Sewing

Small Boxy Bag Tutorial

Yeah–I changed the look of the blog again.  I liked the clean, spareness of the other, but the giant-sized text was really bugging me.  I hope the quilts look okay with this warm beigey background.  We’ll see.

You all know my whines about the last semester–how it beat the stuffing out of me.  Yuck.  So, there I was, at the end of the semester–Christmas and gifts and my brain was just flat out gone.  So I postponed a gift exchange with my colleague and dear friend, Judy, as I had no ideas, nothing.  You see–when I went back to Delaware to see my sister and her new husband–Judy took a week’s worth of classes for me, so I really wanted to say thank you with a hand-made gift, but I just couldn’t come up with anything.  So my husband and I went up to Utah to see my parents and my husband’s family, and by the time I got home, my brain had rested and I knew what I wanted to make her.

A bag for her dry-erase markers!  We are both adjunct professors–meaning we schlep our stuff from room to room as we teach.  Everything has to be mobile and accessible for our time in the classroom, including white board markers and erasers.  So I looked up “cosmetic bag” on the web and found “little boxy pouch tutorial” and this post from Sister’s Choice Quilts for putting in a zipper into a small cosmetic bag. I used what I learned from both of theirs and made mine–but I lined it (unlike Three Bears little boxy pouch).  Here are some of my steps:

First, make pull tabs by folding a fabric strip lengthwise in half, then tucking in the raw edges; edgestitch.  Cut to the desired length (about 2″), fold in half and using the info about adding a tab on a zipper from the Sister’s Choice tutorial, slip the tab in between the fabric piece and your zipper, as shown.

Lay the zipper face down and stitch along one edge (the one with pins).  I’ve laid out rulers for you to see how large I cut my beginning rectangle.  Believe me, it’s all guessing–all trial and error–so don’t fret about having it the perfect size.

Press the fabric away from the zipper, then lay it face down on the other rectangle.  BTW, this is the bag I made for myself–of course, my friend’s was perfect.

Stitch again along that long edge.Notice in the photo below how evenly I stitched (not).  Just go over it again, if the zipper pull gets in the way–slide it down out of the way as you need to.

Lay the lining FACE DOWN, even with the top BACKSIDE of the zipper.  Stitch.  It feels all backwards, but it works.

See–it works!  Press it away from the zipper teeth, and do the other side.

Once you’ve stitched the lining to both sides, and pressed it away from the zipper teeth, topstitch for a nice crisp look.  If these steps are somewhat of a mystery, don’t hesitate to refer to the two posts I referenced earlier.

Separate the bag fabric side from the lining side–right sides together.  Stitch along the edge–where the bottom of the bag would be–on both parts in a 1/2″ seam.  You’ll have two joined tubes.  Flip the lining fabric back and around the bag fabric, enclosing it.  Line up the bottom seams; pin.

Yours should look like this.  To save gallons of frustration later, make sure your zipper is only halfway zipped.  Line up the zipper seam with the bottom seams and pin.

Stitch, then stitch again (a) , then trim (b)  and zig-zag (c) the edges.  Yes, I’m sure there’s a way so these internal seams are all hidden, but I couldn’t figure it out.

Mangle Flatten the bag, lining up the corner as shown.  Get it in the middle as much as possible, then lay your ruler as shown.  The zig-zagged seam will be on the center line, forming a triangle–make sure the points of the triangle are equal distances from the zig-zagged seam (at the 4″ mark and the 8″ mark above).  Draw a pencil line, then pin perpendicular to this line.  Repeat this mess process on the other three corners.  The first time you ever do this, you’re like “Huh?” but then you’ll get the hang of it. Promise.

 

Stitch, stitch again (a), then trim (b) and zig-zag these seams as well (as shown by the chopped-off corner at the top).

That’s it!  You’re done!  Turn it right-side out and admire.  You can see my pull-tabs sticking out on either side of the bag.

