
Showing posts with label cushion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cushion. Show all posts
Wednesday, 17 September 2014
Thursday, 17 July 2014
I am the worst blogger!
To be honest I shall probably continue to be the worst blogger, so let's just keep moving forward, eh.
Things have been MADE, and blog posts written (in my head, where it doesn't really count of course...) and the odd photo has been taken. So today I should like to show you a cushion, which was begun last week and given to its recipient today. It is a very special cushion nonetheless.
I have teacher friends and relatives and I know there is a wild proliferation of chocolates and mugs at the end of each school year, so I wanted to make something, but really I wanted to make something with Trainboy. Trainboy, who got a perfect score of "A" for effort in every subject this year... except Design & Technology. Trainboy had no ideas. Nor did I.
But then I scored some super-cheap fabric marker pens in TK Maxx and brought them home with a sudden brilliant idea. I ironed a bit of white cotton, handed the pens to my son, and asked him to draw a train. Then I suggested we went and chose some fabrics to use for the cushion. My idea was to put the drawing on one side and a bit of pretty patchwork on the other, so his teacher could use it either way, depending which she preferred. I mean a teacher probably collects an awful lot of other people's children's artwork...
What co-ordinates with a blue, red and green train? Why, delicate shades of lime and sage green, and perhaps a bit of neon orange, of course! And yes, that is some of my precious, precious Denyse Schmidt there. He's got some taste, at least. The block is basically "Scots Plaid" from the marvellous 500 Quilt Blocks by Kerry and Lynne.
It was a bit of a challenge but it worked, I think? I ironed some lightweight stabiliser over the back of each panel, overlocked the inside edges, and put a reasonable zip in the side. We gave it to Mrs K this morning and she seemed to like it. She is a really marvellous teacher - I think Wilf and I will both miss her next year!
Things have been MADE, and blog posts written (in my head, where it doesn't really count of course...) and the odd photo has been taken. So today I should like to show you a cushion, which was begun last week and given to its recipient today. It is a very special cushion nonetheless.
I have teacher friends and relatives and I know there is a wild proliferation of chocolates and mugs at the end of each school year, so I wanted to make something, but really I wanted to make something with Trainboy. Trainboy, who got a perfect score of "A" for effort in every subject this year... except Design & Technology. Trainboy had no ideas. Nor did I.
But then I scored some super-cheap fabric marker pens in TK Maxx and brought them home with a sudden brilliant idea. I ironed a bit of white cotton, handed the pens to my son, and asked him to draw a train. Then I suggested we went and chose some fabrics to use for the cushion. My idea was to put the drawing on one side and a bit of pretty patchwork on the other, so his teacher could use it either way, depending which she preferred. I mean a teacher probably collects an awful lot of other people's children's artwork...
What co-ordinates with a blue, red and green train? Why, delicate shades of lime and sage green, and perhaps a bit of neon orange, of course! And yes, that is some of my precious, precious Denyse Schmidt there. He's got some taste, at least. The block is basically "Scots Plaid" from the marvellous 500 Quilt Blocks by Kerry and Lynne.
Wednesday, 16 April 2014
A Cushion
I was seized with the desire to make a cushion this weekend. Recently we re-did our sitting room and I got a bit carried away with making everything co-ordinate in shades of yellow and grey, and having finished, I've decided it's a bit matchy, and some more random is called for.
I had a rootle through my home decor weight and linen scraps - most of which have come from scrap rolls - and put the following pile together.
It sewed up pretty quickly - I used big chunks because these fabrics fray so quickly, and just pieced them randomly. My favourite kind of quilting if I'm honest. For the back, I used the daisies and the guitars since they were the only bits left that were big enough, and this rather brilliant zip tutorial from Fiona at the Village Haberdashery.
(I'm not showing you the rest of the room just at the moment because it is A MIDDEN.)
Then I decided it was about time we got some cats on this blog. So I took it upstairs to the bedroom where Deeley (the black one) and Marsha (the tortoiseshell one) are usually sleeping and tried to pose them nicely with it.
Marsha was having none of it.
Deeley, meanwhile, despite being black and usually quite hard to photograph, obligingly sat on the window side of the cushion and looked into the lens and everything. She's good, is Deeley. She eats carpets, but for the most part she's pretty good.
Ah, beautiful! Well done Deeley.
...Marsha. Go AWAY.
I had a rootle through my home decor weight and linen scraps - most of which have come from scrap rolls - and put the following pile together.
It sewed up pretty quickly - I used big chunks because these fabrics fray so quickly, and just pieced them randomly. My favourite kind of quilting if I'm honest. For the back, I used the daisies and the guitars since they were the only bits left that were big enough, and this rather brilliant zip tutorial from Fiona at the Village Haberdashery.
(I'm not showing you the rest of the room just at the moment because it is A MIDDEN.)
Marsha was having none of it.
Deeley, meanwhile, despite being black and usually quite hard to photograph, obligingly sat on the window side of the cushion and looked into the lens and everything. She's good, is Deeley. She eats carpets, but for the most part she's pretty good.
Ah, beautiful! Well done Deeley.
...Marsha. Go AWAY.
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