January 2008

A new craft

Just what I needed, huh.

Today I took a two hour needlefelting class. Needlefelting involves unspun wool fibers (roving) and a barbed needle. You poke and poke and poke the roving with the needle until it starts to firm up and take the shape you want. It’s fun. And addictive.

Our local craft store offers a lot of classes, and Eric and I have recently agreed that I should take one class each month, just to have some time away from the kids doing something I enjoy. I had been curious about needlefelting since I first read about it sometime last year, and this seemed like a great opportunity.

I came home with a really cute needlefelted snowman. And sore fingers.

snowman

crafts

Comments (2)

Permalink

Kids’ Fat Quarter Tote Bags

I came up with this little kids’ tote bag idea recently, because Ben asked me to make him one out of two fat quarters our local quilting store owner gave him one day.

totebagBen

It has dalmatians and fire hydrants all over it — what could be better for a three year old boy? He loves it, and so does one of our friends, so I made another one for her and documented the process in photos so I could write about it.

Materials needed:

  • Two fat quarters of coordinating fabrics — a bold print for the outside and a plainer/smaller pattern for the inside works well. (Doesn’t work well on obvious one-way patterns — one half would end up upside-down.)
  • Slightly less than a fat quarter of iron-on interfacing.
  • An old belt — I find mine at the thrift store — or some other ribbon or webbing for straps.
  1. Center the interfacing and iron onto the wrong side of the outer fabric.
    totebag1
  2. With right sides together, sew around the edges of the fabric. Leave about the center third of one of the long sides unsewn to allow you to turn right side out. Trim the corners.
    totebag2
  3. Turn right side out, pushing out corners. Iron seams flat. Topstitch at 1/8″ around the entire outside of the rectangle.
    totebag3
  4. With right sides (outside fabric) together, fold in half widthwise. Sew the two ends together.
    totebag4
  5. You now have basically a flat inside-out pouch. Fold in the outside edges that you just sewed, towards the center, so that the seam is laying along the center bottom of the pouch.
    totebag5
  6. Sew across the corner of the bag, about 2″ in from the point, on both ends.
    totebag6
  7. Turn the whole thing right side out. Lay one of the long sides flat against the bottom (like you would fold a paper grocery sack) and topstitch at 1/8″, from corner to corner, along the outside. Do the same thing on the other side, and, if you want, from each of the four bottom corners to the top edge, to give it more of a boxy shape.
    totebag7
  8. Cut the old belt in half, and sew one half on each side as a handle. I do it just a couple of inches in from the ends and at a slight angle. I also leave the belt buckle on for decoration.
    totebag9

That’s it! Give it to your favorite kid and they can carry around their books or art supplies or cuddly toys or whatever they like. 🙂

sewing
tutorial

Comments (7)

Permalink