Monday, 6 August 2012

How To Make an Interesting Blanket: Part 3

Now that you have all the front parts to your blanket, you lay them out to space them. I laid out one part at a time because they had to be sewed in order.
Since for myself, the tree trunk was going to be a pocket, I made sure to leave a space that would not be sewn.
Then I sewed the four sides excepting the pocket hole, and laid out the tree top.
I sewed it on.
Which left me with the top of my baby blanket completed.
I then put the bottom and the middle over top of it and sewed the edge inside out, leaving a space. When finished that, I clipped the the corners and flipped it right side out. I tucked the raw ends from the leftover hole in and stitched the edge all around, sealing it. Lots of people do the same thing by putting everything together right side up and then sealing the edges with binding. Here are two pictures of the finished product. 


Monday, 23 July 2012

How to Make and Interesting Blanket: Part 2

After making a simple yet interesting shape, it is time to work on the top of the blanket. For lots of projects, the top can be a single sheet of fabric. For my project though, I wanted to include jean material, so I decided the jean would be the sky and there would be green grass underneath.

Materials required for the denim top are: jeans, shears, cutting wheel, large fabric ruler, cutting mat.
Since I made a small blanket, I only needed one pair of jeans. For larger projects, more jeans would be required. I also already had the cutting wheel, fabric ruler, and cutting mat. For those who do not have them, draw on the jeans with a pen or marker and metre stick. 
Make a straight cut and base your other cuts on that one. With jeans, you can cut two layers at a time if they are aligned correctly.
 Cut out the sides and top.
You should have 4 beautiful vaguely rectangular pieces.
 Line them up.
 Pin together.
 Sew.
Get out your green fabric, cutting wheal, fabric ruler, and cutting mat (or marker and metre stick).
 Cut out the grass. I wanted a more organic shape, so I angled the cut on one side.
 Pin on and sew.
Now you can lay it out and admire it. Place your simple shapes on top to figure out where to sew them.
The jean denim rectangle need not be used as a blanket top. You can use it to make other things too. For example, I made an apron out of a similar rectangle.


Saturday, 21 July 2012

How to Make Interesting Blankets: Part 1

Making blankets with simple shapes can be a snap, and by snap I mean fairly simple. You start with what you want to make. I chose a tree.

Use soap or a fabric pencil to draw out the pattern. Cut loosely around it.
Pin it up into the desired shape.
For a pocket, take two layers of fabric. Draw, pin, and sew one side together.
I already had two layers of fabric attached. I knew that the top would be sealed by the top of the tree and decided the side and bottom would be sealed by sewing them onto the backing.
 Flip your pocket inside out.
 Pin into desire shape so that all the edges look nice.
Put the shapes together to see how they look.
 Adjust. Now you have your simple shape and pocket to attach to the top of your blanket.
The next step is making the blanket top.





Tuesday, 22 May 2012

Korean "Mehlong" Pin

When you don't know any Koreans by which to embarass yourself wearing Korean stuff by, it is nice to have some Korean accessories. The Korean alphabet looks kind of pretty/funky/cute and decorates things very nicely, especially when spelling real words.
This is a pin I made last fall. It says "mehlong", which is really just essentially sticking out your tongue and saying "nah nah nah nah nah" or some other annoying sound. Thus, since "mehlong" means "nah nah nah nah nah", I made the background a mouth with a tongue sticking out of it. Since I made this last fall, and have since learned the Korean alphabet, I have realized what a bad job I did at centering the letters. Sigh! Not all projects can work out well, can they?

Sunday, 13 May 2012

Style Icon: Zhoumi

 From karachung @ weibo,  From Zhoumi's posts

There are many beautiful people in the celebrity world. Many beautiful people wearing beautiful clothes. Thanks to Youtube, I found out that Zhoumi from Super Junior-M (Woot), is one of those celebrities who take style seriously. He takes it so seriously, he's a do-it-yourselfer who forces other people into trying out new fashions. Here's proof (Zhoumi's the tall one).
Because I am also a do-it-yourselfer, I immediately liked Zhoumi more than I had in the minutes leading up to watching the video. He's so proud of his skills that he shows off his sewing work on video. Zhoumi is definitely my new celebrity style (sewing) icon. Go Zhoumi!

