Thursday, April 14, 2011

He is Risen!!!

Happy Easter, everyone! Easter is my favorite holiday of the year. I love thinking about the beauty of Christ's blood on the cross and the might of Christ's power shown by the empty tomb!! Here are my precious babies in their Easter outfits (which they will wear well beyond Easter so I am not even sure why I am saying "Easter outfits").


I have already blogged about sewing their outfits. Here is all the info on:

Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Cute smocks

I made this smock last year for my daughter. The pattern comes from this great book called One Yard Wonders that my mom bought for me. This is a great gift for any person who sews.
It looks so cute on Isabelle.It looks even cuter when her little friend Holland is wearing the matching one I made for her!
A special little girl in my life named Madelyn turned 3 recently and her birthday party was centered around painting and coloring so I decided to make her a smock for her birthday. I looked and looked and looked for the right fabric. Smock fabric should have fun colors or something paint-related on it. I was about to give up when I found this M and M fabric at Hancocks. Hooray!
I was planning on monogramming an "M" on the smock for Madelyn but now I did not have to do that! Instead of the "M", I decided to applique a paint palette. Doesn't it look cute?

One last thing I changed is to make the smock reversible by adding a second layer of fabric (the turquoise). Having two layers of fabric also helps to make sure no paint gets through; one layer is not quite enough unless you use a thick fabric like duck cloth or household decor fabric.





Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Easter Outfit #3

Isabelle's Easter dress is done and I am really happy with it. It is going to look so adorable with Grace's dress and Gabe's romper in our upcoming family pictures. The striped fabric is from Patsy Aiken's Chez Ami line which I absolutely love!! Unfortunately, I don't think they sell it anymore. :( The polka dot fabric is from JoAnn's. I think the two fabrics coordinate well and even though the dress is a little busy, I am ok with it. The pattern is from Simplicity and I have used it before.

I am really proud of two things on this dress:
  1. How the dots match up on the right and left sides. I have been trying to work with fabrics that have horizontal and/or vertical patterns more and get better at lining the patterns up. I got good practice at this on Gabe's romper which has a large plaid. The dots on this dress weren't as hard. Look how great the dots match up on the back even over the bottom of the zipper! It did not work out as well at the top of the zipper because somehow I made the back right piece a little bigger than the left piece. That happens because my seam allowance is not always exactly the same on with every seam like it should be...Oh well.
  2. The second thing I am proud of is the sleeves. I have made this dress before for a Thanksgiving dress and the sleeves were long and sort of midevil-maiden-style (I made that term up). I really loved those sleeves but since this is a spring and summer dress, I decided to go with the short sleeves. The sleeves are pleated at the top (and one pleat at the bottom) instead of being gathered. Something new to try and I really liked it.
One thing I learned from this dress is to be careful of the fabric material you are using if you have a pattern with a solid colored background and an intermittent pattern like dots. Somehow the polka dotted fabric got snagged or it was messed up before I bought it because you can see areas like the one with the pointer on it below where the pink is pulled out and a white squiggle line remains. The fabric feels almost like linen so I guess this is a danger with that type of fabric. It is on the front of the dress but I am hoping that Isabelle's arm will cover it.
With this dress done, all that is left to do is find some warm weather (hello! Where are you warm weather?!??!) and get my munchkins ready for fun pictures.

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Easter Outfit #2

This dress is adorable but made me age about 10 years while doing it. I made so many silly mistakes on it which required so much seam ripping!! Argh! I have used 2 different dress patterns for Grace and was not sure which one I wanted to use this time.

Should I use the very easy pleated one?
or go with the more intricate gathered one with sleeves?
I decided to go with the second one since we are having some family pictures taken by a friend of mine and wanted the dresses to be extra cute.
This is a tough pattern though and I would not recommend it for new sewers. The sleeves took a really long time for me but I think they are my favorite part of the dress. The back looks really cute, too! I debated about using the green buttons but I did not have any white or pink buttons so the green won.
One problem I am having is getting my sewing machine to do a button hole where the bodice of the dress meets the skirt. I guess it is too much fabric because the button hole foot gets stuck and won't advance beyond that bump in the dress. Anyone else have this problem or solution to it? I solved it this time by turning the dress and having the button hole run horizontal instead of vertical. It will work but I am eager to figure out how to make the other way work.

Want to see Gabe's coordinating romper? I will have pics of Isabelle's dress soon!

Easter Outfit #1

Gabe's Easter outfit was fun to do because it is the first time I tackled plaid and really focused on all the lines matching up. I have been afraid of plaids before and usually choose fabric that does not require such detailed matching. I decided to do it now because I love the fabric from Chez Ami and it looks great with the other Chez Ami fabric that I am using for his sisters' Easter outfits. It was not as hard as I thought it was going to be. What I learned from this experience is that when you have to match a pattern, you cannot double the fabric over to cut pieces. You need to cut each piece out individually to make sure that the corresponding notches on different pattern pieces line up. Yes, it is a pain to do, but all that tedious work at the beginning really pays off with a nice outfit at the end.

