The elementary school's big fundraiser this season involves raffling off baskets full of donated goodies at the Ice Cream Social. I'm heading up the basket for my daughter's first grade class, and my neighbor, Heather, is coordinating the basket for her daughter's kindergarten class. I made fabric baskets for both our classes because (1) I have an obsession with sewing fabric baskets, and (2) fabric baskets are way cooler than crappy wicker baskets from a craft store.
Heather's basket has a Michigan foods/drinks theme, so OF COURSE I had to use cherry fabric. [I'm being a little bit sarcastic here. Everyone in Michigan is convinced that they are world-famous for their cherries even though neither Heather nor I had any idea of that "fact" until we each moved here. We're happy to go with the theme though. I'm probably going to be kicked out of the state for saying that, actually.] Anyhoo, I used the Crafty Hipster Featherweight Tote tutorial (adding Peltex and using duck cloth for the lining).
The basket I'm coordinating will have a "Cooking with Kids" theme and will be filled with brightly-colored kitchen utensils and a gift certificate for a kids cooking class. I didn't like any of the cooking-themed fabrics at the store because they seemed too girly and I wanted the basket to be gender-neutral. As a result of my new obsession with this cute chevron fabric, I had to use that of course. I kind of winged the design and finished the top in a similar manner to my Boxy Fabric Basket.
I went rogue on the sides by adding some large grommets and knotting cotton webbing through them for the handles. This may be my new preferred way to do this! I also added a layer of fusible fleece in addition to Peltex so the basket would be strong and structured. The panel on the front is actually a pocket that is divided into three sections. I plan to stick the gift certificate in the center pocket and a utensil in each of the outer pockets.
Inside the basket, there will be coordinating parent/child aprons. The front sides of the aprons look like this . . .
. . . and the reverse sides look like that!
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Linking up to: And Sew We Craft, The Stitching' Mommy
Showing posts with label basket. Show all posts
Showing posts with label basket. Show all posts
Monday, March 2, 2015
Thursday, February 5, 2015
A manly basket for a little dude's diapers
My old friend, Kathryn, had her first baby not too long ago. Well, it was back in November, actually. It's not too late to send a baby gift, right? RIGHT?!?!? Please say yes.
Anyhoo, I followed a great tutorial from one of my very favorite blogs, The Sewing Loft. It's called the Stackable Scrap Bucket because you're supposed to make the exterior from pieced scraps, but I went rogue and used this tan and black plaid.
[It's 15 degrees outside right now and I didn't have the energy to clean up the toy explosion, so I'm pretending they're supposed to be a colorful background.]
There's a reason this fabric is so masculine -- both the exterior and the lining came from two of my dad's old shirts! They were nice Eddie Bauer shirts that wore out at the cuffs. Mom tried to make them into short-sleeved shirts, but discovered that it's not quite as simple as cutting off the sleeves and hemming. Luckily, she thought of me and saved the shirts so I could make something from them. Thanks, Mom!
The rope handles are so much fun. If it weren't for them, though, the bucket would actually be reversible. I had originally intended for the dark fabric to be the exterior, but when I accidentally placed the seams in the wrong place (the front and back instead of the sides), I had to go with Plan B. (I had to piece together the vertical parts from two pieces instead of it just being one like the pattern called for.)
I figure this basket would work well to hold diapers, toys, or anything else little Nolan (that's his name) might want to put inside. I like that the basket isn't too babyish, so it can grow with him.
I used fusible fleece on both the lining and the exterior, so there is a double layer throughout. Makes for a nice weight of basket, actually. I should have gotten a better shot of the cute grommets on the sides. I'm such a sucker for grommets. I added the piping along the top outer rim of the basket, but it's not very obvious. I'm also a sucker for piping, of course.
Welcome to the world, sweet Nolan!
Anyhoo, I followed a great tutorial from one of my very favorite blogs, The Sewing Loft. It's called the Stackable Scrap Bucket because you're supposed to make the exterior from pieced scraps, but I went rogue and used this tan and black plaid.
[It's 15 degrees outside right now and I didn't have the energy to clean up the toy explosion, so I'm pretending they're supposed to be a colorful background.]
There's a reason this fabric is so masculine -- both the exterior and the lining came from two of my dad's old shirts! They were nice Eddie Bauer shirts that wore out at the cuffs. Mom tried to make them into short-sleeved shirts, but discovered that it's not quite as simple as cutting off the sleeves and hemming. Luckily, she thought of me and saved the shirts so I could make something from them. Thanks, Mom!
The rope handles are so much fun. If it weren't for them, though, the bucket would actually be reversible. I had originally intended for the dark fabric to be the exterior, but when I accidentally placed the seams in the wrong place (the front and back instead of the sides), I had to go with Plan B. (I had to piece together the vertical parts from two pieces instead of it just being one like the pattern called for.)
