Thursday, April 30, 2015

An Easter Dress and Not-an-Easter-Dress


Easter Garb
I took a little sewing bender last month.  I was inspired by the Posie Gets Cosy posts about making dresses for her little girl, here and here.  And while reading them, the small fry declared that she'd like one too.  So in a shameless turn, I ordered some vintage patterns and a few yards of voile fabric and set to work.  Our eldest requested a dress just like "the green one" and I found the exact print from Amy Butler.  It's called Wildflower Voile in "Zest" and is the lightest voile; perfect for spring and summer.  The littlest isn't as specific, so I had fun picking for her and her print is a Robert Kaufman London Calling Meadow Bloom in "Park". It is a garment weight lawn that was also lovely.  (It's a slightly heavier weight that the Amy Butler, but still perfect for Spring.)

Matching, but not...
The patterns I found on Etsy… the one I used was a Simplicity pattern from 1965.  Our eldest has a preference for skirts that twirl.  And this is one FULL skirt.  The pattern is 6066 and I was able to find one in each size, which was sheer luck.  I was very relieved to find that the patterns were in really good shape and that pattern tissue paper circa 1965 was a much better quality than what is for sale now.  (I had visions of the pattern pieces disintegrating upon unfolding them.)  Not the case thankfully!

The sewing was straightforward and I had a really nice time taking my time getting these put together.  I wrapped things up just in time for Easter.  And then the eldest declared hers "Not an Easter Dress," and so we'll wait for a photo op of that one.  In the meantime, here is a funny shot of the peanut on her Easter Egg hunt.  (Her egg hunting strategy could use some refinement… she prefers to eat the contents before finding the next egg… funny thing.)

Full, full, twirly skirts!

I hope the sun is shining on you.

Monday, March 30, 2015

Diving right in

Yards of pseudo ikat dots

We purchased what I like to call a "less little" house last year.  It's very similar to what we were living in (i.e. almost the same floor plan) with the notable exception that it has a second story.  It's been such a welcome adjustment. No one has a subterranean bedroom, we're closer to the school and the park and the closet space is epic for a home of this vintage.

One thing the prior owners left to us were a pair of 70's-ish wingback chairs.  Their silhouettes were classic, lines good, but fabric was worn and out of style.  I think the previous owners darling dog had claimed one of them as his own for a bit too.  They needed help and I figured what better upholstery experiment than on a piece that hadn't cost me much.  (Let's ignore that we had to buy a house in order to get these two chairs...)

Enter a birthday for the small fry.  She's got the perfect spot in her room for a chair and has a personal penchant for anything purple.  Off to the internet I went to research deconstructing a chair, and to shop for affordable purple fabric.  I hit the library up for a good book on upholstering and discovered that my handy husband had an air nailer that could be used to fire upholstery staples (big bonus)!

I took really detailed notes throughout the entire deconstruction.  My thought was that I would be able trace my way back through reupholstery by just working in reverse order.  And for the most part that worked.  (See the references below for some of the sources I used.)  I marked all the fabric panels with a sharpie and used an arrow to indicate the correct orientation on the finished chair. I was also really careful not to cut any of the pieces, as they were all repurposed as pattern pieces for the new material.

Hey, grubby old chair!
 I found some really interesting materials as I uncovered the chair, including this clever metal fastener strip that I was able to repurpose.  And thankfully, the chair's skeleton (woodwork, webbing and basic structural elements) were in really great shape.

Along the arched back.
 I was most nervous about finishing these arm end caps.  They are so prominent from a visual perspective and would demand really careful re-application.  Again, thankfully, the base materials that were used original chair were in good enough shape to be repurposed.

Original arm cap.
There was really a minimal amount of sewing associated with this project. Apart from reupholstering the seat cushion, there were very few seamed sections.  I did carefully break down the cushion as well and learned a few tricks about applying cording to a box pillow.  The zippers were reinforced well. On an interesting note… all the panels used to reinforce seams, create a stapling surface for long stretches, etc. were remnants from other upholstery fabric.  It was a funny archive of fabrics of the time.

