Showing posts with label make do and mend. Show all posts
Showing posts with label make do and mend. Show all posts

Thursday, 1 March 2012

MAKE with mess- a la The Naughty


As promised, here is my back dated late Make blog.
This week it is more about playing then it is about making.

As a want to be clothes maker, I have decided to introduce the naughty to the world of dress making.

Todays make is a bespoke Apron/Tabard/Dress a’la THE naughty. 
The other naughty was having a sleepy day and didn’t want to play



You need:
Tear off the roll tablecloth matt
Fabric paint & fabric paint glitter
Paint Brushes
Ribbon
Scissors
Needle and thread.
A naughty wanting to get messy.

1. Roll off three table cloth matts in one piece. At the third, tear away so you have a triple long piece of fabric. Be careful not to perforate the single pieces.

2. Fold the fabric in half width wise and cut a sausage shape to fit over your naughties head.

3. Prepare for a mess.

4. Let naughty decorate the fabric in any way they feel fit. Hand prints, painting, finger printing. Anything goes.
Glitter girl!

Painting
Hand prints

5. Leave to dry

6. When dry, cut, and tape and secure for making into a tabard/dress/apron. Anything goes!!

7. Ask Naughty to model the masterpiece.

8. Hey presto!

Sparkly shoes too Mummy!
Smile!
Finally she sits still!
Fun to make, fun to dress up.....fun to photograph!

Friday, 27 January 2012

My first simple make


I have a ton of buttons, fabrics, zips, threads and nick knacks that I have collected and been given over the past 15 (if not more) years. I keep everything like this in case one day I find the perfect thing to make them into. I am not a hoarder in every sense. I edit and chuck everything else in my life, except clothes of course. You never know when I might be able to squeeze into those tiny size 10 jeans again!! So apart from Sam and Ida’s toys, gardening books I’ve either inherited, found, been given or bought, clothes and haberdashery things, I’m not really a hoarder.
No really!!

As promised last week, I am going to organise myself and start making something with them. Well they aren’t going to turn into beautiful things by themselves are they! I have in mind to make a mobile for Sam’s room- while he is still young enough to appreciate it. I have a charity shop apron that Ida wore for most of her first year as a dress that I want to grade up to a size that fits. AND Sarah and I have decided that I MUST learn to block print! So to all my textile friends that I used to share halls with at University…your help is needed. HELP!!

So, being a Fashion Degree student, this shouldn’t be hard. Well, as I am sure you have heard I have a small disability. I BREAK all machines!! In multiples.
Therefore for my “first” make project I have kept it simple and made a little bag for my Ida to fill up with bits she finds and like’s organising. You can make your own and turn it into a gift bag, a shopping bag, a party bag or a little one’s “stuff” bag as I have.




Follow my simple instructions to make a similar one.

You will need : a sewing machine, sewing thread, fabrics, paper to make the paper pattern, pins, and iron and ironing board and decorations to make your bag pretty.

  1.  Find/Buy old fabrics and embroidery threads and set up your sewing machine with the coloured thread you have chosen to use.
  2.  Use the pattern below to cut out the bag body (1) and strap (2).  It's best to pin the paper pattern to the fabric then cut it out. I’ve used plain calico for the body and floral fabric for the strap. You can be as inventive as you like.  
  3. Make the main part of the bag by French seaming* the sides together. Don’t forget pressing* is the key to good french seams*! These french seams* have a 1.5 cm seam allowance*. To french seam* simply put wrong sides together, stitch vertically down each side, 0.9 cm from the raw edge. Trim away the raw edge leaving 0.3 - 0.4mm. Open out seam and press flat. Turn inside out then press shut with right sides together making sure you have crisp edge where the seam is. Stitch 0.6 cm from the edge all the way down each side again. Then press.  Turn correct way round so the seam is inside the bag and press again. See illustration below
  4.  Do exactly the same with the strap making a long tube with an opening each end. Press flat. 
  5.  Press the top of the bag up 2cm on the wrong side* of the bag to make a hem*. Then press up 0.5 cm to make the neat hem* finish. Before you sew into place, pin the strap into place. I have cheated and only have one strap. Pin the strap to the wrong side of the bag on one side and then loop over to the back of the bag and pin on the opposite side.
  6. Sew the top hem* of the bag including the straps into the stitching.
  7. Decorate the bag in whichever way you decide. And most importantly play and have fun while making this!

  • The Pattern.


*Translation of strange terminology I have used. 

  • French Seam. See image. A french seam is a tidy finished seam.

  • Hem- the edge. In sewing we finish a garment by pressing up the fabric and turning over to create a finished edge. 

  • Seam allowance- This refers to the area between the stitching line and the raw cut edge of the fabric.  