I figure this basket would work well to hold diapers, toys, or anything else little Nolan (that's his name) might want to put inside. I like that the basket isn't too babyish, so it can grow with him.
I used fusible fleece on both the lining and the exterior, so there is a double layer throughout. Makes for a nice weight of basket, actually. I should have gotten a better shot of the cute grommets on the sides. I'm such a sucker for grommets. I added the piping along the top outer rim of the basket, but it's not very obvious. I'm also a sucker for piping, of course.
Welcome to the world, sweet Nolan!
Sunday, January 25, 2015
Basket prototypes and presents
I went a little bit crazy sewing baskets over the last couple of weeks. In my defense, I was trying to perfect my Boxy Fabric Basket and needed to try out a couple of different ideas. Then I saw a tutorial for a hilarious woven basket that I decided I needed to try, because apparently I have a basket problem.
So what did I do with all of those baskets?
First, I gave one of my practice baskets (one that isn't in the above photo) to Charlotte's sweet friend, Lila, who turned 7 a couple of weeks ago. As I have been doing for all of the birthday parties Charlotte has been invited to over the last month, I also sewed Lila a Shredded Heart T-Shirt. Turquoise is Lila's favorite color, so I paired a turquoise tee with some shiny purple fabric underneath.
Lila is getting a sewing machine from her mom for her birthday (apparently it has yet to be purchased though), so I filled the basket with some scraps that I thought would interest her. Most of them are quilting cotton, but I threw some fleece in there just for fun. What better was to practice with a new machine than on some neat fabric scraps? I had so much fun going through all of my fabric, and it helped me clean out my stash of material that was too small to do much with, but too big to throw away (in my opinion, anyway!).
This green basket was the original prototype for the Boxy Fabric Basket. It was the first one I made using the pentagonal pattern pieces. After I made this one, I decided I wanted side handles instead and started dreaming of a way to use piping. This fabric was from a bag that a table cloth and cloth napkins came in that my mom had bought a few years ago. She didn't want to keep the bag as storage, so she gave it to me to make something out of. I paired it with some black cotton and decided it would be a cute basket to store her cloth napkins in. Mom agreed, so I'm going to send it to her next time I get off my lazy butt and make it to the post office. (I have SUCH a talent for making perfectly even things look completely lopsided in photos, so just trust me that the basket is not nearly as wonky as it looks in this photo.)
This next basket has been claimed by Charlotte to hold her "sewing kit" (scraps of fabric that she has fallen in love with, my extra seam allowance ruler, some dull scissors, and my old tomato pincushion filled with bent pins). It's a little bigger than the final version of the Boxy Fabric Basket, and the handles are sewn on a bit differently. I'm not sure why the peach fabric looks so orange-y in this photo.
This final Boxy Fabric Basket will be given to one of my children's teachers for Valentine's Day. I have no idea why this fabric photographs so blue when it's really quite green. I'm sure it has something to do with my crappy photography skills. The inside fabric is from a cute chevron fat quarter I bought on a whim once. I wanted to use red cotton webbing for the handles, but the only red the store had was way more orange than the piping that I had already sewn in. Whoops. The white handles look okay though.
This Weaved Fabric Basket (shouldn't it be "woven"?) was very tedious to make, but it was a fun challenge. Once I got about halfway through the project I went rogue and finished it off my own way. I also decided I wanted to add handles, so I grabbed some leftover cotton webbing and went to town.
I used four different pink fat quarters and paired them with some teal cotton (which looks blue in these photos for some reason). There is Peltex inside the pink strips to give the basket some structure, but I think if I made this again I would also add Peltex to the teal strips as well. I'm assuming the directions meant that I should use Peltex, but it just specified "interfacing". It looks like Peltex in the photos though. I reeeeeeeeally wish tutorials would specify better what weights of interfacing are required.
So what did I do with all of those baskets?
First, I gave one of my practice baskets (one that isn't in the above photo) to Charlotte's sweet friend, Lila, who turned 7 a couple of weeks ago. As I have been doing for all of the birthday parties Charlotte has been invited to over the last month, I also sewed Lila a Shredded Heart T-Shirt. Turquoise is Lila's favorite color, so I paired a turquoise tee with some shiny purple fabric underneath.
Lila is getting a sewing machine from her mom for her birthday (apparently it has yet to be purchased though), so I filled the basket with some scraps that I thought would interest her. Most of them are quilting cotton, but I threw some fleece in there just for fun. What better was to practice with a new machine than on some neat fabric scraps? I had so much fun going through all of my fabric, and it helped me clean out my stash of material that was too small to do much with, but too big to throw away (in my opinion, anyway!).
