Sunday, October 25, 2015

Boot Booties!
 
 
We live in the Pacific Northwest. It's beautiful here! Green and lush and beachy and mountainous! The weather is mild and exploring the great outdoors is important for our family. If you've heard the rumors.. it is indeed WET on the regular around here in the winter. We wear rubber rain boots A LOT.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
I wanted something to wear over our wool socks to help keep our tootsies warm inside our rubbers.. and help keep the boots snug on our feet. Nobody likes losing a boot in a mud puddle!
 
I had a billion 'slipper' tutes tagged on my Pinterist board and figured I could whip up a sock from some 'never going to make anything else with it' fleece bits in my stash. I started with some basic measurements and sorta winged it after that. So here ya go if you need some Boot Booties too!
 
I started out by tracing our boots.. figuring that would give me a fairly accurate sole measurement and shape and it would include the seam allowance all on it's own.. Bonus! Master Bruce insisted on helping of course. I cut those out noting which (R or L) boot I traced.
 
I then took the following 3 measurements of his foot and created the corresponding pattern pieces ADDING seam allowance of 1/4".. with the arches created by centering the B measurement and then marking 1/2 the B measurement and eyeballing a curved line. **Edit! There would also be a 'D' measurement.. how tall you want the bootie to be. It would be the height measurement on your A/B square as pictured below.
 

 
And here are the pattern pieces! The toe will look huge! Go with it.. it will fit right! Cut 2 each in your chosen fabric. **Remember that if your sole piece has a L or R you must cut 2 opposite pieces. However your soles don't have to have a L or R. Fabrics with some stretch work the best.

 
Once I cut my pieces I cut 2 pieces of 1/4" elastic measuring 2" shorter than my A measurement. I sewed it, using a zig zag stitch, stretching it to fit side to side about a 1/2" above my arches.
 
 
 
Next sew your calf pieces, right sides together,
along the vertical seam as pictured.
 
Then match up the center of the straight side of the toe piece
to the seam on the calf piece, right sides together,
matching up the edges to the
corners of both pieces and sew together.

 
 

 
Now match up your sole piece to the bottom of your
 toe/calf  piece matching center toes and heels.
 
Turn right side out, mark your L and R if needed and voila!
 
Boot Booties!
 




Now make some up for yourself!



Monday, February 9, 2015

Dear Me.. before I had kids.


My 3yo made his own oatmeal. I turned around after putting the baby in his chair with his oatmeal with the intention of helping Luke make his... and he had already poured the hot water into his bowl. That little guy was standing there in his Batman costume on the step stool stirring his little bowl with the biggest grin on his face… I can’t even adequately describe the bursting heart feelings that pulsated through me.

Ok, you’re wondering what the hell the big deal is about. Why oatmeal became the topic of a Once in a Lifetime retroactive letter? Why? Because the message I was going to write was a dark satirical on how terrible motherhood is. Well... maybe it wouldn’t have been that much satire because motherhood IS really terrible. At least... terrible in the ‘You will never ever ever ever ever take a poop by yourself again’ and ‘You are going to touch more feces, urine, vomit, slobber, snot and blood than an ER room and none of it will be yours’ type of way.

You are not alone in those moments you think that having kids was the worst decision you have ever made. Every mom has thought it 400 times.

I really only have 2 pieces of advice. ALWAYS bring 2 more diapers than you think you need and you NEED Baby Anti Monkey Butt powder. It’s a zillion times better than that white stuff.

You are going to wing quite a bit of it and don’t hesitate to follow your gut.

Ok... so back to the oatmeal. This is the part where I lament that Motherhood is the only place you can be in Heaven and Hell at the same time. It’s a really consuming job with very little pay. You work a lot harder than you ever have in your life for a demanding person who is a severe relationship novice. You would have dumped him a long time ago if he were a boyfriend.

But then they make their own oatmeal behind your back. And you realize this is the ‘reward’ of motherhood. Watching this thing you created become a person. These moments are random, sometimes enticed but always a joyful rush. Moments where the everyday grind becomes a cataclysmic jump forward in life. You give birth. He smiles. He rolls over. He sits up. He crawls… and so on. In those moments you are so glad you decided to become a mom. There is no greater momentary rush. And I know… I’ve done Whippits.
 

