I can’t believe it’s been this long. Turns out a three month stint in a country town, three job changes and a broken camera has left YOU all post-less! Anyway, I’m back with my regular, semi-regular up-dates…and today I have a gentlemanly Pea Coat for you. (Or ‘Pee’ coat if your little someone is being a little turd during the night) Pattern: Unisex Pea Coat by Dear My Kids (etsy)
Outer: Japanese Cotton / Linen blend (etsy)
Lining: Austen Powers baby-poo velour.
The velour was the one piece out of a great lot of thrifted fabrics that I brought home and thought, ‘it’s hideous…what was I thinking?!’ And then I remembered this beautiful version of the Pea Coat. I used some dark denim from the same thrifty pillage for a contrast under the collar, sleeve tabs and the self cover buttons. I was planning to take some width out of the coat so it’s a tad more up and down for a boy and forgot…does it look like a dress?
Anyway, I’m quite taken, as many of us are, with the idea of vintage, yesteryear, old-world, tailored little kiddie clothes. I especially liked the idea of a gentlemanly pea coat despite it being totally impractical in our sub-tropical climate. Oh well, I’m pretty sure practicality went out the window when it seemed like a dandy idea to make clothes for a whole year. Along the way I’m discovering that sewing is definitely not quicker and, once you develop a taste for designer fabrics, not cheaper. Who’s complaining?
How would you like to take an ordinary kiddo shirt and transform it into ‘lift-the-flap’ clothing? Lets face it, those books are still fun! You will learn how to make a simple ‘stuffie’ (completely removable for washing) and watch your kids turn it into an interactive prop for creative play. You could even make a few and rotate them.
1. Get inspired. What do you think would make a fun prop? A moustache? An ice-cream? An envelope with a felt letter? Your fabric stash can be a good place to draw inspiration…do you have some stripes that scream villain or conveniently, a fabric with a ready made prop lurking in the print (see telephone). You could put something noisy inside; crinkly plastic, a bell. The cord can become part of the game too! You guys are the creatives. Go wild.
2. Gather materials, including some stuffing to fill the shape with.
3. Cut the cord and attach velcro. The cord should be long enough to reach where the prop will be used (but not long enough to go around a neck) plus an extra inch that will be fixed inside the stu ffie. Cut a narrow strip of velcro (about an inch) and secure it to one end of the cord with a zig-zag stitch, going up and back several times.
4. Draw the sewing line. This will be the perimeter of your stuffie when it is poofed up. This line should be just out from the edge of the image so you don’t lose any of it when you sew.
5. Cut the shape just outside the sewing line this time. This will become the seam allowance.
6. Flip over and re-draw your sewing line on the wrong side.
7. Cut the felt backing. Pin the fabric to your felt and cut around the shape.
8. Attach velcro to felt backing and to shirt. Sew a couple of strips of velcro to the back of the felt backing. Cover a generous area…the stuffie needs to be easy to slap on in a hurry (when you have to hang that telephone up fast). Now for the shirt. When considering where to place the complimentary velcro strips see if there is somewhere in the fabric design to disguise black or white velcro, like in stripes as above. This just makes for a slightly neater look but its not a biggie if its not possible. Pin and sew the velcro on, making sure the stuffie has plenty of area to stick to.
9. Attach cord and sew stuffie. With your fabric right side to right side (velcro facing outside), sandwich the cord between the two layers and pin in place, leaving an inch hanging outside and the rest on the inside. Shut the lid and pin around the remainder of the shape. Sew your Stuffie following the line you drew earlier, making sure the cord is still tucked inside. Leave a gap in the stitching large enough to turn stuffie back the right way.
10. Now stuff it. Stuff it real good.
11. Close the opening with small neat hand-stitching, using co-ordinating thread.
12. To add a little extra tactile goodness and give the stuffie a quilted effect, pick a couple of lines to emphasize and sew along them.
Congratulations…if you made it this far you didn’t stuff up. Sorry. Now stick it on and enjoy the entertainment.
Be Friendly to the Carnival Folk was inspired by dreamy carousels, cotton candy and rickety rides. The fabric is by Kokka and is actually called ‘Carnival’, you might recognize it from my birthday bulk buy. The red corduroy and the buttons were a lucky thrifty find. The pattern is by Dear My Kids and this is the ‘unisex warm hoodie’ in a size 5. Big enough for when its actually winter here.
I first saw the jacket made up here and jumped at the chance to try a new boy’s pattern, particularly one involving piping. Turns out the pattern doesn’t say anything about piping but its a nice detail on an otherwise plain jacket. And since too much is never enough, I piped the sleeves, the rim of the hood and along the hood before, thankfully, it ran out. Its a simple pattern to work with, though I missed the handy notches of an Oliver and S.
By the way, did anyone notice I was fashionably late to this week’s Kids Clothing Week Challenge? HAH, I wish. This is the sum total of my efforts for days 1 & 2 & 3 & 4. Dang that real life stuff that gets in the way of sewing and blogging! This is turning into a one item KCWC for me. It was more fun to edit photos than sew the coat this week, so I think I’ll take that as a sign to re-group and rest. I’ll have to be okay (cries hysterically) with that this time round but I’ll still be checking out everyone else’s awesome sewing in the flickr pool and ‘pinning‘ you all like mad!
It’s not an online fabric store, though catchy name.
It’s the view from the top of my sewing table since my birthday stash arrived! Now to the untrained eye this may look excessive. And, if this was anything but an annual occurrence only (okay maybe bi-annual if I’m good for santa) then yes, you’d be forgiven for thinking someone has a teensy weensy problem. But when it comes to frittering away birthday moolah these days, I’m a simple gal: No handbags here. No shoes. No i-pads. No chocolate. No perfume. Just fabric. Sweeeeeet fabric from across the globe. If you’d like to know what any of these are, ask away, they’re all etsy purchases!
This post should probably have been titled: You know you’ve got it bad when..
This might be my proudest sewing moment to date! It’s the Macaron Dress by Colette patterns and it’s intermeeeeeeediate, which loosely translates to ( maddening )pockets, pleats and an invisible zip. I went in blind. I had to un-pick and re-adjust and un-pick and re-adjust. I didn’t merge the bust, waist and hip measurements. I spent $26 on an invisible zipper foot that I had no idea how to use. I wanted capped puffed sleeves and no contrasting waistband. And for the last two weeks from measuring to sewing the final hem I was prepared for ‘sack dress with dodgy zip job’.
I’d seen from other versions of the Macaron that it could look a little boxy so took measurements with no room to spare. But when I came to fit the dress, the ends of the waist wouldn’t meet! Luckily the pattern’s generous 5/8″ seams allowed a little room for those of us who forget to merge waist and bust measurements. Re-stitching a 3/8 ” seam saved the day and gave the small waist I was after. Phew!
Now, if I was really clever I would have thought to create some sort of ‘lift the flap’ option for breastfeeding. There’s no physical way to wrestle a boob out any opening without freaking out the other guests so its a short stint only frock. There was a lot riding on this dress. If it didn’t work out I would have happily resigned myself to a future of kiddie clothes sewing…
… but the love I have for this dress, with its minty, retro telephones, silky cream fabric, little puffed sleeves, small waist and pockets, runs deep. So deep that I’d pay good money for it in a shop. Plus it goes with my new fringe. So, with anticipation and a little more confidence I’m venturing forth into the world of adult patterns.
I'm Sophie. Seeker of Sewing Highs. Join me, as I whoop-whoop zipper flys and cry over shrunk fabric. Our destination: the ultimate hand-made wardrobe.