This green basket was the original prototype for the Boxy Fabric Basket. It was the first one I made using the pentagonal pattern pieces. After I made this one, I decided I wanted side handles instead and started dreaming of a way to use piping. This fabric was from a bag that a table cloth and cloth napkins came in that my mom had bought a few years ago. She didn't want to keep the bag as storage, so she gave it to me to make something out of. I paired it with some black cotton and decided it would be a cute basket to store her cloth napkins in. Mom agreed, so I'm going to send it to her next time I get off my lazy butt and make it to the post office. (I have SUCH a talent for making perfectly even things look completely lopsided in photos, so just trust me that the basket is not nearly as wonky as it looks in this photo.)
This next basket has been claimed by Charlotte to hold her "sewing kit" (scraps of fabric that she has fallen in love with, my extra seam allowance ruler, some dull scissors, and my old tomato pincushion filled with bent pins). It's a little bigger than the final version of the Boxy Fabric Basket, and the handles are sewn on a bit differently. I'm not sure why the peach fabric looks so orange-y in this photo.
This final Boxy Fabric Basket will be given to one of my children's teachers for Valentine's Day. I have no idea why this fabric photographs so blue when it's really quite green. I'm sure it has something to do with my crappy photography skills. The inside fabric is from a cute chevron fat quarter I bought on a whim once. I wanted to use red cotton webbing for the handles, but the only red the store had was way more orange than the piping that I had already sewn in. Whoops. The white handles look okay though.
This Weaved Fabric Basket (shouldn't it be "woven"?) was very tedious to make, but it was a fun challenge. Once I got about halfway through the project I went rogue and finished it off my own way. I also decided I wanted to add handles, so I grabbed some leftover cotton webbing and went to town.
I used four different pink fat quarters and paired them with some teal cotton (which looks blue in these photos for some reason). There is Peltex inside the pink strips to give the basket some structure, but I think if I made this again I would also add Peltex to the teal strips as well. I'm assuming the directions meant that I should use Peltex, but it just specified "interfacing". It looks like Peltex in the photos though. I reeeeeeeeally wish tutorials would specify better what weights of interfacing are required.
And finally, I made another Quilted Wine Tote for Corey to give to his new co-worker, Logan, when he visited him in Louisiana last week. Corey also wanted to give Logan a pleather keychain like the ones I made for Corey's Lincoln keys. I was happy for another opportunity to use my new walking foot, so I jumped at the chance. The foot worked like a charm for the tote, but I didn't think it handled the pleather as well as I had heard it would. I switched back to my old technique of covering the underside of the presser foot with masking tape and that did the trick.
Monday, January 19, 2015
Boxy Fabric Basket -- Sewing Tutorial
I made this basket to hold some Valentine's Day treats for my son's preschool teachers, but I didn't want it to scream "VALENTINE'S DAY". With the aqua and the dark pink on the exterior and the teal (which looks much more blue in all of the photos for some reason) on the interior, the color combo looks both sweet for Valentine's Day but appropriate for year-round as well.
This basket has more of a boxed-out shape than the typical one because of the construction method. I got the idea for this basket when making my Toy Tote.
Boxy Fabric Basket -- Sewing Tutorial
Materials Needed:
Quilting cotton or lightweight home decor fabric:
- Exterior -- 1/4 yard if non-directional print, 1/2 yard if directional print
- Lining -- 1/4 yard if non-directional print, 1/2 yard if directional print
Felt OR fusible fleece (a piece at least 14" x 21")
Piping -- about 2 yards
Cotton or nylon webbing (1" wide or so) -- 15 inches
Thread to match the piping AND thread to match the lining fabric
Freezer paper (regular paper would work fine too)
Finished dimensions: approximately 6 1/2" wide by 6 1/2" deep by 6" tall.
All seam allowances will be 3/8" unless otherwise indicated.
STEP ONE: Drawing the pattern and cutting the fabric
Draw the pattern piece as shown below on a regular piece of paper, or if you have some, on freezer paper. Essentially, this is a 7" x 10.5" rectangle with the bottom corners chopped off.
If you used freezer paper, you can iron the waxy side of the pattern piece right onto the fabric. Then, it will temporarily adhere and keep the pattern piece from shifting while you cut. I like to fold the fabric such that I can cut multiples out at the same time.
Cut out FOUR of the pattern piece shapes from the LINING only.
Then, grab your pattern piece and hack 3/4" off the top.
Now your pattern piece should have the dimensions shown in the photo below. Cut FOUR of the newly-resized pattern piece from the EXTERIOR and the FELT/FUSIBLE FLEECE.
You should have these now:
Now, adhere the felt or fusible fleece to the exterior pieces. You can either use basting spray with the felt, or you can baste with your sewing machine all the way around each of the pieces 1/4" away from the edge. If you have fusible fleece, then you can just iron those puppies on to the exterior.