Sunday, April 20, 2014

Here, carry this! A reusable shopping bag sewing tutorial.

 Shopping Bag Sewing Tutorial

I'm a bit of a reusable bag hoarder. I have far more bags than I could ever fill in any single shopping trip. But I love collecting them and adding them to my 'container' obsession collection. Yes.. I have a problem.. I am addicted to containers. Boxes, baskets and bags galore. Now, don't take this as some indication that I'm an organized person.. because I'm not.. but I love containers.
 
Along with being only semi organized on a good day (and we just started potty training Master Luke. *pulls hair*) I sometimes decide I need extra stuff on my plate. So, I recently participated in a 'Shopping Bag' swap with some other members of a sewing group on Facebook. And it had a deadline. Yikes!
 
Anyway, the type of bag was left up to the interpretation of the sewer and I decided to go with a pattern I made modeled after a plastic grocery store bag. I created this pattern a couple years ago and made a bunch of bags I gave around to the ladies in my RE office at Christmas.
 
 It was a fun swap and the bag I got was big and amazing and fun. I was using it right away.
 
So here it is, in the wee hours of the morn, whilst children sleep and husbands snore,
The Tutorial.
 
I took apart a plastic grocery bag and ended up with the pictured half bag pattern. The dotted line is a pleat that folded into the bag. For this bag I used about a 1/2 yard of corduroy floral I had in my stash, along with some teal colored lace. You can use pretty much any fabric and any embellishments you would like. I found this fabric was probably heavier than I would use in the future or that I have used in the past.. but it worked out fine for this project. I bought the double fold bias binding and thread at the local craft joint.
 
I folded my fabric and cut 2 pieces, placing the pattern on the fold.
 
 
I wanted a pocket so I started with that. I cut a rough 'bowl' shaped piece to a size appropriate for the front of the bag. This was about 10"x10".
 
 
I folded and ironed the top edge down about 1/4".
 
 
Flipped it over, folded the top down about 1" and ironed again.
 
 
I then sewed a 1/4" seam from the fold to the crease of the original 1/4" fold on both sides of the  top of the pocket.
 
 
I then trimmed just the top seam allowance and snipped the corner as shown.
 
 
I then flipped the 1" piece back over, tucking in the corners and pushing them out with a blunt, pointed object (I use a small dowel) and sewing it down along the edge across the top.
 
 
I then ironed the edges up a 1/4" all around.
 
 
I added a piece of the teal lace here, sewing it down across the top of the pocket. Then I pinned the (camouflaged!) pocket to the front of one of my bag pieces in about the center and sewed it on close to the edges leaving the top open.
 
 
I then added a length of the lace to the 'back' piece of my bag, placing it at about the height as the pocket lace.

 
I then put the 2 pieces WRONG sides together. I'm doing a French seam here. It will enclose your seam and make the inside of your bag finished.
Sew the straight sides and bottom and the top part of the handles together with a 1/4" seam. Do not stitch the rounded part or the square, center handles closed.
 
Turn the bag inside out and stitch the same using a 5/8" seam, enclosing the other seam within the seam line.
 
 
Then I folded the sides over at the place the dotted line fell on the pattern piece. I folded one to the front and one to the back. I sewed them in place along the bottom seam line only.
 
 
This is what that pleat looks like from the outside.
 
 
I then pinned the bias binding around the handle holes. On this type of double fold, bias binding, one side is a smidgen narrower than the other. It's made that way so you can sew on the narrower side and be almost certain to catch the binding on the other side.
My point is.. Put the narrower side facing up on the side you intend to sew on.
 
 
 
I actually turned my bag inside out and sewed from this angle. It was much easier to sew around that smallish hole. I put the narrower side of the binding on the patterned side.

 
I then finished off the big opening the same way. I did learn that I have a lot to learn about attaching bias binding.. but it turned out ok.
 
 
I then folded over the handle from the outside at the point the dotted line was on my pattern, which happens to be the same depth as the pleat you already created, and sewed a straight line across the top to attach it.
 
 
And here it is! Finished shopping bag. Oh.. I did add a little tab and snap to the pocket as an afterthought.. but I didn't catch any photos of it.. sorry!
 