I first made this pattern in Pittsburgh Steeler's fabric for a friend's son. You can see here how I did not match up the notches and how the pattern did not exactly match up horizontally. It did not really matter because the wording and helmets were on an angle anyway. Next time, though, I will be more aware of lining things up better. Oh, how much better we get with time and practice!

The overall pattern is incredibly simple. I still am not a huge fan of pockets but they are growing on me. It is just really hard to make sure they don't shift when you sew them. When they shift, you wind up sewing them crooked and that is really obvious with some fabrics.

I can't wait to see how cute Gabe looks in this romper with his sisters who will be in coordinating outfits. Stay tuned!

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

Pretty in pink

This dress turned out just as cute as I imagined it would be. There is a local line of children's clothing called Chez Ami by a designer named Patsy Aiken. I love a lot of her ideas but her clothes are a bit pricey. She is really good at knowing what coordinates well... like when to accent a flower fabric with a plaid band or when to use dots with prints. What I have started doing is cutting out pictures from her catalog and trying to replicate what she does on my own. One of the dresses that I think is so adorable is a yellow dress with white polka dots with rickrack sewn across the middle. I could not find the picture of the dress on her site so here is the top and bloomers with the same idea.Isn't that cute? I set out to replicate it and had a lot of fun doing it. I have this very simple A-line dress pattern that I have been using a bit lately because it only has 4 pieces and it so simple to do. Isabelle picked out this pink fabric with white dots and then I found cute flower rickrack to go with it. Fun! Fun! Fun! Of course, I used the leftover rickrack to make a simple "I" on the top. I think it tied everything together nicely. The good thing about using the rickrack for the monogram is that I will easily be able to take it out and use this dress for Grace when she gets older.
Isabelle loves her new dress!!! The timing was really perfect because she has been really sick these past few days and I think getting dolled up in pink was just the medicine she needed!!! We have one girlie girl on our hands.
Stay tuned for this fabric possibly to make an appearance in the Easter dresses...

Sunday, February 20, 2011

Burp cloth mania!

I have been putting out a lot of sewn baby gifts lately and am having so much fun! My best friend is having a baby in June and I am trying not to go too sewing crazy for baby Eliana but it is very hard to control myself!!! My favorite baby gift is a monogrammed burp cloth.
I love giving these because every baby needs a burp cloth and it is so handy to have a burp cloth with your baby's name or initials on it to send with your baby to church nursery, daycare, or wherever there are a lot of other babies. They are also very easy and fast to make. All you do is find fun ribbon and use the baby's initials and you have a great gift that is completely functional! Write the baby's initials on the burp cloth with a washable fabric marker and sew over it with a zigzag stitch. The marker will come out with some water.
If you do not know the baby's initials (and please don't give the mom a hard time if she does not share it!), just monogram the last name like here

or the first initial of the last name like this one for my friend whose last name is Gainor.
This double-sided burp cloth is a little bit more challenging because the ribbon wraps completely around the burp cloth so you need to make sure your stitching on one side of the ribbon lines up just right with the other side of the ribbon (aka you need to make sure your straight stitch on one side catches the other side).

Another fun idea is to make a burp cloth that matches a pair of baby shoes and a romper like these here. Check out how to do it!

Friday, February 18, 2011

Matching corduroy

These matching dresses for my girls put the biggest smile one my face because I think they are just so adorable. This McCall's pattern is very easy and I have made dresses from it a few times. I made Isabelle's dress a while ago as part of matching set with her cousin and also for her Christmas dress.
This is the second time I used this Butterick dress pattern for Grace. The first time was her Valentine's Day dress. It is such a simple pattern!! This time I used the dress fabric for the bias tape on the armholes and neckline instead of buying bias tape. I think the accent is really great!!!


Sunday, February 13, 2011

Happy Valentine's Day!!

Love is in the air! You know I just had to make some matching Valentine's dresses for my girls.

I had a lot of fun making Isabelle's dress from the pattern in a book called Absolutely A-Line. It uses one simple a-line pattern but gives you a bunch of different ideas for changing the dress up. The book had a cute idea where you put snaps on the front of the dress and then cut out felt shapes (the book used flowers) and then put the other half of the snap on the flowers so you can snap the flowers onto the dress in different patterns each time your child wears it. I built on that idea and decided to cut out hearts and attach them to the dress in the middle of each heart with a heart button (instead of a snap). I made the two hearts at the bottom of the dress into pockets and monogrammed one of them for Isabelle. I used a straight stitch for the "I" instead of a zigzag stitch so it would be a bit more feminine and delicate.
Grace is getting big enough now where she can actually fill out a dress and it doesn't look silly.
I used this Butterick pattern which I have fallen in love with because the dress and underwear patterns are so simple! Butterick does a great job rating their patterns according to difficulty and I really appreciate that because sometimes you just need to start simple and sometimes you feel frisky and want to try something advanced. It's nice that the ratings help you focus on the type of project you want to accomplish.
The only time-consuming part of the whole dress and underwear was using the bias tape on the neck and armpits. I would highly recommend this pattern if you are looking for a great baby dress. I love the pleats!!

Want to see some other matching outfits? Check them out!