Saturday, April 6, 2013

Spring 13 Ideas House

 {This is not my house}

Enjoy this photo visit to Bachman's Spring 2013 Ideas House, located in an historic (1920s) family home. It's such a wonderful destination for design inspiration. They completely repaint, refurnish and redecorate the house with creative ideas in home décor and entertaining, using their signature mix of vintage and new pieces.

Why did this Ideas House even start, you may ask? Back in 2010 Bachman's celebrated 125 years in business and for their anniversary they opened the Ideas House with the intention of having it only for 2010, but it was such a success that they have continued it ever since. The only change is that they used to have a Summer one, but dropped it due to lack of attendance. They continue to still have the Ideas House for Spring, Fall and Holiday.

Feel free to visit some of the previous ones: Spring 10, Summer 10, Holiday 10, Spring 11, Summer 11, Holiday 11, Spring 12, Fall 12, and Holiday 12.

Spring is my favorite season and here are my most-loved things from the Spring 13 Ideas House...


On the porch: Miniature trellis with ribbon as place card holder in mug with embellished garden rocks as favors
 Faucet wall hooks as curtain rod holders
 In the living room: water fountain used in fireplace, coffee table unit built of 6X6 cedar posts at different levels with decorative tiles
 Vintage cubbie unit as sofa table and magazine holder
 In the sunroom: birdcages turned into miniature garden planter
 Vintage trough used as a miniature garden planter, yellow watering can turned into a miniature fairy house, tree fort made of metal tray and assorted objects
 Vintage round suitcase turned into a miniature fairy house
 In the dining room: salvaged iron panel spray-painted layered on top of vintage wallpaper as wall art
 Paintable wallpaper used as table runner
 In the kitchen: aluminum mesh panels line interior of chandelier
 Shelves above the stove
 Vintage shelving unit next to oven
 Metal rack as hanging herb planter hanging in window
 In the master bedroom: area rug as headboard
 In the girls bedroom: flowers as headboard, light pendants made from hanging vases and metal baskets
 Salvaged picket fence, grapevine, and permanent floral stems as window valances
 In the event coordinator workshop: sachet in a ceramic swan as a party favor, wire birdcage stand as serving piece, vases filled with sand as candlestick holder, bracelet as napkin ring
 Silicone muffin cups as miniature planters
 In the event coordinator office: chandelier made of layered twig baskets
 Decorative notepad paper, plexiglass and molding turned into giant wall calendar
 Coat racks used as window valances
 Birdcage turned into a planter
 Salvaged porch posts affixed to wall and greeting cards hung from line between posts as wall art
 Nests full of eggs in a glass jar !

The Spring 13 Ideas House is open until April 28th, 2013. The Fall 13 Ideas House will be September 12th - October 6th, 2013 and the Holiday 13 Ideas House will be November 7th - December 15th, 2013.

Friday, April 5, 2013

Checkerboard Dress Tutorial

 I'm so happy to have been picked to participate in the Sew Off competition at Nap Time Crafters. The challenge for Week 1 is Kids Clothing and this Checkerboard Dress is my entry. Voting is open until Sunday night, go vote for YOUR favorites, everyone is allowed to vote 1 time for their 2 favorite projects. Go to the bottom of the post and click on 'Click to vote.' And if my look is one of your favorites, it is #9 Checkerboard Dress :)

The patterns: Oliver+S Roller Skate Dress pattern and the on seam side pockets were made with Freshly Picked's free pocket pattern.

The fabrics: White cotton and 100% cotton sateen in fuschia, my daughter picked out the pink fabric, it was her favorite of all the pinks that were available. The lining is 100% cotton voile in white.