 
The End

Tuesday, March 4, 2014

Suck on These Beads Baby! Teething Necklace Tutorial


                     
  Knotted Nursing and Teething Necklace
 
Every so often I see a mom wearing a big ole chunky necklace that a wee babe in her arms is playing with and chewing on. Sometimes they are silicone beads, sometimes wood beads, and sometimes cloth covered beads of some sort.
 
I wanted some of those necklaces! My little hulk baby Master Bruce isn't a passive infant anymore. At 4 months he is Eyes Wide Open to the world. Those little hands grab (and yank!) at everything, and now that he's making some signs of teething (already?) much of that is going straight to his mouth. So without further ado, here is my version of the Knotted Nursing and Teething Necklace.
 


I started with a strip of fabric that I liked.. about 45" long and 5" wide. I found a coordinating ribbon from my stash. Then I took a trip out to JoAnn Fabrics and found these untreated 1" wooden beads. This shape is actually called 'wheels' and I chose it because it seemed like an interesting textured shape.
 
Then I ironed the fabric in half right sides together, lengthwise. Stuck one of my beads in and marked it's width. I then sewed it into a tube at that measurement and trimmed away the excess














I then turned my tube right side out. I happen to have a handy little tube turner tool but you can feed a length of ribbon down on a safety pin if you don't have one.



Then I started sticking in beads. I knotted it at about the middle point and put 4 on each side with another knot in between and ending with a knot.
I got my shiny brown ribbon and stuck it in the open ends of the tube and sewed it shut. My fabric happened to be cut selvedge to selvedge but if yours isn't you just tuck the end of the tube in to finish the edge.
 
Then I cut the ribbon at it's center and did a lighter melt to then ends. Ribbon like this is usually a synthetic and if you 'melt' the ends with a brief pass of flame it finishes the cut fibers.
 





















 And there you have it! As you can see they look really hot over my modern NKOTB t-shirt my dress form wears.. and the slobbering Master Bruce loves them too!

The End
 


Wednesday, February 19, 2014

I Dyed and Went to Wrap Heaven!


 As part of my current baby carrier obsession, I decided I needed a dyed wrap. I was seeing lots of mama's talk about them in my carrier diy group on Facebook and I loved the way some of them were turning out. So I joined the 'Dyed Baby Carriers' group and snooped around in there during a few breastfeeding sessions and got some ideas and instructions on how to do what I wanted. Following is how I got to that fine dyed wrap you seen my chunky monkey lounging in!

I bought some Osnaburg utility muslin and a tie dye kit at my local Hancock Fabrics. It contained some pre-measured bottles of 3 colors - Blue, Green and Turquoise. I only used the Blue and Turquoise.




I then washed and dried my fabric, cut it to the size I needed and serged all the edges the way I like them. I then folded it accordion style to the width of my shoe box bucket I decided to use for dying.

I then hung a tension rod in my shower (you could use the one the curtain hangs on.. I just happened to have another one), put a tv tray table in the tub, set my dye bucket on it and mixed my dye in the bottle. I then poured it into the bucket. I hung my fabric above the bucket and adjusted the rod so that 1/3 of my fabric was laying on the bottom in the dye. I carefully added more water until there was a few inches in the bottom and then wearing rubber gloves I dipped and swooshed and moved the fabric around until it was saturated and laying evenly in the dye solution.
 

 
 
I let it sit for about 45 minutes in the dye and then spread it over the tension rod and sprayed it out with cold water until the water ran clear. I used straight pins to hold it up on the bar. (Of course I forgot to photo the spray out the first time so yes.. this photo depicts the turquoise spray out.)



 After the water was running clear I wrung it out as best I could and put it into a hot rinse cycle and then into the dryer on the hottest setting. Then I repeated the process with the turquoise on the opposite side!
You can see by my finished photo that I did a much better job on the turquoise than the blue. But doesn't everybody do something better the second time?
 
In the end I loved it.. imperfections and all. It looks so beachy in 'real life'. I actually wish I had left one edge the natural instead of the middle so it appeared to be sand leading to water leading to sky.
Also.. note that I did not follow all the steps a perfectionist dyer might. They scour (boil) their fabric with dish soap and soda ash (washing soda) and add soda ash to the dye. I'm both lazy and impatient and really this was just an experiment so I didn't do all that. If you want to do a dye job 'right' I suggest doing some research before starting. But if you just want to have fun, get to dying!

 
The End