Summer is a difficult time of year for me to do crafts. Or, rather, it's difficult when I am trying to stash bust. Lots of stuff I could do, but nothing that I *want* to do. Yes, I have air conditioning in my apartment, but I'm frugal in some arenas (mostly with utilities) to a fault, and refuse to have it kick on until the indoor temperature hits 80.
In other words, I'm not going to do anything with warm fabrics until it gets cooler again. AKA: Why I'm sitting in my living room with a tankini on and a girly fruit/gin/tonic spritzer on the coffee table.
I have lots of lovely patterns to sew and make summer projects, but my stash fabric is mostly winter weights -- wools, tweeds, and heavy fabrics. Um. No. I'm not going to put myself through that, especially when I know I won't get to wear any of them until the fall, and with some luck, I'll have trimmed an inch or two from my waist by then. What's the point of sewing something, and then having it not fit?
And then let's talk the knitting. Wool, cashmere, silk, and more wool. A sweater on the needles, and a shawl on the needles that's rapidly getting big and heavy.
Would you want to knit any of those in a humid Pittsburgh summer? I certainly don't.
So I'm thinking socks to tide me over for the rest of the month. I found some Ultra Alpaca when I was cleaning out the craft room, and those should be small enough to keep me going through June. They're also small enough that I can tuck in my bag when I go to my night class, and I won't need to worry about having this massive thing taking up so much space. (Seriously. The shawl is huge right now.) This pattern seems reasonable enough -- there's lace involved, but the chart looks easy enough.
I feel guilty, though. I told myself I wasn't going to start new projects until the old ones were done. And here I am doing it, just to alleviate my crafting angst and heat-related misery (see above about the AC -- I'm not stranger to heat- or cold-related misery). I'm not buying new materials, which I guess is the point of the overall thing, but now I'm not getting anything *old* done.
*le sigh*
But what the heck. It's hot, and I'll make socks. My impossibly high standards can wait for another day.
I have more yarn and fabric than a girl really needs. It's time to start using it.
Saturday, May 19, 2012
Monday, May 14, 2012
iPad cases are SO overrated...
Having now made two iPad cases, this is my sage advice: Spend the $30 and buy one. Don't waste time trying to sew it and figuring out why the heck the laws of physics don't apply to fabric in your home. Just buy a case made by someone who knows what they're doing.
So. Not. Worth. It.
I had great plans initially. I was going to use this cute quilting fabric, put a layer of solid foam between two fabric bags, and put a zipper in. I was going to write up a tutorial about how to do it.
And then the cursing started.
I failed to realize in the initial plans that to fit the foam and make the whole thing snug enough to actually protect the iPad (silly me for wanting it to be more than just cute!), the two bags would have to be different sizes. And they wouldn't line up. And thus a zipper could not be added.
Lots of swearing involved by the time I figured all of that out.
So this is how we have it now: no zipper, and the inner core is merely tacked to the foam and the outer core. There is a band and Velcro to keep it shut, and overall, it's still fairly well padded. I feel like a Bad Person for using fabric glue to attach the band to the case, but by that point, the idea of trying to sew Velcro through quilting fabric and one layer of foam by hand was something I just didn't want to do.
But it still serves its purpose.
And eventually, when I get the spare cash, I'm so buying a "real" case from Vera Bradley.
Sunday, May 6, 2012
Early? Inconceivable.
The May Sewn thing is... done? On May 6, even.
Oh, this dress. Simplicity 2886, and Simplicity is the last thing this project needs to be called. Although it turned out nicely in the end, the beginning was pure misery, and resulted in one of many modifications.
Simply put, the bands that were supposed to be at the top were not working at all. They worked until I tried to flip them to the correct side. All I read online in reviews for this dress were that the seams "didn't line up".
That's one phrase for it. Another phrase to describe it would be "human boobs don't point in that direction" -- which is exactly what I said a week ago after spending close to two hours trying to make it work. The more I tried to fix it, though, the more frustrated I got, and finally decided to just tape the two pieces together, and cut it out as one whole piece. (Pro Tip: If you do this, make sure to delete the seam allowance from the bottom of the piece, before the midriff is attached, or else the front and back won't line up. I neglected to do that at first, and couldn't figure out what went wrong.)
