Monday, November 12, 2012

Child's Library Bag





This is essentially the same as my Reversible Library Bag, but I've added a spot for a library card and pencils - making it not reversible. But you don't have to add the pocket so that it can be reversible! This bag is also smaller than the adult one. Please refer to the tutorial here if you need more pictures - it has step by step pictures. The only ones in this tutorial are of additions to the bag. Now, let's get started!


What you'll need:

  • 1 fabric strip for the contrast strip on the front, 5" x 12"
  • 1 fabric strip for the left front, 4.5" x 12" 
  • 1 fabric strip for the right front, 8" x 12"
  • 1 piece of fabric for the back, 16.5" x 12" 
  • 2 pieces of fabric for the lining, each 16.5" x 12" 
  • 4 pieces of fabric for the straps, each 1" x 18"
  • 4 pieces of fusible interfacing for the straps, each 1" x 18" (optional)
  • 1 piece of fabric for pocket, 5" x 8"
If you don't want to have a contrast strip, just replace the contrast strip, and the left and right front pieces with a front panel measured at 16.5" x 12".

Here's how:
Iron your fabric and cut out all pieces.

Place your contrast strip and left front piece right sides together and sew. Press the seam open.

Place your right front piece right sides together with the contrast strip and sew together. Press seam open.

Place your bag front right sides together with the bag back. Sew together along the SIDES and BOTTOM. Not the top!

Creating the gussets:
Fold the bag so the side seams are centered on the top and bottom (on top of each other). This will make a point at the bottom of the bag. Measure 2" from the tip of the point and cut off in a straight line.

Pin each flap. Sew each corner, separately.

Onto the inside of the bag, the lining:
The pocket will go on the lining piece. First, fold over 1/4" of fabric on all four sides and press.


How I folded the corners:

Before sewing it on the lining, sew a straight line across the top of the pocket, so it looks finished and keeps the fabric folded. You want to do this first so it's not attached to the lining.

Place it where you want it to be on the lining and sew down one side, across the bottom, and up the other side. Do not sew the top.

Then measure 1 1/2" over and sew down once and again another 1 1/2" over from that spot. This is for the pencils!

Place the two lining pieces right sides together and sew along the sides and bottom, just as you did the outside of the bag.

Now create the gussets just as you did for the outside of the bag - Side seams together, make a point, measure 2" up and cut a straight line. Pin and sew each flap.

Straps:
Fold each strap lengthwise wrong sides together and press.

Open the fold. Place interfacing above crease.

Fold fabric over interfacing and press. Place another interfacing strip below the crease and do the same for the bottom half of the fabric.

Fold strap in half at the crease and press. 

Sew strap along the folded edge and along the open edge to close it up. Repeat on opposite strap.

Pin one strap to the front of the bag, each end 3 1/2" from the sides. The bag is outside out now! The strap will lay on the outside of the bag once sewn on, until the lining is in. Sew in place. Repeat on the back side of the bag with other strap. Make sure you don't catch the other side of the bag when sewing the strap on.

Insert the outside bag into the lining, with the right sides touching. The straps go inside, too.

 Line up the side seams and pin in place. Sew together, leaving a 3" section open on the back. Flip it right side out now, through the opening you just left.

Tuck the lining to the inside of the bag. Press, tucking the raw edges of your open stitch to the inside of the bag. Edge stitch around the top of the bag to close up the opening and give it a nice finished look. Make sure the straps stay out of the way when you top stitch.




Sunday, November 11, 2012

Reversible Library Bag


What you'll need:
  • 1 fabric strip for the contrast strip on the front, 5" x 15"
  • 1 fabric strip for the left front, 4.5" x 15" 
  • 1 fabric strip for the right front, 8" x 15"
  • 1 piece of fabric for the back, 16.5" x 15"
  • 2 pieces of fabric for the lining, each 16.5" x 15" 
  • 4 pieces of fabric for the straps, each 1" x 18"
  • 4 pieces of fusible interfacing for the straps, each 1" x 18" (optional)

Here's How:
Iron your fabric and cut out all pieces.

Place your contrast strip and left front piece right sides together and sew. Press the seam open.



Place your right front piece right sides together with the contrast strip and sew together. Press seam open.


I did a decorative edge stitch on the front at this point, but this is optional.



Place your bag front right sides together with the bag back. Sew together along the SIDES and BOTTOM. Not the top!

Creating the gussets:
Fold the bag so the side seams are centered on the top and bottom (on top of each other). This will make a point at the bottom of the bag. Measure 2" from the tip of the point and cut off in a straight line.


Pin each flap.


Sew each corner, separately. This is what your bag should look like at this point.



Onto the inside of the bag, the lining:
Place the two lining pieces right sides together and sew along the sides and bottom, just as you did the outside of the bag.

Now create the gussets just as you did for the outside of the bag - Side seams together, make a point, measure 2" up and cut a straight line. Pin and sew each flap.