  • Wrong side/Right side- Most fabrics have wrong sides and right side. The wrong side is the side of the fabric you don't want to see. The Right side is the side you do want to see. See above image on Seam allowance. 





  • Press, to iron


Have fun making!







Friday, 20 January 2012

My make do and mend plans


Sarah and I have given ourselves the task of learning something new to brighten up our already busy lives. A used brain is a happy brain after all! And Sarah and I aren’t the type to sit on our bottoms for too long!  As if starting a new business with a new family wasn’t enough we are now starting a new hobby.
Sarah is learning how to make magic with her Camera, capturing special moments that are so easily lost. And luckily she’s taking us along with her telling us in simple stages how to shoot and snap in only a few easy steps.

I on the other hand am going to take you all along with me on the good ship make do and mend. I have just (last April!!) moved into my house. It is still a complete tip and lots of things still needing to find permanent homes. SamSam is sleeping in a travel cot in our bedroom till we finish Ida’s new bedroom and her current room can become his. So it’ll be all change. And as usual there will be lots of things that we “I” need to make this house a home. Sam doesn’t have a mobile and I can’t find one I like so I am going to make him one. 
I have a huge pile of baby clothes that are too tatty to pass on but are too new to throw away. So I’ll be making lots of pretties to make my house comfortable and homey with those.

For those of you who know me I am not particularly a practical person so it will be very very simple. I am more likely to take a machine apart (with lots of stressful tutting and probably a lot of swearing) to understand what I am doing rather than calmly making something. I recently managed to break 4 sewing machines and 1 over locker in one sitting!! God knows how I managed to finish a 6-outfit catwalk collection for Graduate London Fashion Week I’ll never know!

So as a magpie who doesn’t like to get rid of anything incase I may need it one day, I’ll be making lots of new things from old loved things.  That way I still get to see all my battered treasured beauties.

So for the coming weeks watch out for my weekly blog about making do and mending.
And don't worry, I won't sing that annoying mouse song again!!



Tuesday, 17 January 2012

Another Happy Customer


It's a New year so I have been spring cleaning our unik office and asking all our customer's to give us a little feedback to make the unik service a better one!

Here is some friendly funny feedback from one of our lovely customers.

Mr Peter Grafton, London
Purchase of two wooden cars for his Nephew, Archie


“I have asked Archie through the medium of paint to describe to me the +vs and -vs of his 2 toy cars.

Here is his response.




The blue and green represents his satisfaction with the cars and the incredible value for money they offer.


The yellow suggests a small intake of breath when he heard about the £5.90 p&p charge..”

Mr Grafton, We are very happy Archie is enjoying his two cars. They are gorgeous! 
Let me explain a little about the £5.90 P&P charge. The £5.90 is simply the price that Royal Mail charges us to send your weighted gift "SPECIAL DELIVERY". This ensures your gift is insured and track able and received the next working day after we post it. The pretty packaging we parcelled your Nephew's gift in was a gift from us to you and your nephew. We parcel all our gifts that way.

We will happily send gifts standard Royal Mail first or second parcel rate if a client stipulates it. There is a notes section on pay pal where you can add comments and request special things like this. We will happily abide and refund the postage difference to you if you choose to do so, if you are happy to run the risk of the gift not being insured, lost or damaged. We choose SPECIAL DELIVERY so that every gift is received safely and quickly with minimum problems.

We are VERY happy that Archie likes his toy cars.




Wednesday, 11 January 2012

New Shoes!

@ChicUniqueUK Dorothy slippers I love!

This year, is my first year in a very long time that I will not be pregnant. Woo Hoo! The first year I can actually go shopping and buy something that isn’t a tent. I can look like me again rather then a beached whale. I am very excited. Except for the part where I actually hate shopping for me! It fills me with fear as I know I’ll come home with something that I actually don’t like and waste money. I don’t know why I do it. I just do! It’s such a dissapointment.  Anyway, I certainly haven't had time to shop for me since my two naughties have been around.

So instead I am going to make sure I make time to make do and mend and make new things for myself. I’ll re-vamp old well loved pieces, make new things from saved and treasured bits of fabric and mend things that I thought I’d never wear again.

Inspired by a lovely lady on twitter, Lizzie Longworth of ChicUnique who sent me this twitpic just before Christmas. My reply…I love them! After being out bid on a dress she was in love with on ebay,  she made a gorgeous dress herself, and these AMAZING Dorothy slippers to match. I wished I had the time to do things like that again!

So that's my plan for the coming year.
To get the sewing machine out, make specials for me, my naughties and my new home and then ask Lizzie to make me some special shoes!!

New Year! New shoes!
An MUST!
At least shoes always fit!!
And I'm off to recite the Bagpuss Mice song again!

To see what other lovely things ChicUnique carries click here

Thankyou Lizzie for inspiring me x