lose all the baby weight, so I should get a free pass for 18 months, right? That means it only took five and a half years to make my skirt. (Cue embarrassed laughter.)

Monday 4 April 2016

Red "Kash-mere" Jacket

After 35 days of coxsackie virus turned bronchitis, I'm back! I'm feeling a little overwhelmed by the amount of sewing I haven't done. I challenged myself to 52 projects in 52 weeks, and I'm WAY behind my intended schedule of one project per week. Had I been able to maintain my schedule, I'd be showing you project #14. However, here is project #9...

Last fall "Thing 3" started school. Usually I'm the parent who puts her on and gets her off the bus. At the beginning of the school year the weather is warm and I don't mind being outside with just a hoodie, and in the winter it gets cold and I have a down coat, snow pants, all the winter gear. But in the fall and spring, I don't really have the appropriate clothing to be comfortable while waiting outside, just standing in the cold-ish temperatures. I bet you can see where this is going...

Wednesday 9 March 2016

Striped Sweater

I finally did it! I made the sweater that I've been imagining for two months now. The fabric is a sweater knit from my stash. I originally bought it from a second hand store because it was so soft and drapey, and, of course, it was a good price. I thought it would make a great cowl neck sweater with the stripe on the bias, but I wasn't sure how to accomplish that. Then, for Christmas, I got Butterick 5760 with it's cardigan pattern. I had to marry them.

Butterick 5760

Saturday 5 March 2016

Charcoal Wool Skirt

I'm a conservative dresser at heart. I love the look of a well tailored suit, on a man or a woman. Wool and silk are completely irresistible to me. And I dislike the extreme casualness of today's fashions. So it should come as no surprise that I bought Butterick 5760. I originally bought it for the cardigan pattern, but after a closer look I realized that there are other pieces in the envelope that shouldn't be ignored. The more I looked at it, the more I liked the skirt. I like the contoured yoke and the simpleness of the skirt.

Topstitching along the yoke

Friday 26 February 2016

What to Make Next

"Thing 3" brought the coxsackie virus home from school. Let me tell you, this is a virus to avoid. So, do that. Avoid it. We're sick, that's all there is to it. Too sick to sew... or do anything else, like breathe. We're on day 6 of this bug. Yesterday I took a shower and got dressed. Then I was so tired I needed a nap but I was dressed. I had the nap anyway. Today, I was wiser. Today I skipped the shower. I changed from my pyjamas into clothes. It wiped me out. Then before we went to see the doctor, I realized my leggings were covered in fluff from my flannelette sheets. They were the same leggings I was wearing while I napped yesterday. I had to change into a fresh pair. Whew! I need another nap. See... it's a nasty virus.

What do you do when you're that sick? I can't sew. Even if I have a couple of hours of awake time, I can't sew... my sewing machine is downstairs. I'd never make it back up the stairs again. And sewing with a fever is probably as stupid as sewing after that second glass of shiraz. I spent a whole day (which may only have been an hour of awake time, who knows?) deciding what to make next.

Sunday 21 February 2016

Pink Pyjama Top

Do you ever sew with knits? Or do you avoid them because you think they're too tricky to sew with? For years I have avoided sewing knits. Why? My past sewing machines, I guess. I had a hard time keeping the seams from puckering, my stitches never seemed to be formed properly, I felt incompetent. Then Pinterest came along. That didn't help things. I kept reading people's pins on how to sew knits. Even they made it seem like a losing battle. But they were WRONG!

I love knits. I mean I love wearing knits. I have more than one piece of fabric in my stash that has been bought with a beautiful knit wrap dress or a floral tee in mind. But once I got the fabric home, my fear stopped me from following through with my plan. That's part of the reason that I decided to take on the challenge of sewing 52 projects in 52 weeks. I hope to learn new skills, become more confident in my skills, and use up some of my fabric stash.

So after the last project's pyjama pants, I thought I'd ease into sewing knits with a pyjama top. I chose McCall's 6658, and I chose View C. It's a very easy pattern, it only has four pieces... bodice front, bodice back, sleeve, and neckband. I chose View C because the envelope artwork shows a crew neck. I was disappointed to find that in reality it's a scoop neck. But I digress. Back to the sewing...

Tuesday 16 February 2016

Houndstooth Pyjama Pants

It's winter in Canada and our heat pump isn't working properly (Lennox is working on it). We're not in danger of freezing. We have a wood stove and tons of wood, and our heat pump has a backup electric coil that does work. But the reason we had the heat pump installed was to save money.  Electricity is expensive here, so we don't want to use the electricity unless it is absolutely necessary. Our wood stove is great at heating the basement, but the heat that it generates doesn't get circulated around the rest of the house very well. What does all of this have to do with anything, you ask. Well, it means that the main floor of our bungalow is cold. And most of the time, I'm on the main floor. So I need to dress warm, especially in the evenings.  I like to sit down and watch Downton Abbey or Agent Carter in the evenings. And if I get chilled, I find it extremely hard to warm up and I can't sleep. So, I decided to use that houndstooth flannelette that I used in the Valentine's Day Dress and make myself a pair of pyjama pants.

Once again, I called on Simplicity 3696, the same pattern envelope that I used for the Reindeer Robe a couple of weeks ago. Through trial and error, I've learned that even though my waist and hip measurements fall into Simplicity's XL category, I prefer to wear a smaller size. This time I made up the pants in a size L, but I extended the rise to the height of the size XL, because I don't want to hear my kids singing, "I see London. I see France. I see Momma's underpants!" and it's easy to take away extra fabric if need be.

So anyway, I made up my pyjama pants in a size L, praying the whole time that they would be large enough to go around me. I sewed the inseams, I sewed the crotch seam and I sewed the outer seams. The  moment of truth had arrived... were they big enough to go around me? 

Wednesday 10 February 2016

Valentine's Dress

My five year old asked me to make her a new dress.  It was to have long sleeves and it should be pink. It sounded like a reasonable request, so I agreed.

I headed to my pattern stash and found the ONLY pattern that I own for a long sleeved, little girl's dress. New Look 6309. Does it bother anyone else that pattern designers and clothing manufacturers don't seem to get that girls need functional clothing as much as boys? I mean, really, just because they like to look pretty doesn't mean they need to freeze.

New Look 6309
New Look 6309 circa 2003




















Tuesday 26 January 2016

Reindeer Robe

Simplicity 3696. I have to say, I didn't have much hope for this robe when I decided to make it. Historically, I don't have much luck with robes. I'm a curvy woman and it seems to me that robes are built for men. They're boxy and cut very much like a series of rectangles. I was also afraid that I wouldn't like the horizontal pattern in my fabric. You know how they say we should never wear horizontal stripes...

Thursday 21 January 2016

Black Cherry Bra




So here it is! My black cherry bra. I've been working on this thing for DAYS. Isn't it pretty? There's a bit of a back story on this bra...

*** This picture has been removed***

Friday 15 January 2016

Curtains

I've finally finished the first project of my 52 sewing projects challenge! I was so gung-ho to get started that it was hard to hold myself back at the end of 2015. And, still, it took me two weeks to complete my first project - Unlined, rod-pocket curtains for my daughter's bedroom window...A beginner's project, really.

Sunday 3 January 2016

Some New Fabrics

Okay, so 2016 hasn't started off the way I planned... I went to the fabric store and found out that I missed their boxing week sale! The flyer said it would be on until January 4th, but it wasn't. What's a girl to do when she misses the sale? Shop the dollar racks of course!