Straps:
1. Fold each strap lengthwise wrong sides together and press.

2. Open the fold. Place interfacing above crease.

3. Fold fabric over interfacing and press. Place another interfacing strip below the crease and do the same for the bottom half of the fabric.

4. The bottom strap is what it should look like.

5. Fold strap in half at the crease and press.


Sew strap along the folded edge and along the open edge to close it up. Repeat on opposite strap.



Pin one strap to the front of the bag, each end 3 1/2" from the sides. Notice the bag is outside out now! The strap will lay on the outside of the bag once sewn on, until the lining is in. Sew in place. Repeat on the back side of the bag with other strap. Make sure you don't catch the other side of the bag when sewing the strap on.


Insert the outside bag into the lining, with the right sides touching. The straps go inside, too.


 Line up the side seams and pin in place. Sew together, leaving a 3" section open on the back. Flip it right side out now, through the opening you just left.



Tuck the lining to the inside of the bag. Press, tucking the raw edges of your open stitch to the inside of the bag. Edge stitch around the top of the bag to close up the opening and give it a nice finished look. Make sure the straps stay out of the way when you top stitch.







Monday, October 15, 2012

Thanksgiving Countdown for Kids

Believe it or not, Thanksgiving is coming up! With the help of Stephanie at Somewhat Simple, I've "krafted" a fun countdown to Turkey Day! Not only is this fun for kids to do, but gives them opportunity to show their thankfulness and makes them aware of why they should be thankful.





Since the latest Thanksgiving can be is November 28, I went ahead and did 28 pieces on my craft. 

Let's get the tutorial started!

Here's what you'll need:
Scrapbook paper
- Laminate (this isn't necessary, but with kids and using the countdown more than once, I figured it would be good to use it)
- Ribbon (or a container to put activities in)
- Small clothespins (if using a container - you won't need these)
- Paint or decorations for the clothespins (optional)

Here's how:
After borrowing some topics and ideas from Somewhat Simple, along with creating some of my own, I printed out  these fun things to do: (Please feel free to borrow any of these that you would like!)



ANIMALS
VOLUNTEER AT THE HUMANE SOCIETY
CHURCH
HELP CLEAN THE CHURCH

MY MOM
WRITE MOM A NOTE AND BUY FLOWERS FOR HER
OUR CAR
HELP CLEAN UP THE CAR AND FILL IT UP WITH GAS
FIREFIGHTERS
TAKE TREATS AND A THANK YOU CARD TO THE FIRE STATION
POLICEMEN
TAKE TREATS AND A THANK YOU CARD TO THE POLICE STATION
MY HOUSE
HELP CLEAN UP A ROOM AND KEEP IT CLEAN FOR A WEEK

CLOTHES
GIVE AN OUTFIT TO SOMEONE IN NEED

FOOD
MAKE SUPPER TONIGHT AS A FAMILY

PASTOR
WRITE A NOTE TO HIM AND DELIVER IT WITH A TREAT

MY NOSE
BUY SOME FLOWERS AND PLANT THEM

BOOKS
GO TO THE LIBRARY AND PICK OUT SOME THANKSGIVING BOOKS
COUSINS
WRITE A LETTER TO ONE OF YOUR COUSINS

SCRIPTURE
MAKE A POSTER OF YOUR FAVORITE VERSE AND HANG IT IN YOUR ROOM
TOYS
GIVE SOME OF YOUR TOYS TO ANOTHER CHILD

NATURE
GO ON A WALK AS A FAMILY

MY TEACHERS
MAKE A PLATE OF COOKIES AND A CARD FOR YOUR TEACHERS AT CHURCH
NEIGHBORS
RAKE THE LEAVES FOR YOUR NEIGHBOR

MY FAMILY
PLAY A GAME TOGETHER, INSIDE OR OUTSIDE

MUSIC
MAKE UP A SONG – EITHER WORDS OR TUNE

MY DAD
MAKE YOUR DAD AN ICE CREAM TREAT

GRANDPARENTS
CALL AND TELL THEM “I LOVE YOU. I AM GRATEFUL FOR YOU”
FRIENDS
INVITE SOME OVER TO PLAY

PRAYERS
SAY A “THANKFUL PRAYER” & DON’T ASK FOR ANYTHING
MY EYES
WATCH A MOVIE WITH YOUR FAMILY

DOCTORS
WRITE A NOTE TO YOUR DOCTOR THANKING HIM FOR HELPING TO KEEP YOU HEALTHY
MISSIONARIES
SEND A CARE PACKAGE TO A MISSIONARY

MAKE YOUR OWN
COME UP WITH A REASON WHY YOU ARE THANKFUL AND AN ACTIVITY TO GO WITH IT


I printed them on the white side of the scrapbook paper and cut them in 1.5"w x 2.5"h pieces. Then I laminated them.