Seat cushion zipper reinforcement.
I took my time with the arm caps.  They were broken down easily and consisted of a heavyweight fiberboard core and were outlined with piped cording.  The original was stapled together, but I ended up taking my time and hand-stitched it back together.  I did add a bit of quilt batting to the face as the original was a little thin after I disassembled it. (Tea and chocolate helped.)

Arm cap success… now to just replace it.
 Once all the fabric was removed from the chair, I cut similarly shaped cotton quilt batting to reline the interior surfaces.  When I removed the fabric, the cotton batts were pulled apart a bit and I was a little worried about the finished surface being bumpy under the upholstery fabric.

At this point, only the cushion was done.
 Disassembly and reupholstery ended and started (respectively) on the interior surfaces of the chair.  The first part that was replaced was the interior seat. Replacing that was one of the more tenuous jobs.  There was a nylon cord that was woven through the seam of the seat and stapled to the exterior to the frame to keep the chair bottom from coming loose.  Thankfully it was replaced fairly easily, and so far, there is no evidence that the tension is too tight.

Starting to see what the new chair
might look like.
Pardon the fluorescent lights.  
 The materials I used were pretty straightforward.  I found the fabric online at quite a discount.  $8 per yard, I think…  I bought a box of upholstery staples, new cotton cording, some new tack strip and the rubber mallet you see below.  That mallet is so fun.  I really couldn't have done the job without it.  It helped me get fabrics folded neatly into that metal finishing strip and to replace the arm caps.  It was also kind of therapeutic to bang it around.

Rubber mallet!!!
 The wings and back finished edges were both lined by this metal stripping. I actually removed it as carefully as I could and repurposed it because I though it was such ingenious stuff, and I had no romantic ideas about hammering in hundreds of upholstery tacks.  (No thank you.)  Unfortunately, I can't tell you where to buy it.  I salvaged it all and took care to bend it straight again and make all the "teeth" stand up before using it to refinish the edges.

Exterior wing and arm.
 The finished chair was a huge hit.  Our girl loves it.  It's become a favorite reading spot and it felt so good to not throw something away and breathe some new life into it.  She had a great birthday, complete with cake and friends and a few new Legos to build.  And I had a great time taking on something new.

Finished!


References: This youtube video about breaking down the existing chair.  This invaluable reference from the library. And this reference for fabric quantities.

Monday, March 23, 2015

Tiny Sweater Update

Buttons!

Quickly… I'll share the button band and mini skirt.  To be delivered on Thursday to one sweet tiny little friend.
Ruffled Denim Mini

Have a good week.

Sunday, March 22, 2015

Spring and a Tiny Sweater


Raglan tiny-ness

This sweater reminds me of crocus.  I'm sure that it's the season that we are in, the sun has been shining. The girls and I took our 2015 inaugural bike rides together yesterday and I'm anxiously awaiting the spring flowers in this yard that is new to me.  I think we've got some daffodils and hyacinth… no crocus or tulips yet.

About this little sweater; I'm pretty picky about variegated yarn, but I love this color combination.  The greens and pinks and lavenders all play so well against the bit of navy blue that anchor this color palette.  I picked this sweater pattern for a couple of reasons.  I really enjoy knitting baby garments out of sock yarn.  I'm wild about the lightweight fabric that it creates and I love how sturdy and less likely to snag it is with tight stitches.  I also love working top down and raglan construction.  Details about the pattern and the yarn are here on Ravelry.

One pink button band awaiting...

I have only the button band to knit and then it will be off to my new little friend.  (And I purchased a funny little denim mini-skirt with a ruffled back side to go along. So cute.) I hope it keeps her cosy in these cool spring days.

It's been busy around here.  Getting settled in the new house, and attempting to tackle the projects that come with getting settled.  But there has been plenty of making going on and I'm hoping to get back to this space and record a few of the projects that I've had/am having so much fun working on.

More soon.

Sunday, January 25, 2015

Purple Crested Chatterbox

There are some "birds" around these parts that are always making noise… playing, talking, spinning tales and giving direction.  It's the best, these little opinions… stories made up… the first year of advice for her sister… retold experiences from school.  I will be very, very melancholy when she doesn't have so much to share with us…

Rubens

Until then, we'll listen and encourage.  Knit hats in favorite colors and do what we can to make sure that these two girls are good to each other.

