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March 31, 2007

Cough. Cough.

Ugh. Sorry it's been so quiet around here, but it hasn't been quiet at my house. First we had to put my 13 year old dog to sleep, then I had to go out of town for a conference (for work, not fun), then when I came home, I was so sick I couldn't even get back to work. The nice doctor said, "Hmm, I don't like the sound of that lung. Let's get an x-ray...pneumonia isn't good."

After several doses of antibiotics and some hardcore cough medicine, I'm feeling a bit more like myself. My fever's gone, and I'm finally sitting upright again. And so, I ventured down to the sewing machine.

While I was in Boston, I met up with some friends...one of whom saw the little change purse I'd made for myself a while ago change purse, and said, "HEY, that would look great if it were round, and black on one half and white on the other...like a black and white cookie!

And so I give you...The Black and White Cookie Purse! Black and white cookie purse -- front It's about four inches across. I made it by creating a simple embroidery design, and it's all done in one hooping, only three steps, so it stitches out quickly. They're fun! I'm going to sell one on Etsy, and see if anyone...er...'nibbles'. Hah! Nibbles! Cookie! *cough* I should go back to bed.

March 21, 2007

Are you a hipster?

If you are, you'll <3 the crunky video podcast from ThreadBanger. It's short (around five minutes) and fun, with lots of energy, and some neat ideas. As crazy as it sounds, I never thought of going to a thrift store to buy something and recycle it for its fabric or its printed design. Duh. (OMG, did I really just say 'crunky'?) *dies*

March 19, 2007

What is it with Arkansas and Texas?

Man, I have never wanted to visit the south more than I do now. As I mentioned on the podcast, it seems as though we have a really high percentage of listenership in Arkansas and Texas! Now, for a couple of gals who've not hung down there, that's pretty exciting. In the first few hours after posting our newest podcast, almost a hundred people had downloaded it! That's pretty cool. And several hundred snagged our first one. Who knew? You people are cool.

One of the hopes I had in creating this project was not only KEEPING in touch with Carrie, but GETTING in touch with new people. So, if you wouldn't mind, drop us a line to say hi at missyousewmuch@gmail.com, or just lay a comment on us here on the blog. We have CONTESTS coming up, where you can WIN! THINGS!, and while I can't tell you exactly how they're going to work yet, they WILL involve emails and/or blog comments.

So here's your shout out -- why not give us one back?

Podcast #2

Here are some LINK-O-RAMAS!

Earth Guild, Asheville, NC
French seams link 1 | French seams link 2
fiend A Fiend!

March 18, 2007

the little yarn that could

Sometimes I just have a little bit of yarn, and I have no idea what to do with it. For instance, I was given this gorgeous Manos del Uruguay yarn for my birthday - cotton candy pink and bulky weight. Not enough for a pair of mittens, and too pink for a hat (for ME, anyway). So after a lot of thought i came up with - LONG SKINNY SCARF!

Cast on about a million (give or take fifty-thousand) stitches on a long circular needle and just knit three or four rows - instant cool.

Why didn't I think of this before? Skinny pink scarf, here I come!

Thread stand...on the cheap

I need a thread stand. I have an embroidery machine, and I have more cones of thread than should be legal, not to mention the spools I also have. The spools are OK...I can mount them on the machine properly. But the large cones are hard to deal with. I've seen thread stands before, but I've never gotten around to getting one. Well, we finally have a piece of wire in the house that is perfect for it, and I'm going to make one out of it. BUT. If I didn't have that piece of wire? Here is what I would do.

thread stand
by dispril

This gal made a thread stand out of a CD spindle and a wire clotheshanger. Sheer brilliance.

March 17, 2007

Rolled hems

Just back from a little vacation in Chicago -- we'd never been, and it was a lot of fun! Sadly, I didn't get to the garment district. (OK, I am making this up, as I don't even know if Chicago HAS a garment district.) And Carrie's away for a bit, as well.

But now that I'm back and surfing the web, I found this great picture tutorial on how to get a rolled hem working.

http://www.sleepingbaby.net/jan/Baby/hemming.html

I cannot for the life of me get a decent rolled hem, even with my magical sewing machine and its magical rolled hem foot. This tutorial has made me want to give it another try, and maybe just practice one every time I sit down at the machine, on a scrap. At least it couldn't hurt, right?

Please leave a comment if you have any suggestions at all on how to successfully do a rolled hem.