For the clothes pins, I used the extra paper. I just decoupaged the clothespin, put the paper on, let it dry and then did one more layer of decoupage. I added a button with some fabric glue I had leftover from my canvas box. Some of them received a little glitter, too.

After decorating the clothes pins, I hung up each piece onto the ribbon and put the ribbon on the wall. (Oh how I miss having a mantle!!!)





Simply have the kids pick one a day until Thanksgiving and follow the instructions on the paper! I will just leave the completed ones turned over and maybe after Thanksgiving, we can look back on what we've done and share what we learned from doing some of them.





You could put numbers on them too, but kids like to pick them, so I opted for no numbers. 

Mandy

Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Sorry! All links are fixed now!

I just realized this week that my Follow Me on Pinterest link wasn't working and that no pictures were showing up when the Pin It button was used. I've done my best to fix all of them. Sorry for any extra hassle this may have caused!

Reversible Coffee Cozy



Well, this project seemed easy - but I just couldn't get it! I threw my first three attempts away! I have no clue why I couldn't wrap my brain around it! Especially because, in the end, it's actually quite easy!

Hopefully the pain I went through for this will turn out a really great and well explained tutorial!

Here's what you'll need:

- Two coordinating fabrics (1/4 yard each)
- Insul-Bright (1/4 yard)
- 2 buttons
- Elastic
- Standard sewing equipment (Machine, rotary cutter/mat, tracing paper, pins)
- Cozy pattern or cardboard cozy to trace

For the fabric, I traced around a cardboard cozy I already had and added 1/4" all the way around. Then for the Insul-Bright, I traced around the cardboard without adding anything. I did it on plain paper and will save it for more cozies. 



Here's how:
Trace your template on the two fabrics and Insul-Bright. Cut it out. Cut your elastic 4 -5 inches long.



Make a loop with your elastic and lay the loop side on the right side of the fabric and on the inside on the fabric. 

Pin. Then sew across the elastic back and forth a few times to secure it on there.




Lay your fabric right sides together, making sure the loop is in between them and all you see is the tails of the elastic. Then lay the Insul-Bright down against the wrong side of one of the fabrics. This should be the order: 

Pin!!! With it this thick, pinning should be required! 

Start sewing from the bottom and go around, ensuring to leave a space big enough for you to flip it right side out! I usually do a reverse stitch at the beginning and end so it doesn't come unraveled as I flip.

For turning corners, make sure your needle is in the down position. Lift the presser foot and turn the fabric. You can manually put the needle down by turning the wheel on right side of your machine towards you.


Take care to clean up an Insul-Bright "dust" from your machine - it can be nasty!

Cut the corners off.  



Flip it right side out. Use either dull scissors or a point turner to get the corners all flipped correctly.


I hadn't cut off the corner yet, but if you look closely at the bottom, you can see where I left a gap for flipping.




Iron it and sew a top stitch all the way around. It can be a little rough with two layers of cotton, plus the batting, so take it slow! I used a seam ripper to get that little extra thread off when I was done, but scissors will work too. I just think the seam ripper gets closer to the fabric.

Now for the buttons! 

Fold your cozy so the ends meet and put a pencil through the loop. 



Make a mark at the farthest point the elastic reaches WITHOUT stretching it. This is where you will sew the buttons.

If you know how to sew on buttons, go for it! I didn't and had to look it up, so if you don't want to go searching around for how to do it - I added these instructions.

I would suggest using smaller buttons, it makes it easier to finish off the button at the end. I learned this the hard way, unfortunately.

Thread your needle, and tie a knot at the end. Push it through your mark on the fabric and then add a button on the side without the knot. Then go back through and add the button on the other side. Back and forth until you feel the buttons are secure enough. Anywhere from 6-10 times depending on a two-hole or four-hole buttons. I usually do it way more than I need to. Then on your last stitch, go through one button and out the fabric on the other side (not through the button though). 



I pulled on the buttons a little bit to loosen them up so I could get the elastic around them. Now, using the extra thread, wrap it around the thread between button and material about 6 times.

It was really hard to go and back stitch on the other side to finish it off, since I have a button there, so I just slide the needle through the thread and a little fabric.



Then I wrapped it around one time and did that again then cut the thread. Hopefully it stays put! If this doesn't I will let you know! However, I don't see why it won't.  








I would love to see pictures of a coffee cozy you made using this tutorial!

Thanks for reading! Feel free to pin this on Pinterest, but please don't use my pictures for any other reason without my permission!


Mandy

Monday, September 24, 2012

Mirror Up-cycle


I've seen mirror up-cycles all over the place and since I had this old mirror sitting around for quite a while, I decided it could really use some sprucing up.



I had left over gems from the wall art I made last spring, so I thought, "Why not add a little more mirror to my mirror?" I laid out all the gems to make sure I had enough and that I liked it, but it was looking a little plain, so I painted a few hearts red and added them in! I just used the fabric glue I already had to adhere them to the mirror.


Here's my finished project! It definitely is more attractive!



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