Aside from that major issue -- which had me muttering about this expletive expletive dress for a while -- I quite like this dress. After last week's mishap, it was easy to finish in a weekend, and the only hemming involved was hemming the lining. All told, I'd say it probably took me five hours this weekend? Not too bad for stash fabric that's been sitting around since 2009, and for a cute sundress that will serve me well.
The style was precisely what I wanted -- something that would use up the denim stash fabric I had, while making a sundress that was work-appropriate for casual Fridays. If I throw a white cardigan or bolero over it, it's nice for work, and then the cardigan can come off if I want to go out after work and have something a little more casual.
Many modifications to this, mostly because I liked the style, but hate how Simplicity does things:
This dress sort of sums up my problems with Simplicity. I end up not
liking how they've drafted the patterns -- or they just plain don't make
sense -- and I end up modifying it to the point where the only thing I
get from the pattern is the actual pieces. I don't know that I'm going
to completely give up on Simplicity, but I'm pretty close. They have
really cute patterns, but I do hate how nonintuitive the patterns are,
and how some things take a lot of shortcuts. Like, why only line the
bodice? Why not attach the straps through the back, instead of
afterward?
I'll probably continue to stick
mostly with Vogue. Even though they don't always have nice trendy
things (they do, but not always in the sundress assortment), the
patterns make more sense and they're usually lined -- or at least easy
enough to add a lining.
Oh, this dress. Simplicity 2886, and Simplicity is the last thing this project needs to be called. Although it turned out nicely in the end, the beginning was pure misery, and resulted in one of many modifications.
Simply put, the bands that were supposed to be at the top were not working at all. They worked until I tried to flip them to the correct side. All I read online in reviews for this dress were that the seams "didn't line up".That's one phrase for it. Another phrase to describe it would be "human boobs don't point in that direction" -- which is exactly what I said a week ago after spending close to two hours trying to make it work. The more I tried to fix it, though, the more frustrated I got, and finally decided to just tape the two pieces together, and cut it out as one whole piece. (Pro Tip: If you do this, make sure to delete the seam allowance from the bottom of the piece, before the midriff is attached, or else the front and back won't line up. I neglected to do that at first, and couldn't figure out what went wrong.)
Aside from that major issue -- which had me muttering about this expletive expletive dress for a while -- I quite like this dress. After last week's mishap, it was easy to finish in a weekend, and the only hemming involved was hemming the lining. All told, I'd say it probably took me five hours this weekend? Not too bad for stash fabric that's been sitting around since 2009, and for a cute sundress that will serve me well.
The style was precisely what I wanted -- something that would use up the denim stash fabric I had, while making a sundress that was work-appropriate for casual Fridays. If I throw a white cardigan or bolero over it, it's nice for work, and then the cardigan can come off if I want to go out after work and have something a little more casual.
Many modifications to this, mostly because I liked the style, but hate how Simplicity does things:
- Got rid of the bands at the top. See above paragraph about human boobs and gravity. After I finished the dress, I also realized that the white bands in contrast would have looked too cutesy, and not what I wanted for this dress.
- No pintucks in the midriff. This started out as "I DON'T WANNA AND IT'S NOT GOING TO WORK" and then shifted to "Wait. Why are there pintucks in a summer sundress?" With the way the ties are, I like having it smooth all the way across.
- Gathers instead of pleats. Pleats don't look good on me, and with the lightweight denim, I was worried that pleats would just look weird.
- Wider elastic in the back. I felt it needed a little more support than the narrow elastic would provide, so I went to 1/2 an inch over 1/4 inch. It fits nicely, and gives the girls a little more support in the back. See previous references about gravity.
- Fully lined. I prefer lined dresses, and even though the bodice was lined, I didn't think it was enough. I went with my standard Posh Lining from Joann Fabric. The price is reasonable, and it gives dresses and skirts a little more body. .
![]() | |
| Probably the only time it's going to have a perfect bow. |
I'll probably continue to stick
mostly with Vogue. Even though they don't always have nice trendy
things (they do, but not always in the sundress assortment), the
patterns make more sense and they're usually lined -- or at least easy
enough to add a lining.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)

