by Dorie on September 8, 2013
Ladies, get your hatchets ready!
Do you remember who Carrie Nation, excuse me, Carrie A. Nation was? I can refresh your memory. She was the woman who famously took her hatchet into bars to smash up all the bottles full of demon rum. You’ve probably seen her depicted in old political cartoons looking both crazy and curmudgeonly. She was a woman doing outlandish things for her cause.
The general public may have thought that she was nuts, but she was able to create a whole symbol for herself and the temperance movement. Hello hatchet. Hello branding. If you were a temperance supporter, you could get your very own hatchet pin or little “Carry A Nation” hatchet. The Grandmother’s Choice blog (very cool idea) has a good post with more about Carrie Nation and instructions for the Carrie Nation quilt block.
PS – Carrie Nation has a quilt block named after her.
And that’s what I used as the base for this quilt. I took the traditional Carrie Nation block and laid it out in a zig-zag and pushed it toward the side edge of the quilt. I think the original idea of the block was to depict all the little pieces of the bottles flying (or maybe I am making that up), but my layout is meant to pick up the slashing of the hatchet.
I really like it, as a quilt. I used an old white sheet as the back, so it all very light and soft and snuggly. In the photos taken by the field, the color are washed out by the beautiful golden sunlight. The colors are correct in the other ones.
This is my second quilt in a modern exploration of temperance movement quilts. You can read about the first one, “T” is for Tipsy here.
by Dorie on June 11, 2013
Earlier this year I finished a little quilt with words on it. I find that I look at that quilt a lot, and it’s actually helpful. And more than that, making the quilt was a good thing. Making a quilt about it is as good a way of dealing as any.
I like problem solving and figuring out how to make things work. Sometimes I spend time thinking up new solutions to the same problem instead of just staying committed to the solution I’ve started. While that can be a good quality, it gets old. Solutions are great, but they’re even better with follow-through. Hence, my reminder. I’m all in, whole hog, working to get stuff done.
That’s why I made this little mini quilt, but I totally love it at face value too. Pigs! Hogs! Text! Hand quilting! If I can find a place where it won’t get greasy, I’ll put it in the kitchen.
My friend Jenna had the 2013 goal to learn to sew knits, and being the opposite of a slacker, she made herself this and this. Then, she decided to draft her own pattern for a garment that would be easy, flattering, and comfortable. Or as she said, “I’m creating a pattern called the Jorna. It’s a dress or a jumper or a top. Want to test it?”
Heck yes, I’ll test it! Oh, wait this is a knit? Hmm… knits and I, well, we don’t hang around and sew very much. Sewing this Jorna dress was first time I sewed with a knit by machine since I made a very frustrating dress for my daughter back on 2006. But, the Jorna was not at all problematic. I bought myself a ball-tipped needle, sat down at my not fancy sewing machine using a regular old straight stitch, and I was fine. The Jorna only has four pattern pieces – a front, a back, and facings – so the sewing was straightforward.
The result is this dress, which I really like. The neckline is high enough that I don’t worry about gaping, the arm and necklines fit smoothly, and the skirt is all swishy jersey, which makes me feel quite dancy. With this long dress length, I felt like a needed a belt, but if I make the shorter, above-the-knee, jumper version, I wouldn’t wear a belt. And I will make one. This will be the summer of the handmade jersey dress.
Jenna has the pattern live now. My biggest feedback was that the top could have been a little more fitted in the front, and I know she’s adjusted for that. If you make it, I do recommend twirling like a five-year-old. It’s fun and the blur is quite slimming.
Good Jorna to all, and may your summer be full of comfortable dresses!
My Skipping Steps quilt pattern is all set and done! Hooray! I really do love this as a kids quilt. I mean, we all like zig-zags, right? They’re just fun. And then when you add silly little embroidered animals to the scene, you get even more fun! Nothing wrong with that.
Skipping Steps on Etsy
Skipping Steps on Craftsy
If you’re looking at this quilt going, “hmm… that’s a little familiar,” it might be. The pattern was originally published in Quilts Baby! as Stair-Crazy (also a cute name). I decided to release the pattern on its own, and I’ve re-tooled the instructions and added a complete second set of embroidery templates. The original pattern has cats on the stairs (because I am cat-obsessed), and the new version also includes woodland animals, because who doesn’t love woodland animals?
The piecing of the quilt is really easy – you just sew rectangles to rectangles in rows. It’s one of those patterns that doesn’t really need a pattern. I almost released just the embroidery on its own, but then I realized that it would also be useful and worthwhile to know how big to make each step, how many rows, etc. It would be a good quilt for a beginner who wants to try some simple embroidery or for a more experienced quilter who wants to be able to whip up a quick baby quilt.
I hope you like it. The pattern has seen several pairs of eyes, but I’d love to get a couple more reviews. If you’re interested, let me know!
by Dorie on April 28, 2013
I have loved sewing things for my daughter as she has grown.
And while I will continue to sew her things, if she is interested, this will be my last kid’s clothes week spent sewing for my kid.
After all, she will be 13 in a few weeks. Not really a kid like that anymore. It makes me happy that I will be able to continue being a part of kid’s clothes week while writing code, even if I’m not sewing for a small person.
So here we are, one last time. Tank 20 from Japanese craft book ISBN 9784834756913, which is a book with patterns in ladies sizes. I find that the simple shapes of the Japanese patterns work well for slim tween. Some of the styles “could even be trendy”. Eva chose the fabric, and so, the top may actually see some wear.
by Dorie on April 21, 2013
This is my second Laurel. After the jumper, I wanted to try to make a version of the pattern with sleeves, and I also wanted to take on the challenge provided by the “self designed” category of the Laurel contest.
