Showing posts with label sewing room. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sewing room. Show all posts

Thursday, September 12, 2013

Solids in a Bag

Solids in a Bag
  I'm trying to thin out my fabrics and use up what I accumulated and kept all these years. I've gathered fabrics from my stash of solids.
I have kept my solids and other fabric prints in this type of storage totes for years.
 
I store mostly 1/4 yard and fat quarter pieces. Some of the zippers on these totes are tired. I have a paper clip as a pull tab on one tote.  But the containers are easy to stack, store AND still useable. They also are easy to pull out and look through.  My 2014 resolution will be to create a useful storage system in the closet.


For this project, I cut 28 colors into 2" strips then put them in the paper bag (recycled from a local quilt shop)
and began sewing together whatever color I pulled out.
(gee I hope this works) 

When I was sewing the strips, I kept 2 things in mind. First, the strips that were kinda shorter were sewn on one side.  Second, I sewed one strip top to bottom and then the next strip to sew beside it, bottom to top.  That way, these strips wouldn't pull at an angle.



I actually sewed 28 together but took out 2 to fit width of 1/2 yard of backing and batting.
 I created enough fabric to make 2 new fabric pieces.  But on one, I took away a couple of shorties then re-sewed the unit. The strips were just too short to make a second unit. That's why there's a different color pattern on one.


 

Sandwiched and pinned, I then used the many built-in fancy stitches on my Janome 6600.



I used variegated Coats and Clark cotton thread.



  The binding was 1 1/2" wide that I already had on hand.  My goal is to use what I have in my "studio". Since the binding was narrow in width, I adjusted my needle position and it gave me enough fabric to turn over to front. I then used a wide zig-zag stitch to sew it down and sewed slowly.  I then went around the binding a second time with a straight stitch, trying to touch the point of each zig-zag for extra reinforcement.


Solids in the Bag became a colorful table runner. 

Do you see the small bonded block that is holding the clips? It's my test sample, finished to use as a mat for my tiny scissors and seam ripper or as a mug rug.
Now to make the other!
   

Thursday, April 11, 2013

Stabilize It Mod

Sometimes those annual sales are just too good to pass up. Every year I go a day early and every time I'm welcomed to shop at sale prices.  Shoulda, coulda, woulda taken a picture of all those sewing necessities I acquired those 2 days while shopping for my Sis and myself.  Bargains galore!

I did acquire several rolls of various stabilizers for my machine embroidery work at the price of $2.00 each (who can resist) but now, how to store them?  Guess I'll have to sew something up!

 I could try to replicate this: from SewLynn via Martha Pullen.com
  http://i195.photobucket.com/albums/z182/SewOriginal0/Home%20Dec/IM001265.jpg ...


 http://i195.photobucket.com/albums/z182/SewOriginal0/Home%20Dec/IM001265.jpg

 or maybe this pattern found @ Nancy's Notions:
 http://www.nancysnotions.com/product/stabilstor+stabilizer+storage+system+pattern.do

 




Maybe combine BOTH...
Mine needs to hang on a closet bar and needs to hold plenty.

 I started with the MOD fabric leftovers from my "Scrap Catch Hamper" project and couldn't decide which hanging set up to use.  Either with a plastic pant hanger or a dowel and ribbon.



Since the widest fabric bit was 12" that became the width.  The length was pieced till most of the fabric was used up, close to 54". I stitched about 1/8" from the pieced bits, to keep it from unraveling and to lay the pressed opened seams down, but I don't really think it was necessary. It just looks finished.  (who's to see it?)... Only ME!



 Wow the faded portion shows up in this pic...                           don't look. 


  I cut (2) 4.5" squares bound them & folded as a triangle to cover and hold the hanger or dowel.

I was still debating on which hanging method to use.  Just in case, I added a buttonhole to slip a pretty ribbon through to tie it onto the closet rod. I finished the edges with bias binding tape. For making bias tape, I usually do the continuous method, like this tutorial:

 http://www.coletterie.com/tutorials-tips-tricks/continuous-bias-tape-tutorial

 

The hard copy shown above was a handout from one of my Quilt Guild's Take N Make meetings. Handy single page reference. 


I cut 6 vinyl pieces with my Crafting Rotary Cutter (not MY good one) 12" x20" to hold more than one roll per section. Sewn 
binding on each side of the length. The only piece I added width binding was to the top piece for a nice finish.   