These are my markers in my bag–I bought my friend some new ones, and a new eraser as well.  With white board dust, I recommend keeping the eraser in its own ziplock bag to further the time in between washes.  Did you know you can wash your eraser?  I do about every three weeks–soap and water does the trick, then an overnight dry.  We adjuncts make NO money (practically) so we’re always conserving our resources.

Here you can see the finished size:  about 4″ by 6″.  Very approximate.

Have fun making these.  I’d say the first one took me about an hour to figure out and stitch.  The second one took me about 15 minutes.  It goes faster and faster as you get better.

Happy Old Year Ending (Wrap-up) · Quilts

Happy Old Year Ending

In the old days of travel, we had a travel agent who was charming, helpful, knowledgeable and had a lovely saying passed down to her from her grandfather.  He’d never say Happy New Year–it was always Happy Old Year Ending.

I really wanted to finish up the old year by completing this quilt.  But I had a touch of the flu, and so ended up out of steam, out of the energy to push it to completion.  But the bright side is, I get to say I finished a quilt on the first day of the new year!

I added another interior border with small blocks, then a blocky outside border–mainly to use up the stack of cut fabrics.

P.S. If anyone wants this stack of 3 1/2″ squares–probably about 100 of the pinky-oranges and about 25 of the white (I haven’t counted)–leave me a comment and I’ll send them to you.  BTW, I put the rotary cutter in front for scale. (That’s not included!)

I’ll work on the backing on Monday (some Marimekko fabric from the Crate and Barrel outlet store), and take it to the quilter (Cathy Kreter of CJ Designs).  A  good way to start the new year.

Family Quilts · Quilts

Working in a Series

Here I am again, with a bunch of pink and orange and some orangey-red patches.  I’d started this when the boredom and pressure of constant grading began to get to me earlier in the fall, when cutting and stitching and feeling the fabric under my fingers was a tonic for what ailed me.  I finally got back to it this week–Dead Week (bliss!)–and have finished most of the top.  I still have another narrow white (with teeny blocks) then that long blocky-piano key-type border on the left.  Just a little something extra to differentiate it from the one I made for my daughter (•here•).

I began this because I “knew” it–knew how to do it and didn’t have to think about it when my brain was really somewhere else.  But it’s been interesting to stitch the same thing again.  This repeating of a quilt is not a process I do ever, and yet I’ve always heard that “working in a series” is the best way to go.  Of course those who offer that advice mean it in service of the creative process–not making the same exact thing over and over, but sticking with a technique, a style, mining a vein of creativity to see where it takes you.  Knowing myself, I wonder if that might not lead to boredom on my part?  It’s the constant change of promise that keeps me going forward.  I’m guessing I’m not alone here, judging from the explosion of fabrics this past two years, put out in limited edition, one-of-a-kind fabric lines that quickly sell out, leaving room for newer arrays to tempt us quilters.

I did finish another quilt this fall, but I couldn’t really write about it because it was a Christmas gift for my daughter-in-law, Kristen.  I did give a sneak peek *here* when I held it up at Quilt Night,  but here’s a lovely picture of lovely Kristen on Christmas morning with her quilt.

She says she loves it, and that makes me happy.  I guess when I look back, I have worked in type of series, but just not a creative-push-the-edge type series.  I made the green quilt, then the pinky-orange quilt, then this blue quilt.  I went for the modern-style pattern of lots of “empty ground” with the white, letting the fabrics come forward.

Whether working in a series or not, perhaps the bigger and more important issue is to keep on working?

Uncategorized

Merry Christmas!

Merry Christmas!

I hope you sleep well under hand-made quilts, with visions of sugar-plums quilt blocks dancing in your head.  I have a few projects I’m dreaming of, but I’m stepping away from the sewing machine and going to celebrate Christmas with this little guy, who is now three years older and just a bit taller (he’s a wee tiny one).  He and his little brother will be the childlike wonder in our day.  Hope you have a good one!