Tuesday, 8 May 2012

Green Cotton Skirt

Meet my mannequin Akephalei (sic). Here Akephalei is sporting a 70's tunic shirt and green skirt. I made the skirt. The shirt just matched well.
Several months ago there was to be a folk dance at the local college. Always looking for an excuse to sew, I decided to make a flowy skirt for it. Unfortunately, there wasn't enough fabric to make a circle skirt with (those things are sooo flowy), so I used vaguely geometric shapes to create flow instead.
The body of the skirt is made up of seven triangles with the tops cut off, seamed to look circular on the bottom. The top is a waist band made out of a really long rectangle. Then, because no skirt should be without a pocket, I found a scrap of green big enough for a pocket and sewed it on where it wouldn't get in the way. As far as design went, this skirt worked pretty well. As far as fabric choice went, green cotton was not a good idea.

Tuesday, 1 May 2012

Embroidered Letter Baby Blanket

Once again friends and family are popping out babies which means me sewing them all blankets. Here's the latest one.  


I did a tree theme. Here I just made the tree lines.
Unfortunately, when it comes to normal embroidery I kind of suck so these trees don't look too great. However, they do look like trees.


As for the names I printed out the letters onto paper, pinned the paper in the right sport, and then sewed through the paper/letters and fabric. For this blanket I used two types of yarn to get a nice highlight/accent look. I think it looks rather nice.

Monday, 30 April 2012

Watermelon Tea Cozies

These are watermelon tea cozies.

These are two watermelon tea cozies.

Watermelon tea cozies are good for keeping your tea warm, because we all know that you use a teapot when you make tea.
I use tea cozies when I make tea. They keep tea warm for hours. I like drinking tea for hours.

I also like watermelons. They go good with rollkuchen.

What do you like to eat watermelon with?

Wednesday, 25 April 2012

Denim/Jeans Apron

The denim apron.
When making yourself a denim apron, there are several styles to choose from. I chose to construct this one out of long rectangles/a pair of jeans because I like a smooth look. The jeans' waistband was used in the back, so only people my size can this particular apron. I assume that the apron being fitted prevents people from stealing it but that's just an assumption and I'm not actually that worried about it.

Monday, 23 April 2012

Tree Theme Blanket


This here is a tree themed blanket. I sewed this for my cousin when she didn't bring blankets to college.

Basically it's a tree with a little bird in it. There are some grammar shapes on the bottom as a TESOL joke. Because TESOL people (and TEFL people too) are cool.

For this blanket, I adapted the basic square to create more of a round shape and I used some old tan pants to create the tree trunk. I made this in about a week, but I should have put the time in to buy some light blue fabric. Since there is such an awkward colour contrast, it is hard to tell what the blanket is supposed to look like.

Saturday, 21 April 2012

Teenage Hairpins

One of the things I find hard to style is my hair. It is straight and doesn't hold shape, so I have given up and usually put it into a ponytail. It also becomes a horribly knotty mess once it is a certain length long. Is there a solution for this? I don't know. I wasn't paying attention when the kids my age were learning that sort of stuff. I also don't know how to properly use hairpins, for the same reason. But I do know that I can make fun hair pins. I kind of wish I were back in highschool or junior high so that I could wear them. Here are some examples of stuff I've made.
The one on the left says 'saranghae' in Hangul (Korean)  which means 'I love you'. The one in the middle is meant to make it look like there is a zipper in your head. I can't wear either of these to work. The giraffes on the left were made of foam bits. I ended up giving them to my cousin who is of age to wear them. Lucky her.

Friday, 20 April 2012

Rainbow Blanket #1

I enjoy sewing. Or rather, I enjoy the product of the sewing process, the process of creating, and the texture and colour of fabric.
For those who are interested, the following is my sewing background.
I started sewing as a wee child, making Barbie clothes. Then at age 12 I upgraded to gym bags, top-hat toques, and boxers (the ever popular first home-economics project). In high school I further upgraded to sewing lingerie, shirts, and a suit jacket. Those were all my teacher's fault. It was because of that teacher, the teacher who made us put shoulder pads in suits, that I learned how to sew blankets. And since I am frugal, the first thing I resorted to when my friends started to get married was my quilting skills.
I learned quickly that queen size blankets are annoying to make as well as time consuming. I then learned that all that fancy line work just makes the project longer. It was here (see picture), at my 12th blanket that I found out I could connect the front and the back using a regular sewing machine. That's pretty much where I am at now as far as skill, but I finished over 26 blankets thus far, with baby blankets counting as 0.5 blanket.
It is pretty rewarding when people use the blankets I made in their living rooms and then tell me like my blankets and use them to nap all the time. It is also rewarding to have people appreciate them just because they like me as a person. People don't tell each other they appreciate each other enough, and the roundabout compliment is one of the ways they do that. 

As far as how this blanket was made, I made six inch squares and sewed strips between them to form the core. Then I just added long strips to make it larger.

Wednesday, 18 April 2012

Pillows in "Brown"

These are a pillow set I made about a while back. They're reversible for a variety of looks. The most flattering part of these was when my relatives thought they were store bought. Yay.