March 11, 2007

The $85 set of potholders...

Hey Fishy! Muffy came over this weekend. In addition to the fun hangingoutness, she also had some sewing needs. First, we looked at her Singer Featherweight, which is in need of professional repair. :-( So she couldn't fix the zipper in her coat, or make potholders, which she really needed.

The $85 set of potholdersOff to Jo-Ann we went to get some potholder fabric. And they had little White sewing machines on clearance!! It would have cost more than $80 to get the Featherweight fixed, and that's how much the machine was, so she got it! It does all the basic stitches, including a four step buttonhole.

We also got some Insul-Brite, which is this soft inside batting that also has a metalic layer, perfect for use in potholders and ironing board covers and such. So, after $80 for the new sewing machine, and about $5 of fabric and materials -- BEHOLD!! The $85 set of potholders! We had expected to spend about $5 and do them on my machine. Instead, we spent $85, and used the potholder project to sort of get acquainted with her machine. WHAT FUN!

March 08, 2007

The dress -- Simplicity 4014 review

So, I mentioned my new dress/jacket, which I made for Pittsburgh.

I needed a dress to wear...something winter, not too showy (it's HER day), but comfortable. Yes, I could have pulled something out of the back of the closet (I haven't had the need to dress up much lately, so dresses are pretty tucked away), or I could have gone to the store and endured mid-February clothes shopping (try finding something that's not SPRINGY), but really, it's so much better to make something. Not only do you wind up with just the garment you want, but you also are honoring the person for whom the event is planned -- I made this special just for this event! It just does feel more...ok, special.

The other thing is, when your bust measurement is almost five inches smaller than your hip measurement, well, dresses off the rack never fit right. Separates are ok because you can buy them in different sizes, but not dresses. I've gotten pretty good at taking in tops and flaring out bottoms as necessary in commercial patterns.

I love the style of this dress...Simplicity pattern 4014, a tank dress just below the knee, gently scalloped hem, and three-button jacket

The three-piece front is a flattering style for any shape, but especially for less-than-large-busted women such as myself, and the scalloped hem is flouncy and pretty. I chose a green sort of twilly sort of peachskin (pictures to come) that has a bit of a stretch. It was very easy to work with. I decided not to line it though, and I had to adjust the neckline quite a bit, as the darts and the waist were too low. I also had to take in the armholes a bit. But those mods were no big whoop (I did have to cut a custom facing for the neck, though, since it was now a completely different shape.) The neck seam puckered a little bit at one corner, but I don't care, because it's sleeveless, so I'll have a jacket over it. Also, since I didn't line it, I had to figure out what to do with the armholes (no facings, no lining) -- and for the same reason, I just overcasted the edges and then rolled them in, and topstitched. They got a little bit puckery, too...grar. But again. Jacket. So I didn't bother ripping it out and redoing it. I'll do that for the next time I wear it.

The jacket was a horse of a different color. I used a heavy brown moleskin that was embroidered with simple green-gold-red shapes. In a dress, it would have made me look like a chair. But for just the jacket, I think it actually looks pretty nice. Since the jacket goes *over* the dress, you'd think that it'd be cut a bit bigger than it is. Even adding some flare at the bottom wasn't quite enough, and I decided to not even add a button/buttonhole, mainly because I ran out of time. The shoulders fit just fine, but the waist and hips really could have used another inch or so (I like a loose fit -- but a FIT, not a potato sack.) Also, the neck of the jacket was pretty confusing to put together -- there's a long front underfacing piece (well, two pieces that you put together), and then a back facing that I finally figured out goes inside...but it all goes together in a weird way, and it did make a tiny bit of a pucker that I just couldn't get out in time. The back facing piece I would have done in a lighter lining fabric had I figured out sooner how the thing goes together. I struggled with this for quite a while before I figured out how it was supposed to go together -- and I still wasn't able to machine stitch it exactly the way it needed to be. But close enough.

That said, I REALLY like how the jacket came out. I think it helps that the fabric has a bit of weight to it, and I used plenty of interfacing. But the collar is a really interesting feature (I have a small wrinkle in mine on the inner left neck, but I'm sure I can figure that out), and it lays nicely.

