2 December, 2009

Today is Giveaway Day!

2009-12-07T01:04:39-06:00Everything Else, Freebies & Patterns|298 Comments

Welcome to Blog Giveaway Day.  I am participating, along with eleventy-seven other bloggers, to give away fun handmade and crafty stuff via the Sew,Mama,Sew blog.

Here’s what you need to do to enter.

1.  Make a comment on this post answering this question:  What is your favorite handmade object?

(Don’t worry if your comment doesn’t show up right away.  I have to approve it first.  I will do that whenever I can throughout the day.)

2.  Make sure I can contact you. Enter your email address in the comment form.  There’s a place for it.  It will not be published, so no one but me will see it.  I will not send you spam.  But I do need a way to contact you if you are a winner.

What is my favorite handmade object?  My collection of handmade Christmas ornaments.  I have ones made by my mom, sisters, aunts, neighbors, me, my husband, nieces & nephews and friends.  Every one has a story.  Every one is different.

What can you win?

Three random winners will get a custom alphabet ornament. You tell me the letter you would like and your favorite color.  I will make it custom for you.  (Those in the picture are keytags, I will put a long ribbon loop on your ornament.)

One random winner will get a copy of the new book, One Yard Wonders! I am a contributor to the book, so I am already a big fan and I have an extra copy.  See my post from a few days ago for a tour of the book and my projects.  I will sign it for you if you want me to.

The small print.

If you don’t answer the question in your comment or I can’t contact you, your entry is disqualified.

I will ship internationally.

Contest is open until Sunday December 6 at midnight CST.  Anybody who comments before then is entered.

Comments are now closed.  Thanks for entering.  I will announce winners soon!

28 October, 2009

One Yard Wonders

2009-10-28T16:13:09-05:00Freebies & Patterns, Sewing & Design|1 Comment

One YardThe official release of the book is today!  For anyone that missed me talking about it before, I have 2 projects in the book: a laptop sleeve with a dog applique and a bear-shaped pillow.  To celebrate the release of the book and to celebrate Halloween, I have a freebie for you!

My laptop bag has a dog applique that you can add on.  Rather than trace and enlarge the pattern from the book, I made it easy for you.  Click on the graphic above and download a printable version of my little daschund with bonus costumes!  You can put him on other things too!  Make a weiner dog t-shirt!  When I was making the sample project for the book, I had this great fabric with airplanes on it to use for the sample.  I kept thinking of Snoopy and the Red Baron and really I wanted to give the dog some aviator sunglasses.  Now you can!

21 June, 2009

Pattern Freebie – Snaggle Tooth

2009-06-21T16:46:27-05:00Embroidery, Freebies & Patterns, Sewing & Design|Comments Off on Pattern Freebie – Snaggle Tooth

For your crafting delight, I decided to put together a pattern for my Snaggle Tooth onesie.  With a nephew getting his first teeth in and a very grown up friend who is losing his baby teeth already, I decided there are plenty of reasons to celebrate snaggle teeth.  Click on the cute dino above for a .pdf of the pattern and some ideas about how to use it to make your own snaggle tooth fashions.

13 June, 2009

Inkle Looms – Let’s talk about warp

2009-06-14T20:21:48-05:00Tutorials, Weaving, Felting & FIbers|Comments Off on Inkle Looms – Let’s talk about warp


Inkle looms are a little picky about what makes good warp. Whatever you use it has to be smooth.

Good warp:
I often use something called “rug warp”. That’s pictured on the left. I can get it at the Weavers Guild of MN, which is located in the Textile Center. Super convenient. It is strong, ultra smooth and comes in all kinds of colors. About $4.50 for a spool.
I have also used perle cotton 3/2 weight. Again carried at the Weavers Guild. You can get it at craft stores and use the little skeins. Have done that in a pinch, but it is more expensive that way. Perle cotton has beautiful shine.
Embroidery Floss. Works great. The little skeins don’t go very far, but everyone seems to have them lying around.
Bamboo/Tencel yarn. I made a couple of scarves on the inkle with blends of bamboo and tencel. Nice drape, really pretty result.

Bad warp:
Anything with fuzz. I have tried sock yarn. It works ok, but due to the way you move the threads as you weave, any little fuzzy bits that stick out get tangled together and you do a lot of picking fuzz out of your weaving and prying things apart. Some experimenting with sock yarns might get you the perfect thing. Merino yarn is a disaster. I tried a single ply lace weight and it just plain didn’t work. Wrong kind of yarn for this kind of loom.

Probably good:
I haven’t tried but I imagine that cotton yarns would work great, smooth nylon ribbon yarns too.

8 June, 2009

Inkle Looms – Vocabulary

2009-06-08T23:08:00-05:00Tutorials, Weaving, Felting & FIbers|Comments Off on Inkle Looms – Vocabulary


I had several comments from my last giveaway asking for help with inkle looms. So here is the start to a series all about what I know! First things first, we need to start with vocabulary. Weavers have all kinds of strange words to describe the parts of looms.

Inkle looms are small tabletop looms used to make long narrow bands – up to 4 inches wide, 9 feet long. Mine comes from Beka Inc and I love it. I am the keeper of 18 of these for the kids programs at the Textile Center and these ones are durable!

Shed – the opening that you pass the shuttle through when you are weaving. On an inkle loom, you move one set of strings up and down, creating the shed.

Heddles – hold down every other thread. On an inkle, one set of threads stays in place, one set moves up and down.

Warp – the long threads that you put on the loom. Inkles make a “warp-faced” weave, which means you only see the warp threads in the finished weaving. This inkle has a continuous warp, which means it is one big loop, with all of the separate colors tied to one another.

Tension Bar – this is the only moving piece on this loom. It can be loosened and tightened to adjust the tension in your weaving.

Weft – The thread that you weave back and forth through the warp. You carry it on a shuttle. It passes through the shed. On an inkle, this thread hardly shows in your finished piece.

Shuttle – a thread holder for your weft thread. You also use the shuttle to press or beat the threads tightly together as you weave.

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