The Sports Blanket: Part 1

This hockey rink is part of an ultra manly sports themed blanket that I worked on. It took really long because I made it king sized, which is a really annoying size to make.
For this one, I sewed the lines onto a large piece of fabric. It turned out that the process of cutting long strips, ironing them flat and then sewing them onto large pieces of fabric is a long and arduous task. Next time I will sew small strips of fabric together in order to create a large piece of fabric.

Swing Dance Skirt in Blue

A big part of my life right now is swing dance. Therefore, I like to attempt to make attractive skirts for the purpose of swing dancing. Since swing dancing includes lots of movement (pants/skirts slowly edging down) I made this one highwaisted. Using a pink ribbon at the top, I completed the waist band.
 However, since I have a paunch, I used ultra new high-techy techniques to make it so that a high skirt wouldn't give me stomach aches. Aka. I cut out the stomach part.

Baby Blankets

This year a new event happened in my life. My friends and family started to have babies! Or rather, I started to sew them baby blankets. I have hordes of small bits of fabric at home and I really enjoy buying more fabric (as long as it's cheap), so sewing often  helps me to be frugal while giving people a useful present.

For these two blankets, no one knew the sex of the babies at or before the baby shower. And, while babies don't care what colour they get, parents do. That's probably why more parents now are having baby showers after their babies are born.

These two blankets were made prior to knowing the sex of the baby. I was going for an androgenous look for both.

For the pink/blue/purple one, I tried to balance the blue with the purple and pink. If it was for a girl, she wouldn't be shafted with something pure pink, and if it was a boy, then it was half blue. I really liked the colour combination of these particular colours.


For the red denim one, I was trying to match it with the blanket I had given the couple the year prior. Red and blue are both attractive colours and suitable for all sexes, so it worked out well. What I was really going for here was a blanket that taught children textures. Each red square had a different level of softness, smoothness, or slipperyness. Then if the parents wanted to, they could teach their children textures.

I think both of these were a success. They were both attractive and small-child sized. Since both children turned out to be boys, I don't think the purple one will get much wear, but it will look good nonetheless and might get played with. Pockets can be intriguing things for children.

Denim Skirt: Part 1

At one point I decided that a denim skirt with suspenders would be a fun swing/eclectic look, so I tried it out. I started with a pair of jeans, slit the seams, and put in triangles. Then I put in more triangles. I tried the pinned version on to make sure that it would allow all necessary swing dance movement (ie. Charleston Stars), and then I sewed the new seams.
I then tried on the semi-complete skirt to see where the fixed-size suspenders would go and sewed on the important parts. As you can see, the skirt still needs some work like hemming, attaching the front of the suspenders, and flattening that little annoying piece on the back, but I think it's done enough that it looks like how it will look like completed.

The top that is accompanying it is the "sleeveless suit jacket" I made in summer for Ai-kon. I used my best collared shirt (two front pleats) to create a basic pattern and went from there. The green top orginally accompanied a silky geometric skirt.

Red Bag

This recent project was a simple bag, intended to carry overnight clothes in. It was made of nylon-like fabric, with an inside pocket just opposite of the outside pocket. Essentially, I made it from a large rectangle and tried to sew bottom corners into it by doing this strange triangular thingy and then I used one seam to connect two pockets to the main body.  Connecting handles and sewing nice edges also were done to complete it.
It's not very glamorous, but it should be functional. Cell phones and iPods can go in the outside pocket while more personal affects can go in the inside one, and there should be space for at least one outfit.

Re-using Upper Under Garments

"What is this?" you ask. This, my friends, is a "bra extender". What is it used for? It is used for turning strapped bras into strapless bras.

The idea is that if you have no strapless bras but need one, you can fold the strapped bra straps down and use this attachment to make your bra wrap around your torso twice. Wrapping your bra around you twice should make it more supportive and stable, while concealing your straps. At least that's the idea. The "bra extender" should also work to lower your back strap for lower-backed dresses and such.


This is a handy dandy way to recycle ratty old bras. You can keep the hooking system and attach it to a longish piece of fabric. Because there are several different hook types (widths apart) and numbers (1,2, or 3), it is a good idea to make several different ones.

Crochetted Mittens

Once upon a time I crochetted. These mittens, which are obviously photoshopped, were made during a trip in 2008.
These mittens have many stripes because I used my leftover yarn balls for these. I included L and R on the mittens because the 'pattern' I used made up was the same for both hands. Therefore I included a letter to tell me which is which. I think the letters made them more cute. 

P.S. If you know how to crochet in circles, you know about everything you need to know in order to crochet mittens.