The mods and tutorial: The squares were pieced together to achieve the checkerboard look. The first thing I did was figure out the proportions of the dress, so I cut out a lining and placed fabric squares on top (they were 5 inch squares from a charm pack).
 It was the look I was going for, so with .5 inch seam allowances taken into consideration, I cut 6 inch squares.
 There were 60 squares cut out: 30 white, 30 pink.
 I sewed the white & pink squares into rows (and pressed the seams open).
 Next I sewed the rows together (and pressed the seams open) to form the new fabric. I took extra care to make sure all the corners and edges lined up in order for it to look exactly like a checkerboard.
 Then I cut out the dress pattern.
 I added a 1 inch square notched neckline. To help achieve that I ironed on interfacing to the neckline of both the dress and lining pieces.
 I added deep on seam side pockets (my daughter insists on having pockets on everything).
 The shoulders are perfectly symmetrical.
 There is an empire waist elastic casing (that follows one of the checkerboard seams), it only partially goes around, it does not go under the front center square. I achieved this by stitching in the ditch of the checkerboard seam (parallel to the casing lines) to secure the elastic.
 I found a white button (in my button stash) for the back, it's perfect for this dress because it has a square on it.
 The entire dress is fully lined to hide all those carefully pressed open seams and to make it nice against the skin. I'm so pleased with how it turned out, all of the squares are positioned exactly where I wanted them and the dress fits her perfectly.
 The placement of the squares on the back is the same as the front and that is exactly the way I wanted it.
So move over stripes... move over chevron... here comes checkerboard!

PS photo shoot location: white hallways at the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA.
PPS ignore the Tinkerbell bandaid on her knee, she took a stumble on Monday :(

Saturday, March 30, 2013

Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery

 I came across these recently: Poppy Field dress by Groovybabyandmama during Kid's Clothes Belgian Style series hosted by Straightgrain.  It was so inspiring, it was contagious ~ I just had to make one, too :)

The pattern: Oliver+S Fairy Tale Dress, size 5, no sleeves, no collar, no bow

The fabrics: Poppy Field by Michael Miller and the lining is 100% cotton voile in white

The mods: I raised the waistline up 3 inches and widened the neckline. Also the width of the skirt is 44 inches (which is the entire width of the fabric) and not the 52.5 inches that is needed in the pattern (so the skirt is not as full)
PS I'm really getting my money's worth out of this pattern ~ this is the 6th time I've used it!

Monday, March 25, 2013

Monet Wearable Art

 Project Run and Play All Stars is going on right now and for Week 1 the challenge is Inspired by Art. Last week I saw this flickr photo: Tribute to Monet fabric Rollerskate Dress by megamora16.  I loved the fabric so much, I bought some online and when it arrived in the mail, I sewed up this dress!

The pattern: Oliver+S Fairy Tale Dress, size 5, no sleeves, no collar, no bow

The fabrics: "Tribute to Monet" designed for ExclusivelyQuilters and the lining is 100% cotton voile in white

The mods: The width of the skirt is 44 inches (which is the entire width of the fabric) and not the 52.5 inches that is needed in the pattern (so the skirt is not as full)
Monet is one of my favorite painters. During the 3.5 years during which I lived in France I took advantage of the opportunity and was fortunate to visit as many Claude Monet art exhibits and museums in Paris as well as his house and gardens in Giverny. So needless to say I was super excited to discover that Monet fabric existed.

These are totally my colors and I decided to keep in simple and let the fabric speak for itself. It is the perfect dress for spring and summer.
So there you have it wearable art!

PS I sure have been getting my money's worth out of this Fairy Tale Dress pattern, this is the 5th time I've used it, you can see the previous 4 here, here, here, and here.

Saturday, March 23, 2013

Easter Basket Dress

 Easter dress sew and tell here today...

The pattern: Oliver+S Fairy Tale Dress, size 5, sleeveless, collarless, no bow, no crinoline (there is a tutu under the skirt for fullness)

The fabrics: bright green and hot pink, Timeless Treasures Fabrics

The mods: Easter basket bodice (I got this waist weaving detail idea from cathgrace). 2 Easter egg pockets (egg-shaped hole pockets, they are inset pockets (floating) with visible pocket lining in pink). And that is not all my friends, no that is not all… teeny tiny bunny hidden inside a pocket!

