Showing posts with label finished projects. Show all posts
Showing posts with label finished projects. Show all posts

Aug 8, 2012

Peppermint Pizzaz, quilted!

I wrote about this "Peppermint Pizzaz" table topper here,
 a few weeks ago. 


This is what I need to machine quilt, the foot, my grippy gloves that make my arms tense :) and of course my quilt.  
I think it took about 5 hours to quilt.


There, it's all quilted!


Now I cut off the batting, flush with the edge of the quilt.


Sew the binding on.


Handstitch the binding onto the back of the quilt.


Yeah, it's finished!  Always a great feeling :)


I wanted the peppermints to stand out a little, so I machine quilted in the ditch.  I quilted jigsaw shapes on the rest of the quilt.


I stitched in the ditch with the pinwheel stars, and the squares outlining them.


I just love the fabric I chose for the back, and I love the horizontal striped binding.


Quilts always look more beautiful after they are quilted :)

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Aug 3, 2012

Travel Pillow Tutorial

My friend Donna asked me if I would write a tutorial on my
 travel pillow .  It's really simple but when I make something, I find it so much easier to visualize if I can look at photos.

My son said that his pillow is his favorite thing that he brought with him on his two year church mission to Brazil.  I made a note of that.....lol, and decided to sew him another pillowcase so that he can rotate them.  This time I went to the fabric store and chose some "masculine" fabric.  This is what I chose....


The printed fabric is called "how to press a shirt".  Very appropriate, since my son wears a white shirt every day of the week.  When Sean was 15 years old, he earned his Boy Scout Eagle award.  His grandfather flew in from Florida for the occasion.  His grandfather is retired Air Force and very strict about creases in the sleeves of his pressed shirts.  I had shown Sean how to press a dress shirt before, but it wasn't his forte.  Sean came downstairs with a perfectly pressed shirt, and even creases in the sleeves!!!  We were all impressed, including Sean's grandfather.  Later my father in law asked me where the iron and ironing board was.  I showed him and we noticed a paper on the ironing board.  We picked it up and it said, "Google:  How to press a shirt".  We laughed and laughed, so this fabric has a lot of meaning!  Ha ha!!!


The pillow form that I buy at JoAnn's measures 12" X 16".  I cut two pieces of fabric, 17.5" X 13.5" each. 




I get such a thrill out of choosing fabric, that I choose a different print for the front and a different one for the back.  If you want to use the same print for the front and the back, you still need to cut out two pieces.  
I also cut out 2 pieces 4" X 14", for the edging on the pillow.
Here are my cut pieces.


Place the two pillowcase pieces right sides together and sew along three sides, the two long ones and one short side, using a 1/4" seam.
Finish the edges with a zig zag stitch to encase the raw edges.


Turn the pillowcase right side out and press.


Now take the two smaller edging pieces, and fold them longways, right sides together.  Lay them against the short end of the pillowcase.  I did that, and saw that I needed to sew the short ends of the edging with a l/2 seam allowance.  




Turn the edging right side out and press.


Pin the edging to the pillow case, matching the finished seam of the edging to the side seam of the pillowcase.




Pin the same edging piece to the other side seam and then finish pinning the rest of the edging piece to the pillowcase, right sides together (there isn't a wrong side of the edging).  I usually pin when I sew, it leaves less chance of having to rip out stitches!  My seam ripper and I have a love/hate relationship....




See how the edging pieces meet perfectly at the side seam?  The other side seam looks exactly the same.  The two flaps give a little more "masculine" look.  





Sew the two edging pieces to the entire pillowcase, using a l/4" seam allowance.  Then zigzag, encasing the raw edges of the seam.



Press the finished seam toward the pillowcase and staystitch.  Staystitch means to sew a seam close to the seam, so that the seam won't "roll up" and will stay pressed towards the pillowcase.




This is what the seam looks like on the inside.  Since the seam has been staystitched, it will never roll up, but always stay pointing towards the pillowcase.




Here is the "how to press a shirt" fabric close up, isn't it cute?




This is the front of the pillowcase.


This is the back, a nice argyle print.


I made one for my husband, as a birthday gift. (it's Sunday :)




If you would like to add a ruffle to your pillowcase instead of the plain edging, the measurement is one and a half times the width.  Instead of cutting your edging 14" long, I would cut it 44" long. You only need one piece instead of two.  If I don't have a piece long enough in the print I want for the ruffle, I often piece the fabric, joining different pieces together.  The seams never show.  



When I sew a ruffle onto my pillowcase, I use one piece and only have one flap instead of two.




There are two flaps on the edging of the masculine pillowcase.


That completes my travel pillow tutorial.  If you make one, I would love to see some pictures!
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Jul 30, 2012

Great Granny Table Topper

This was such a fun little quilt to put together, it measures about 45" X 45".
As I showed you last week, I finished all nine blocks.


I didn't take any photos of sewing the sashing and the borders.
I sandwiched the quilt top, the quilt batting and the backing and pinned it all together with curved safety pins.
I use safety pins on small projects because I can't stand basting!


When I first started quilting, I quilted by hand.  After a few quilts, I realized that even using a thimble my fingers were so sore that I didn't have any feeling in them.  I thought it was best to machine quilt.  I really love this process.  I look at the quilt for a few minutes and determine what method of quilting I should do.  I felt that stitching in the ditch wouldn't take away from the beauty of the fabric in the squares.  If you don't know what stitching in the ditch is, it is stitching on the seam line.




After all the ditches were stitched, I outline stitched each square.


The quilting is finished!


I bought a beautiful Amy Butler fabric for the back of my quilt.  I wanted a bright color for the binding, to keep the theme of the colors in the squares.  I picked an aqua polka dot out of my stash and auditioned it with the Amy Butler fabric.  I like it.


I have a Robert Kaufman app on my smartphone which I use for calculating the binding.  It told me I needed 5 strips for my binding. I cut the strips and sewed them together and pressed them in half.


Now I'm attaching it to the quilted quilt, using the method I showed you in my binding tutorial part 1 and part 2.



The table topper is finished :)




I decided to sew little circles on the sashing and borders of the quilt.
Here are some closeup photos.






I love the back of the quilt!


See how the stitching in the ditch shows up on the back?




I love finishing a project.  I put in it various areas of the house and admire it as I walk by!  Am I weird?  lol




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