I will definitely make both of these pieces again. The neck facing on the dress is a bit tricky, but I think next time I'll put the facing in first, and THEN do the alterations. And I'd probably tape the armholes or maybe even actually line the dress. I could make my own facings, but if I'm going to do that, I might as well line it anyway. The fit is just excellent, and with my minor alteration (taking it in at the shoulder seams), the waist hits exactly the right spot, and the bottom is just a *little* bit flouncy, as it should be.

March 06, 2007

Bookmaking

OK, here in Rhode Island, bookmaking means something different than bookBINDING. ;-) But I made a book! I used the Flat Back Spine kit from Hollander's, and frankly, I cannot BELIEVE how it came out. Everyone who looks at it thinks that it looks like a professionally manufactured journal. I made a book!

The nicest thing about the kit is that everything comes pre-cut, so you don't have to do any measuring or cutting. That really makes for an excellent first-timer experience. I would post a step-by-step tutorial, but honestly, I don't think that would be fair to the Hollander's folks, who sell a booklet with the instructions. (I'm definitely going to do more of this, though, so as I come up with my own techniques and caveats, I'll be sure to share more detailed information.) And the instructions were clear and thorough. There was only one question I had (when you start stitching the second signature, and you go into the 'first' hole, it SOUNDS like you go into the TOP hole, but really, it only makes sense to go into the bottom hole), but I seem to have guessed right, and everything worked out perfectly.

I have also been doing a bit of reading, and have found a neat way to make your own bookcloth for book binding -- find a nice medium-weight fabric, and iron fusible web (such as WonderUnder) to the wrong side of the fabric -- and be sure to really iron it in there. It'll stiffen the fabric and make it nice to use as bookcloth. (Do NOT try to use ModPodge over the fabric. Trust me.) I think when I get my new order of bookboard (a guy on eBay sells it precut!), I'll use the robot fabric from the wedding tie project to make a journal for Spud.

March 01, 2007

Idea!

OK, I'm at work, so I only have a second, but I just had this idea. If you have a boy, and he likes those T-shirts that are short sleeved shirts with extra long sleeves sticking out underneath the short sleeves, you can make them by saving old outgrown or stained long-sleeve T-shirts. Cut off the arms, and sew them into a short-sleeved shirt.

I am so doing this.

Photos of FOs

I have a fairly inexpensive digital camera that, for the life of me, I cannot figure out.

So, kind readers: what works for you? What takes the best close-ups of stitches or shows off the amazing patterns in the fabric the best?

Also: what would you like our next podcast to be about? Any questions or comments?

Also Also: Super Secret Contest coming up. Tell your friends. And your friends' friends.

Nerds show you how a sewing machine works

If you ever wondered exactly how the mechanics of a sewing machine work, and you happen to like nerds, check out this 8-minute video. (Also, don't miss the bloopers at the end, especially at 8:10.)

Rumplestiltskin

I'm a total Lost freak, but I'm also a TIVO freak, and I can't start watching it until I've calculated out all the commercials (about 30 minutes into the program).

A lot can happen in 30 minutes.

I admit I haven't been doing as many normal fiber arts as I usually do (I've been working on a painting that's been eating cloth, modpodge, and paint), but I felt an itch to spin some yarn while I waited to watch my Secret Boyfriend Hurley on teevee.

I have a Louet S15, single treadle wheel. It's sturdy, but plain, doesn't require much maintenance - and my cats love it more than they love stray bits of yarn. I spun a fairly consistent single, and since i tend to add a lot of twist, i think it would work best with a ply (anyone know the andean ply method? it baffles me).

I really like sitting in front of the teevee, my hands moving without me having to tell them what to do, and my right foot steadily pressing down on the treadle. I feel small, doing something that so many people have done before me.

I will knit something small with what I created. Wool is pretty. Spinning is fun. I recommend it.

And it was a really good episode of Lost.

Knit Captain Underpants! Sewing for boys...and ME!

Carrietta? Mom? Someone? I know a guy who might LOVE one of these...civil bitch has a free pattern for a Captain Underpants doll!

Which brings me to a dilemma. Sewing for boys. OK. I can make buttondown shirts. I can make cargo pants (but they never look as cool as the ones from the Gap -- I think they don't prewash the pockets or something). But what else?? I'm going to embroider the name of Spud's school on a T-shirt, that'll be cool. And bookmarks with his favorite characters, those are always handy.

But what else?

And lastly, I found this HILARIOUS pattern this morning that I'm totally going to use, from SuperNaturale. Make underpants out of old T-shirts. Yes. Indeed.

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