Showing posts with label Homemade Stitched with Heartstrings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Homemade Stitched with Heartstrings. Show all posts

Monday, May 8, 2017

TUTORIAL - Vintage Style Needle-book...



I have hundreds of ideas swimming through my mind at any given time, but the ones I'd like more time to explore and play around with are ideas for re-purposing vintage linens. 

We had a lovely relaxed weekend. 
On Saturday morning we checked out a few garage sales and found a brilliant rowing machine for minimal cost, I experimented in the kitchen and successfully came up with a lovely slice recipe which I'll share another day, Mr E pottered around with the car and wrote some school assessments, we watched a wonderful new movie (Lion), and eventually closed our weekend with fish and chips by the beach at sunset.

In between these activities I indulged myself by following through with a vintage doily idea that's been simmering away in my mind for weeks, so felt totally content when it was complete. 

Some cutting here, some stitching there, I didn't rush anything but weaved the project throughout our two day break until all that was needed were a button and ribbon sewn in place early Monday morning.

I'll share with you the steps I took, but there's no measurements or patterns sheets because it grew from one circular cross-stitched doily I've had for many years. Your doily may be a different shape or size, but the basic instructions will work none-the-less.

I began by choosing two 1930's reproduction fabrics in pink and blue from my stash, with colours as close as possible to those used in the doily's cross stitch. 

Then I cut a circle from the blue fabric about 1 1/4" wider in diameter than the doily, a square from the pink fabric slightly larger than my circle, and a square of Parlan which I fused behind the pink square.

(you could use thin fusible Pellon instead)





Lay the circle right side down on the pink square and pin the two fabrics together.


Sew around the circle with a 1/4" seam, leaving a 2"- 3" opening for turning out. 
I used blue pins as my markers for where to begin and end the sewing.

Cut away the excess pink fabric...



...and clip into the curve with your scissors, being careful not to cut through the seam line.


Turn the circle right side out and press. 

You now have two sides of the opening to hem.
Tack the curved fold of the Parlan backed pink fabric in a contrast colour and iron a curved hem along the edge of the blue fabric.



Ladder stitch the two sides together to close the opening and remove the contrast tacking thread.

Fuse a strip of applique bonding paper along the centre back of your doily, and once cooled, peel it off.



Gentle fuse the doily onto the centre of the blue side of your circle with a warm, dry iron.



Now you'll need two strands of blue embroidery thread, a length of cream Ric Rac, and some cream Perle #12 thread.

Sew a line of blue running stitch 1/4" inside the edge of the blue circle. It's fine for the stitches to show through on the pink side.




Turn over to the pink side of the circle and use the cream Perle #12 thread to hand sew the Ric Rac over the blue running stitch. Don't stitch right through the circle, just place your needle between the blue and pink fabrics as you stitch.


Use pinking shears to cut a circle of cotton or wool quilt wadding, two inches smaller than your fabric circle.

Fold the circle of wadding in half and sew a line of contrast tacking stitch just under the fold as a guide for you when working on the next step.

 On one side of the fold, embroider some simple flowers with colonial knot centres, lazy daisy petals and cross stitch leaves. 

I chose variegated threads very close in colour to the threads used in my vintage doily.




You can scatter the flowers around any way you like. I kept the middle of the half circle free because I wanted to add something there later.



Take a length of silk ribbon, lay it in position on the pink fabric circle, and carefully embroider a flower into the middle of it, whilst sewing only through the pink fabric and not through the blue. 
The ribbon is to hold your scissors in place so choose where you want the scissors to be before you start the embroidery.



Turn the circle back to the blue side.
Blanket stitch around the edge of the doily with two strands of blue thread to secure it onto the fabric, being careful not to stitch through to the pink side.


Remove the tacking stitch from the wadding and sew the wadding to the pink side of the needle-book along the centre fold line with cream thread. Hide the stitches between the pink and blue sides of the needle-book.

From here you can finish the needle book as you like.

I sewed a mother of pearl button onto the centre lower front of my needle-book, then folded a length of blue silk ribbon in half and stitched the fold to the opposite edge of the circle.

This way when I close the needle-book I can wrap the ribbon around the button and tie a bow for closure.



Inside the needle-book I added a few vintage buttons and sewed a sweet round of crochet to the front of the embroidered wadding before adding a mother of pearl button to the centre of the crochet. Lastly I secured my very old embroidery scissors in place with the ribbon. 


Now you might be fussy about wanting to hide the back of your wadding embroidery?

If so, you could add another piece of same sized wadding behind the embroidered one and blanket stitch around the edge of the two wadding circles to secure them together before sewing this piece in place on your needle-book.

But me?

I actually love the raw homeliness of my threads when the pin keep is opened...