Concentric

The hat is knit from Acadia.  The pattern is Rubens, written by Gudrun Johnson.  I knit this in transit back from New Hampshire last June, when a storm created a bottleneck in air traffic and I spent an entertaining afternoon and evening watching the people of Baltimore mill around their home airport.
Lovely Marled Purple

Knitting details are recorded here on Ravelry.  I highly recommend the yarn and the pattern and it's designer… XO Faye

Sunday, January 4, 2015

Little Doe and her Fox Friend

How lovely is everything in Alicia Paulson's world?  Her online presence is so well managed, her home looks like the perfect place to curl up and read a book in, her daughter is darling and her designs… irresistible for this mother of two little girls.

A finished pair of friends

In late summer I purchased two softie kits from the Posie Gets Cosy website.  The first was Miss Dandelion Doe and the second was Mr. Basil Fox. I was just completely drawn in by these charming little faces and leggy bodies and also loved the idea of little animal dolls for the girls that were not mass produced.
Frannie the Fox

I won't lie, they took some time to assemble, but the kit was great.  It had nearly everything you would need, and the few things it doesn't include are identified clearly and are easy enough to find.  I started assembly really, really early… in August?  And felt foolish for kicking the project off so far in advance for Christmas.  Because as it always happens, life gets in the way of these creative projects.  Weekends fill up with commitments, evenings get darker and my eyelids wave the white flag of surrender.  And so, here it is December and I'm just wrapping things up.  I think it is almost better that I started earlier so that I could enjoy the hand sewing and knitting and not feel rushed.

The girls love these little friends as much as I enjoyed making them.  Our oldest is fiercely independent at the moment. She wants to dress herself, has no hesitation about be apart from us (at school, or dance class, or with her favorite sitters) and has ideas about everything. She's not particularly taken with dolls, but is with animals.  She loves Miss Dandelion and immediately declared her a kangaroo.  Her name is now Kanga.  (No argument here… her profile is a little kargaroo-ish..)

Kanga

And the littlest.  She will probably love Mr. Basil.  She's a clown and affectionate and the wild baby of Borneo lately.  She's taken to walking on her own, just this month. (Her poor sister's world is about to get altered again, I'm afraid.)  I see that it won't be long before she's running.  You can see in her face how badly she wants to keep up with everything that her sister is doing. She loves soft things, loves dolls and fuzzy stuffed animals.  I just hope in a flash of that wild-babyness that she doesn't rip off one of his little arms (she's also surprisingly strong).


I really enjoyed making these and have ideas for more clothes for these two little critters now that they've been made. We'll see how much time permits in the post-holiday winter.  I may be busy playing doll house or tag or hide and seek and not have time to finish additional softie knitwear.

Just hanging out.

Stay warm.  F-

Thursday, January 1, 2015

A tale of three drop stitch cowls

This fall I was inspired by a friend to make some bulky knit cowls as gifts.  And what a great idea it was.  I'm generally not a fan of bulky or super bulky yarn, so I didn't have any on hand.  But the promise of being able to finish a piece so quickly and yield something so cute was all the convincing I needed.
Bright Red Dropped Stitches

I used the Drop Stitch Cowl pattern by Abi Gregorio. It was really a fast pattern to learn, it's really a fairly simple pattern repeat and can be used on any even number of stitches.  I highly recommend it, if it appeals at all.

Probably the best color representation

I ended up knitting three of these.  Two as gifts and one for myself (no judgement… in fairness my office at work is a virtual ice box.)  The two gifted cowls were knit out of Zumie by Skacel.  And they are really soft and will hopefully be comfortable to wear next to your neck and face.  The red one I plan to keep and although it's not as soft, I'm loving it.  It is knit out of Cascade Magnum.  It's a big fat singly ply and so far I'm impressed that it's not leaving bits of itself all over the place.


So 2014 handmade efforts were extended a bit this holiday season with a nice little pattern that knit up in a few hours.  Hope your holidays are warm and cozy.