 For smooth sewing on plastic, this project needed a Roller Foot for my Janome machine. I could have bought it on the Annual Selvage Sale at Hokema's but after 3 visits within 24 hours, I think they would have laughed at me for being a frequent buyer. When I went to their shop to buy this foot, us gals had a good laugh about my visits.






 I found that I need to put a piece of paper under the vinyl for stitching movement, otherwise it wanted to stick to the sewing bed. (just use the protective sheet that comes with the plastic, position it slightly AWAY from the edge to avoid being sewn)

I clipped up the sections with this new product and it worked very well...

http://www.clover-usa.com/product/0/3155/_/Wonder_Clips_%2810_pieces%29
  
  but I ran out of Wonder Clips, so I used regular clothespins and they did the job too.    
 

I then sewed these sections starting at the top and worked my way down, leaving room at the bottom for a side pocket for storage of the flat stabilizers.  I added a big pocket on the back for extra storage.  




Now that it is completed and full, it is VERY heavy that neither a plastic pant hanger or the ribbon could hold it securely.  BUT a wooden pant hanger is a perfect solution and I think the bow adds a nice touch to "Stabilize It Mod."

  

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Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Think Spring

Welcome  Springtime!  I can hardly wait to get the salsa garden going, but in the meantime I'll keep on sewing the little things that make me happy....


  3d butterflies on batik 18"x 16"



This is my variation of the pattern that is a current freebie, via Quiltmakers Magazine on Facebook.  It's a limited time freebie (ends March 31, 2013)
check it out.

This project was totally made from leftovers from other projects.

The bodies of the butterflies are a program pattern built in my Janome 6600. I programmed various elongated lengths and used variegated thread 

The antenna are also a program stitch I elongated and used a "mirror" option to reverse it. It's the first time I tried that type of programming. Kinda Cool.     



 The blue border is leftover border fabric from one my son's "Turning Twenty" quilt. I had made 2 "Turning Twenty" quilts that Christmas (one son was turning 20 to 21 and my other son was turning 20 in Spring)

The solids were leftovers from a project via Joanns (their pic) titled "Hexagon Color Wheel"  it's also a freebie.  Make one for your sewing room, I refer to mine often. 

 




Years ago, I cut way too many pieces of the batik background when I was finishing another dollar block winning. 

I titled it "3 Octobers of Random Stars".
 I won 14 of the large stars as dollar blocks in October 2004. Added additional Ohio Stars large & small October 2010, using another freebie pattern via Quiltville titled "Random Ohio Stars". The borders, long arm machine quilting & binding done in October 2011.  






When this quilt came back from the professional long arm quilter, it had a noticeable rip on the back which showed through on the front.









She apologized and told me she would give me a substantial price reduction on my next quilt to be long arm quilted.   

 I repaired it myself using Bo-Nash (powder fusible) and very small stitches. 


Oh enough of being a Debbie Downer - it's Spring. Celebrate all things new. I should go pull weeds and plant seeds but it's raining.  Must be time to sew something new and maybe a freebie

Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Scrap Catch Hamper


Just what does one do with all those fabric scraps, you know the ones that gets tossed over the shoulder of a quilting star or quietly slips under the work surface?  I have started to save them bitty pieces for pet animal beds, as stuffing.  I have made several and will continue to do so.  




  Here's Bagheera resting on 6 Upholstery Samples cut, rearranged. and sewn to a fleece back.



I have since learned to make an ugly fabric pillow insert and the cover separately, that way the outer sham can be washed.
But enough of that ongoing project....


I have "collected" these fabric bits in a trash bag, tubs and even a laundry basket. How boring is that? Pretty boring to me!

I "StumbleUpon" this tutorial by ikat bag: Hamper dated 2/25/2012.  (since this is only my 4th blog entry, link up is NOT a know how for me) ....yet  http://www.ikatbag.com/


I had been given this focal fabric in pieces and many more fabrics long ago by a relation to a genuine hoarder that never sewed.  She gave me fabric flats that still have JCPenney tags on them for $2-$3. Do you remember fabric shopping there? I do, at the store we frequented, fabric was located in the basement of the store  (Bakersfield CA)   



I suspect this fabric is from the 60's...so Mod....




My hubby made the frame for me, it just needs sanding and staining.  A portion of the fabric faded during the vinegar rinse but hey, it's old fabric and JUST a scrap hamper for my sewing room.  The measurements for this tutorial were spot on and we had no pattern problems.  I serged the finished edges and since this fabric was almost a canvas type no need to line it - 


 'cause it's JUST a hamper.



Now it's ready to catch those scraps being tossed by this non-celebrity and it adds a little neatness to my sewing space.