Truly, this was a delight to make and I hope you have fun making something similar.



Have a blessed and joy filled week!

hugs


Wednesday, February 10, 2016

Tutorial : "Vintage Hearts"...



Whenever we're out on a weekend drive and pass a small town market Mr E parks the Jeep and follows me along (wallet in hand) as I wander among the various stalls to hunt for treasure of the vintage kind.
Linens, china, picture frames and cookware are my favourite purchases, but occasionally I discover beautiful old buttons and sewing notions too.

 I don't mind if the linens are stained or damaged as long as there is a piece that I can salvage for a project or as a stitchery background. Such was the case with a lovely $1 table runner I found at the Ayr market last year. It had two pretty rose embroidered corners but plenty of rust spots scattered over the rest of the linen, however I could visualise two heart shapes featuring those roses so I rescued it right then and there despite Mr E's frown when he reluctantly handed me the dollar coin.

A few days later I cut out two hearts from the old linen runner and wrote the words 'so delightful' and 'old & lovely' around the embroidered sections of each heart.
Then I cut two heart shapes from some Whisperweft (a fabric stabiliser - see here) and fused it behind the linen heart shapes before embroidering the words in backstitch with a single strand of variegated thread which blended with the colour of the roses. 


At this point I had to try and match a backing fabric with the embroidery colours and fortunately found one fat quarter that would work. 
Today in hindsight I wonder why I didn't think to use more of the stained linen table runner?? 

Laying each of the linen hearts face down onto the backing fabric I stitched the fronts and backs together with a 1/4" seam, leaving a 2" opening down one side for turning out.

With any curved shape like this you need to clip along the edges every 1/4" or so before you turn the shape right side out. Once that's done, turn the hearts right side out and press the edges flat. 

PAUSE: This is where  the whole idea stopped for about four months. The two hearts lay on my cutting table waiting, patiently waiting, desperately waiting...until today. I was tidying the sewing room and about to pack them away in my unfinished projects box when I thought, "you owe them a chance to shine" and promptly cleared my diary and set forth with a bright idea!

So let's see what happened, shall we? Are you going to follow along with your own hearts-almost-made? Wonderful!

 Ladder stitch or slip stitch the opening closed on both hearts...


Gather an old photo frame, cream background fabric, scraps of lace, ribbon, beads, buttons, pretty pins, bits of bling - anything you think may look good with your hearts.

I collect old broken jewellery and beads so I always have 'something' I can use for a project like this...


...and in my plain fabrics box I found a long forgotten piece of Osnaburg that needed no auditioning  as my background fabric because it was perfect.


Remove the backing from your picture frame and dispose of the glass carefully.
Trace the shape of the frame backing onto a scrap piece of quilt wadding and cut it out.
Cut a piece of background fabric about 3" larger than your frame backing.


Spray baste the quilt wadding onto the centre of the wrong side of your background fabric...

 Now we have the fun part.
Place the empty frame over the front of the background fabric and start adding your lace, beads, hearts and other fancies, moving them around until you're happy with the display they make together...


Lift the frame away and carefully stitch the pieces in place from behind so that the sewing thread only catches the back of the hearts and appear invisible on your lace and other elements...


Once completed wrap your vintage hearts block around the frame backing and secure with wide tape.
I prefer this method to lacing with thread because it prevents dust from getting behind the fabric (I live in a very dusty/windy place)...


Pop inside the frame and you're done!



The pattern for the heart and words are a free download HERE in my shop.

 

Having a supply of old odds and ends like this will give you a wonderful treasure trove of gift and home decorating ideas that can be made for next to nothing but look truly lovely.

I wonder what you have on hand waiting for its Cinderella moment?


Wednesday, February 3, 2016

A fox for the boy-child...

Yesterday I showed you Blossom's baby bump, so today I'll show you Aisha's baby bump!
I took this pic last month when Aisha, her hubby and two daughters were up here on holiday...


No surprises that I'm making quilts for my two grandbabies due this year, right?
As Aisha's little boy-child is due mid-April I've started on his quilt first, and after discussing colour choice for the nursery we decided to use these woodland themed prints I found at my local Spotlight store...


I'm adding a cute applique fox to the mix as well. 


The free template for the fox came from over HERE at  Positively Splendid...


Cute, don't you agree? 


I'll blanket stitch the applique with chocolate brown thread today, and piece the quilt top in a split 9-patch layout later in the week.


Split 9-patch is a really simple patchwork design and perfect for those who are new to quilting!
I shared a tutorial HERE a few years ago using a charm square pack if you'd like to give it a try.
My table runner only took one morning to piece, quilt and bind...
 

What are you making at the moment?

hugs