Works in Progress, November

I had fully intended to have a completed project here today. But there was an explosion in my sewing corner.  Ummmmm, caused by me when I decided to get one of my trunks of fabric organized.  I will not show you a picture.  It was ugly.

And then, surrounded by the mess,  I started on a Christmas pillow and had a nasty gluing incident.  

Piping
This is the pillow I thought I’d tell you about today. The only thing I actually finished was the piping!

So I returned to sorting all those scraps in the trunk.  How do sewist arrange all these leftovers?

I’ve been working on several things in my sewing room besides the pillow…..like I just finished a quilt top.  Lots more to do before I have a completed quilt, though. 

Quilt

Then I got into the organizing mood yesterday.  I have no idea why this crazy idea just popped into my head.  Just clean out that trunk, you have plenty of time to get that pillow finished.  Which caused that spontaneous eruption of bits of material flying around the room and landing helter-skelter.  

Part of that mess is my holiday fabrics.  I wanted to get new but after getting them all sorted and in a nice neat pile, I’m having a tough time justifying the expense when I already have too much!  

fabric
None of this stuff matches! I probably need to get more. More, more, more….

Come back next Thursday and I’ll have that pillow finished.  And I’m sure it will be very cute and Christmasy. And put you in the holiday mood.  And you’ll want to get all of your boxes of decorations out.

If I could just get this chaos under control.  

What’s New Pussycat?

KittiesIf you’ve been checking out my sewing projects over the past few years, you know that I design some of my own but sometimes–why reinvent the wheel?  There are several DIY blogs that have great patterns and tutorials.  Purl Bee, Sewmamasew and PositivelySplendid just to give you a start. 

But the one I turn to most has to be Sew4Home.  Sometimes I start out with their pattern and morph it into my own. That’s where I got the idea for all those wascally wabbits I made earlier this year. 

So many wabbits!
Wascally Wabbits

This week I wanted to make kitties for Pippety Piper since that’s her all time favorite animal and I turned to sew4home again for their kitty pattern.  I followed their tutorial but I wanted my kitties to be bigger. I downloaded their pattern and enlarged it through Photoshop.  Since it didn’t fit on one 8 1/2 x 11″ page, I cut it in half through Photoshop, printed, then taped the pattern together.

Pattern
Can you see the line where I taped?  Then I marked a 1/4″ seam for the back.

I also like to eliminate as much handsewing as possible so I cut the back of the kitty pattern in half and added a 1/4″ inseam so I could insert and machine stitch the tail.  I taped the ears on to the pattern so I wouldn’t have to use separate fabric plus I used faux fur instead of double-sided minky.

catpattern1

seam allowance
I put a 1/4″ seam allowance on the pattern.
pattern
After I cut out the front, I cut the pattern down the middle with a 1/4″ seam allowance for the back.
pieces
All the pieces cut out.

I always make the faces first. Because if the face is ugly, why bother finishing it? I used fabric glue to attach the features.  After the glue dried, I stitched around each eye and the nose and did some embroidery for the mouth and  added buttons.

face

 faceNext I sewed the tail together and attached it to the back.  About 1/2″ from the bottom.

tail

back
Leave an opening of about three inches on the back, above the tail, for turning the kitty right side out then filling it with stuffing.
Thomas
Thomas the Cat

I thought Thomas’s ears were a too small so I made the next kitty’s ears a little bigger and moved them down the sides a tad.  Plus, I changed up the face.

The face

kitties

 

What's new pussycat?
Here they are doing a little yoga on my mats. Yes, I use three mats!

A couple of hints for you.  Faux fur is slippery.  Use a lot of pins.

Faux fur

I used binder clips to hold the opening together for handstitching.  And always use the very best premium fiberfill for the stuffing.  It’s worth it.

binder clips

Piper
Piper named them Talking Tom and Angela. We have no idea where those names came from.

Piper

I plan to make some more kitties and change them up a little. I’ll give you an update! 

Let’s Calculate!

A few weeks ago I mentioned I used Algebra to figure out the dimensions of the bags, totes, baskets, and boxes I design.

Today I’m demonstrating the calculations I use.

But first a little background….

Last month I said I was making a bag for my daughter-in-law’s school’s fall festival auction using these Premier Prints fabrics…

Tote, Premier Prints, fabric.com

But I really messed up the pocket on the bag plus ran out of the gray thread that I was using.  I was working on a very short timeframe so rather than getting the ripper out and then driving to Jo-ann’s which is 35 minutes away to get more thread,  I pulled some other Premier Prints fabrics out of my stash and made this bag instead:

DIY Tote

Then I put a little tutorial together that explained how I made the boxed corners for the bottom which gives the bag that nice structure.  

And my daughter-in-law just texted me that the bag went for $50 at the auction!

I hate leaving anything unfinished before I move onto another project.  The orange and gray fabric was sitting there nicely cut out and lined in fleece, it just needed a little TLC and I had already picked up more thread. So I decided to fix the pocket and create a new tote.

Let's Calculate! Formulas to figure out size of fabric piece.

And here’s where the calculations come in….

I keep an Excel Spreadsheet on my computer with formulas in it just to figure out–quickly and easily–how to change the sizes on bags, totes, baskets and boxes. 

My three variables are height (h), width (w), and depth (d).

I use 1/2″ seams on all my totes, bags, and boxes.

I want this tote to be 12 1/2″ in height (h), 13″ in width (w), and have a 4″ depth (d).

12 1/2" height
12 1/2″ height
Width, 13"
Width, 13″
4 " depth
4″ depth

So I need a piece of fabric cut 35″ x 15 1/2″. And how did I know that?

To get the width, the calculation is ((2 * w) + (2 * d) + 1)

The 1 in the above formula is for the 1/2″ seam on the sides of the bag.

The desired width is 13″ and the depth is 4″ so I just fill in the variables.

(2 * 13) + (2 * 4) + 1 = 35

The height formula is (h + (1/2 * d)  + 1)

Again, the 1 is for the seams on the top and bottom.

The height is 12 1/2″ and the depth is 4″

(12.5 + (.5 * 4) + 1) = 15.5

One last calculation allows me to figure out how to box the corners.

(d/2)

My depth on this bag is 4″

4/2 = 2″

Let's Calculate!
2″ down from corner
Let's Calculate! Formulas to figure out size of fabric piece.
4″ across

Confusing?  Not really.  It’s easy-peasy. Especially if you put the formulas into Excel. But, I always liked Algebra–except those word problems.

And here’s the inside of the bag.

Let's Calculate! Formulas to figure out size of fabric piece.
With a key clasp and pockets for phone and sunglasses.

I don’t have any plans for this bag yet.  Perhaps it will go into into my inventory so next time I get a last minute text that I need to make a bag–I’m ahead of the game!  

You may also want to check out:

How to make boxed corners
How to Make Boxed Corners