Spoonflower would be a great option for the self designed category of the Laurel contest, but I’m really trying to work through my stash, if possible. (I mean, aside from buying all that sale voile.) I decided to use this gray Swiss dot that I’ve had for some time. (I think I bought it for a dress for my daughter years ago – such a familiar story.) On instagram, I had been seeing all the beautiful fabric that people were making for the printed fabric swap—many pretty things from simple designs. I had been wanting to give printing a go again since my class with Lotta Jansdotter at QuiltCon, and this top and contest category were a good opportunity to put it all together.
I wanted to do stripes with the same stencil I made in Lotta’s class, and I wanted it to look like something I would wear. Stencils scare me a little because there’s a fine line between something that looks cool and something that looks like a crafty arts and crafts project. I wanted my paint to be subtle and pretty. Generally, I don’t associate metallic gold paint with subtle, but I chose a darker paint that is metallic—not glitter—and on top of the gray fabric it’s toned down. The gold on gray reminds me of an antiqued finish. The paint adds a little more texture.
by Dorie on April 16, 2013
I made a dress—a jumper actually—not because I particularly need one or have been dreaming of one, but because I stumbled, via the powers of the internet, on Colette’s new Laurel pattern and the whopping contest they’re putting on to go with the launch. So, fun contest came at the same time as my annual spring itch to sew garments, and the rest is history
The jumper is made from a really cute brown corduroy with a sweet little acorn pattern. I love this fabric, and whenever I say corduroy in my head I also say “cloth of kings”. It is very soft. I bought it at Joann’s years ago to make pants for my little girl, back when she was a little girl. I tried to make a tova top from it in January, but I didn’t have enough yardage. So really, the jumper felt like a solution. It was the garment I could make with this fabric, and yes, isn’t it nice that there’s a fall category in the contest? It all fit.
But does the dress fit? Yes, mostly. I made a muslin, and from that I thought I needed to shorten the waist. I did this for the jumper, but it’s not quite right. I probably needed to do a small bust adjustment instead, which I’ll do for the next one. This was my first Colette pattern. I hadn’t tried one before because I thought of them as patterns that look really cute on people with large busts. Laurel seemed more forgiving than the others in this way. The pattern instructions were good and the extra info on the Colette site was great. This is the best zipper and blind hem that I have ever done, thanks to those tutorials.
Will it get worn? I don’t know. It might be a little too sweet … acorn corduroy I bought for my 7-year-old and all.
by Dorie on April 3, 2013
I’m really happy to share that I’ve been working on a kid’s clothes week (KCW) project with Meg, and it goes beyond even the usual stitched realm of goodness. We’re working on giving KCW its own website. Yay!
I love Kid’s Clothes Week—I’ve stitched along in many. I like how simple it is, how accessible, and I like seeing all the beautiful things that others make. It’s been a semi-annual event (we’re now bumping that up to seasonal), and it seems like it deserves a site of its own. It’s big enough, it’s cool enough, and it just feels like there’s more to be explored.
The website we’re building will give you a place to find kid’s clothes patterns and designers, to post your own projects, and to see others’ projects all on one place. You might be thinking, hmm… like a ravelry for kid’s clothes? Well, yes and no. Yes, to posting projects and sorting by patterns, and tagging, and searching. No in that it’s still driven by seasonal challenges. The site will be the place to go for that round’s inspiration, and it will be beautiful.
It has been really fun for more me, as a developer, to work on a site that belongs to the sewing community. If I get to do code-y stuff and stitchy stuff at the same time, I’m pretty much in my happy spot. It’s also be great to be able to make a pretty site. Most jobs I work on do not have the goal of being pretty. It’s refreshing.
I hope you’ll like what we’re building, and actually, I hope you’ll help. Take a look at the KCW blog for more, if you would!
by Dorie on April 1, 2013
I made myself a shirt this weekend, partially on a whim, partially because I’ve been wanting to forever, but totally because it is spring and that makes me want to sew an annual tunic.
This is my first tova. I’ve had the pattern forever. I almost made a corduroy tova top this winter, but I didn’t quite have enough fabric. I did trace out all the pattern pieces at that time, which made it much easier to make a spring top just because I felt like it. Any other time I had thought about making a tova, I just couldn’t make the fabric commitment. I didn’t feel like making a muslin and I didn’t want to make something that might not suit me using any of the nicer garment-friendly fabrics in my stash. Yay for me that both Sew Mama Sew and Pink Castle fabrics have been having $6 voile sales. This is doable, and PS, the voile is wider so I was able to fit the sleeve up next to the front while cutting, and I think that saved me half a yard.
I made a small because that’s what went with my measurements. It fits nicely in the top, and while it goes over my hips, I would grade the bottom up to a medium if I make it again, just to have more room.
Overall, I like it. It’s a cute folksy style without all the billowing blouseiness. I’m curious to see how much I’ll wear it.
by Dorie on March 21, 2013
A week or so ago I finally finished this quilt. It had been sitting in my living room with a floppy binding since the A2MQG January retreat, where I all but finished it. It was doing a good job of protecting my white armchair from naughty little cat paws, but really my whole reason for making this quilt was to have a large blanket for snuggling under on my couch.
In the end, machine binding allowed me to get it done. I followed Heather Jones’ machine binding tutorial on these potholders with really nice results, so I decided to try it on this quilt. The results on the quilt were less good for two reasons: 1) I didn’t trim the edges to 1/4 in. but left it at 1/2 in. (what I usually do for quilts). 2) I was impatient and didn’t pin.
But it’s fine. This a super functional quilt. It is great to be under and it spruces up my couch with a little color and pattern. I like its variety of textures – linen, quilting cotton, vintage sheet, double gauze.
Made from Plain Spoken pattern by FunQuilts AKA Weeks Ringle and Bill Kerr. I started this project as part of the low volume quilt a long on flickr.