STEP TWO: Constructing the exterior
Grab your piping and cut FOUR lengths that are each 6 inches long.
On the RIGHT side of the EXTERIOR fabric (which already has the felt/fleece attached), pin each of the piping lengths down the right vertical edges, matching the raw edge of the piping with the raw edge of the fabric. The piping will hang off of the bottom of the fabric just a bit.
Pop your zipper or piping foot onto your machine. Using the thread that matches the piping, stitch right on top of the stitching that holds the piping together, right down to where the fabric ends.
Yeah, you can't really see the white stitching on the white piping, but believe me when I say it's there.
Trim any of the piping off that extends beyond the bottom of the fabric. It's easiest to do this if you flip the fabric over first.
Repeat with each of the other pieces. You should have this now.
Place two of the pieces with the right sides together. Repeat with the two other pieces. Pin them down the LEFT side.
At a spot 3/8" up from the bottom left corner (where the piping ends), make a little mark.
Do the same thing 3/8" up to the left from the bottom point.
Start stitching at the mark you made at the bottom point. When you get to the mark you made at the left corner, leave the needle down, lift the presser foot, pivot the fabric to start stitching on top of the existing stitching line (the one that attached the piping), put the presser foot down, and stitch all the way to the end.
Now you should have this:
Repeat with the other pair of exterior pieces. if you open both of them up, you should now have this:
Place the two sets with the right sides together, matching up the corners and seams. Pin.
Flatten out the places where the bottom points meet, like this:
Sew them together stitching with two different seams with a 3/8" seam allowance. Starting at the bottom point (3/8" in from the point), sew up the diagonals and up both sides (on the existing stitching lines).
Turn the exterior right side out.
Take the rest of your piping and pin it around the top edge with the raw edge of the piping matching the raw edge of the fabric.. Leave a tail of about two inches unpinned at the beginning and at the end. Don't trim the ling end of the piping just yet.
Sew the piping on (sewing on the stitching that holds the piping together), but leave a couple of inches on each end unsewn. Make sure about an inch or so of the end of the piping overlaps the beginning of the piping and cut off the excess.
Using a seam ripper, rip out about an inch of the stitching holding the end of the piping together. Cut off the cord inside at the point where the beginning of the piping meets the end of the piping.
Fold in about a half an inch of the piping casing on the end and finger press it.
Nest the beginning of the piping into the end of the piping, butting up the two ends of the cording together.
Close the piping casing around and pin into place.
Stitch the piping down, closing the gap.
STEP FOUR: Sewing the lining and assembling the basket
Assemble the lining with the same construction method as the exterior, only without all of the piping mess. Now you should have this:
Turn the exterior wrong side out. Trim a bit off of the corners and at the bottom points of both the lining and the exterior. You can also trim a little bit of the felt out of the exterior seams to cut down on the bulk.
With the exterior turned wrong side out and the lining turned right side out, nest the lining inside the exterior. Yup, the lining will be sticking up about 3/4" above the exterior. Double check to make sure the pretty sides of the fabric are facing each other before you pin and stitch.
Shove the lining down to align the raw edges with those of the exterior. Pin into place, matching all of the seams. Then sew them together on the stitching line that attached the piping, BUT LEAVE OPEN A 4" TURNING GAP! I like to leave the turning gap open on the side where the piping is attached.
Carefully turn the basket right side out through the turning gap.
Shove the lining down into the basket with the excess wrapped around to the exterior. Now the lining should fit nicely down inside the exterior.
Press it all down neatly into place, including the part with the turning gap.
Switch your thread to match the lining. Using your zipper foot, stitch along the top edge as close to the piping as you can get. This will close the turning gap and keep the lining down into place.
Now it should look like this.
STEP FIVE: Adding the handles
Take the 15" length of webbing and cut it into two lengths, 7 1/2" long.
Fold under an inch on the ends of each piece and press.
Pin them onto the sides of the basket, 1" down from the piping on the top and 1" in from the piping on the sides. This will make the handles bow out a little so they won't lie flush against the basket. I like to make one of the sides with the handle be the one with the piping join and the turning gap.
First, switch the only top thread in your machine to one that matches your webbing. Keep the bobbin thread the same color as your lining. This will disguise the stitching on the lining. You always could just sew on the handles before you attach the exterior and the lining, but I think it helps keep the lining in place to have the stitching for the handles go through the lining as well.
Stitch the handles on by sewing a square with an "x" through it at the end of each handle, enclosing the raw edges of the webbing. Repeat on the opposite side with the other handle.
From the outside, you should only see the white stitching.
From the inside, you can hardly see where the handles were attached.
Grab your iron and give the basket another press. Give it shape by folding where the edges of the box should be and pressing a sharper crease.
Looks cool from the inside as well, doesn't it?
Voila! A sweet little basket to fill with treats for your favorite teacher or friend.
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