Wednesday, 16 March 2016

Ruffled Baby Bloomers

I made a 3rd pair in dark green with beige lace.  They're actually my favourite.  Didn't bother getting a pic of them.  

No, don't have any babies to give them to.  Not really gift worthy as no top or dress to go with them.  They're just made out of scraps and lace I thrifted from Value Village a couple of years ago.  

I'm a parenting coach so may just offer these to a client or something, not sure?  










Zipper Bags, fully lined

When I feel like sewing I don't always have a project in mind.  That's when I turn to stash busting.  Here are some little zipper bags I made from scraps.  They're all lined and I just made zipper pulls out of ribbon for an added touch.  

What sparked these projects was that I found a bag of about 20 7" zippers at Value Village for around $2.  

No idea what I'm going to do with these bags, probably just give them to a homeless shelter.  




Tuesday, 5 January 2016

Computer Bag from old Army Duffel Bag

My daughter's boyfriend told her he'd love it if I made him a computer bag for Xmas.  Perfect!  I went on the hunt for some fabric and lucked out.  I found 2 huge army duffel bags at Value Village.  They were filthy and even had a name and number on them so were obviously used and looked really old.  Washed them twice so they were all clean and ready to sew with.  

I love upcycling and this was a perfect project.  The pic below is the new bag beside the remaining duffel bag. The computer bag took me 8 hours to make as I don't have an industrial machine so had to hand crank a lot.  The computer bag took almost every bit of fabric from the other duffel bag which I was surprised at.  I'm obviously not good at eyeballing fabric as thought I could get 2 bags out of each duffel.  

Don't have any plans for the other duffel bag ... yet.     






I lined the inside with a pair of my daughter's old jeans.  Even unpicked some back pockets from another pair of her jeans to sew into the bag.  Told him he can carry her with him wherever he goes.  Was tempted to put some of my old pockets inside also so he could carry me around too but resisted. He wanted a bag with a flap but I also added a zipper panel so it would be more secure.  I made the strap extra wide and put several rows of stitching down it so it would be extra stable.  Hardest part was sewing the straps to the bag, machine was coughing and sputtering through same.  I make a lot of bags so often think I should bite the bullet and get an industrial straight stitch machine ... maybe one day.  




















I'm happy to say he loves the bag and it really suits him.  Was probably my favourite sewing project of the year.    

Wish I liked taking pics as made a ton of stuff recently:  
- 10 walker bags for my Mom's care home
- dog coat for a friend's dog which I made out of an old skirt she gave me.  
- workout shorts for daughter using her old shorts to copy (best way to get a perfect fit)
- lots of tote bags for people
- hostess gifts galore
- Spiderman purse for a little girl
- etc.

All for now, Lisa


Tuesday, 14 April 2015

Tuesday, 20 May 2014

Doggie Bag ... of sorts




Rico was my model for this doggie bag.  It wasn't that I expected it to turn out or anything, was just experimenting with this project.  I put it on my Etsy page to see if it sells and if it does, I'll make more.  Might use my other dog as the model next time.  



Here's what I did.  
  1. Found a drawing on-line of a pomeranian.  Use drawings or outlines so I don't use up the entire ink cartridge.
  2. Printed it out on normal paper.
  3. Traced over it with tracing pencil I bought years ago for projects to transfer cartoon characters onto my kids' clothes.
  4. Turned it over onto a panel of fabric and ironed like mad.  Takes forever and even ended up tracing over it again and again to get it to transfer.  I don't remember it being that difficult to use before, maybe I had a hotter iron then or the pencil was newer and worked better, don't know?
  5. I then painted it with a paint pen but that didn't look great so just used a thin brush and used regular paint from the $ store.  At 99 cents per bottle it's a real deal.  I also bought some fabric medium to add to it if painting onto t-shirts or anything that I don't want to be stiff. But I didn't bother with the medium for this project.
  6. The key to making the paint durable is to use a hot iron on the paint for about 3-5 minutes.  I make sure there's a thin layer of cotton between the iron to project it from any iron stains or burn marks.  I've done this with many projects and the paint lasts through the wash beautifully.  But the iron really has to sit on the design for several minutes to seal it into the fabric.  
  7. Once I decided the painting was a success I turned it into a bag and added a couple of buttons for eyes.  
  8. Size is perfect for small laptop and some books and made sure the handle was long enough to wear over the shoulder.  
I don't sew to sell, I sew for fun.  But when I do sell things from time to time it helps pay for this pricey hobby :).

I've moved my sewing room downstairs in the rec room so will have to take some pictures of that new set-up.  It doesn't look as nice down there as isn't a pretty room like the other one.  But once I get some time I'm planning on painting all the furniture white so it'll brighten things up and make it look nicer.  

Lisa.





Friday, 13 September 2013

1st Sewing Club Meeting

We had our 1st Sewing Club Meeting tonight at Starbucks and I forgot to take a picture as there was a last minute rush to leave at the end as Corinne's husband arrived to pick her up and I had to pick my daughter up from work.

Anyway, we had a great time!!!!  There were just 3 of us and I don't know if a 4th could've gotten a word in edgewise as we chatted up a storm.

Carley, Corinne and I (will put their blogs/websites below) told our life stories then actually got around to talking about sewing also.  It's wonderful when you get together with people who share the same passion for your hobby.

If you live in Greater Vancouver and would like to join our little group please drop me a line (lisa.thimblelisa@gmail.com) and we'll have a chat.

Turns out I did take a picture afterall ... here we are :)


Monday, 9 September 2013

I Love Lucy ... fabric find.

Made these coasters from this great fabric I found with that old I Love Lucy Chocolate Factory episode.

My 89 year old Aunt just had a birthday and I made a "mug rug" for her out of this fabric.  She loved it.

It's great when you get a fabric that not only you like the look of, but that it brings back a lot of fond memories.