 After assembling the bodice, I put it on the dress form, and weaved 1.5 inch wide ribbon on it to see if that would be a good width for all the basket pieces. It looked fine, so I decided to make the basket pieces 1.5 inches in width.
 I cut out 13 pieces at 3.5 inches X 5.25 inches and 2 pieces at 3.5 inches X 27 inches.
 I used a circle cut out of cardstock to get the curve on top and sewed all those pieces together.
 I tacked down the tops (hand sewn) and baste stitched around the bottom.
 I added 3 box pleats to the front of the skirt.
 Drew an egg shape on white fabric for the lining of the pocket.
 Sewed along the line and cut through both layers in the middle.
 Clipped the curves.
 Pushed the white fabric through the hole, topstitched it, then attached pompom trim (hand sewn).
 Added a loop of ribbon along the seam of the bottom of the pocket.
 Here is the loop at the bottom of the pocket, this is where the teeny tiny bunny is attached (so it doesn't get lost).
 The knitted bunny is attached by crochet chain, so it is removable because we don't want the bunny going for a ride in the wash machine :)
 The bunny is her favorite part and mine, too.
 I put those loops at the bottom of both pockets, so she can decide which pocket the bunny will go in.
The teeny tiny knitted bunny is a free pattern, she was knit with 2 yarns: Alpaca Silk and Brushed Suri leftover from my scoop neck vest I knitted for myself over 4 years ago. She is a very fortune bunny having 4 knit dresses! It's another free knitting pattern called itty bitty dress.
 Here's another idea... add pompom trim to the neckline and arm holes... this was actually my daughter's idea, she took some pompom trim and placed it on the neckline (on the dress form).
 A Blessed Easter to all of you who celebrate it. Here is Frozen Ice Block, Minnesota this is what Easter egg hunting will look like this year... kids diving into the snow in order to dig out those Easter eggs!!
PS this is the 4th dress I've sewn using the Fairy Tale dress pattern, see the others here, here, and here

Sowing While You Sew

 This was originally posted a couple of weeks ago at Daisy Chain Creations, bringing it back home today...
*****
Sowing While You Sew is such a great series, I'm so glad Sally invited me to contribute. You know, when I was growing up I learned many types of sewing skills (hand embroidery, cross stitch, machine sewing, quilting) during 4th and 5th grade summer school (which was free). I also took some sewing classes during Junior High School. Nowadays I don't think many schools offer these types of classes anymore, so if we want our children to know some basic sewing skills, like how to sew on a button, for example, we have to teach them ourselves. And what a perfect opportunity to do to some sewing projects together would be during those 3 long months off of school during the summer, just something to keep in mind when you're making those plans for the summer.

Anyway, today I'm going to share with you what I've done to teach my son how to sew.

Back when he was 4.5 years old, I cut out a piece of burlap from an empty rice bag, and placed it into an embroidery hoop.

 Besides sewing, I also knit, so I always have some yarn and a tapestry needle (thick blunt metal hand sewing needle) on hand.
 He took these tools and materials and hand sewed a yellow flower and white star.
 Fast forward 5 years to now when I recently told him: "I'm going to teach you how to sew. You can use my sewing machine." And my 9 year old son said: "Finally!"

The whole goal was to start out simple and teach him how to sew a straight line on the sewing machine ~ he started with a very easy instant gratification project called: canvas loose-leaf paper project.  It's such a great little project, it is simply sewing one red, then many blue straight lines on a small size rectangle canvas fabric. In the end you have a piece of fabric that looks like a piece of loose leaf paper!

The first couple of lines I placed a strip of yellow tape that he used as a guide...
 then the rest of the blue lines he used the edge of the presser foot as the guide. He quickly discovered that the harder he pressed on the foot peddle, the faster the sewing machine went and there were smiles and laughs when he went really fast!

 So after he got some practice done, it was on to the drawstring backpack. I wanted to make this fun for him, so I made sure to include his favorite colors. Solid yellow pima cotton fabric and red thread were used for this project. I also thought that a darker thread on a lighter fabric would make it easier to see what he was doing. This is a simple flat tote where the drawstrings are also shoulder straps. The 2 drawstrings are anchored in the lower corners and gather in the top hem channel. In case anyone is interested, this drawstring backpack is made out of only one piece of fabric cut 12"X32" and two cords that were cut 60" long. After sewing several straight lines, he was done! A drawstring backpack is a perfect beginner sewing project, I had no idea that it was so easy to make.

To add to the fun factor I made a teeny tiny sized drawstring backpack for his favorite tiger stuffed animal. 
 My son also created a LEGO sewing machine!
I gathered some resources that might be helpful with sewing a drawstring backpack:
Gifts are for giving, so I encourage you to pass on your sewing skills onto your children. Have fun sewing with your kids!