Showing posts with label Tutorial. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tutorial. Show all posts

Friday, August 2, 2013

Tutorial: Upcycle a Vintage Table Linen Into a Funky Wristlet - Now with Wine!

Edited to add: Here is the non-silly version of how to actually make a wristlet from a vintage table linen. PDF format with links to resources for the supplies I used.

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I love vintage linens! And I also love purses, so what could be a better match than a wristlet made from a vintage embroidered table linen? Nothing? Correct.

I promise the hardest part of the whole project is forcing your scissors to cut the linen. There's no turning back at that point.

Fortunately, I purchased a box of vintage lace and linens from a store on ebay so I had no emotional attachment or memories of the linen being used every Thanksgiving. Still, cutting that sucker went against every fiber of my being.

Once cut, it was damaged and HAD to be made into a wristlet just to save it from becoming a dust rag or something equally degrading. The project instantly became a rescue mission.
The victim, er, vintage piece of embroidered linen.

The linen, unbleached cotton, and fusible fleece.
MATERIALS:

  • A small table linen that, when folded in half, appears to be a suitable size for a clutch or wristlet.
  • A piece of lining material (I used unbleached cotton) of similar size.
  • A piece of fusible fleece, likewise of similar size
  • A zipper longer than your linen is wide at the center, where you fold it in half
  • Thread, scissors, pins and a sewing machine, naturally.
  • Optional hardware for strap
  • Zipper foot attachment optional


Oh, and if you are anything like me, get that seam ripper handy.

Instructions:


  1. After you have sufficiently paid tribute to, and mourned the demise of, the linen as it exists in its pristine, vintage state (probably a rare piece that would fetch a six figure appraisal on Antiques Road Show), fold it in half and iron it.
    Nooooooo! That was grandma's!!!!
  2. Cut it along the crease you just ironed
  3. After you make it back from tossing your cookies over the terrible remorse you feel from having just desecrated your vintage linen, lay one half of it on top of your lining material and trace around the outside edge.
  4. Cut 2 and pray your vintage embroidered linen which was hand made 437 years ago was actually symmetrical, OR, a better idea for step 3 would have been to lay the whole thing flat BEFORE cutting and trace around it. But I'm giving you the tutorial step by step as I did it.... not necessarily as it *should* be done because what the heck, I love blog comments and I know stuff like this inspires people to write them.
  5. Lay one piece of the lining on top of your fusible fleece and try tracing around it with a maker. Notice how the tip gets repeatedly snagged in the fleece? Now get creative with those cuss words as you realize that's not going to work and you've just ruined your perfectly good fine point Sharpie.
  6. Go pour a glass of wine. You're going to need it for the zipper step anyhow. Let's start early because you deserve it.
  7. Okay, you're back in control now. You've got this! Pair the fleece pieces with the matching lining pieces. Get all set up to iron them together. 
  8. Let it dawn on you how bulky the seams will be if you have the fleece the same size as the lining. Trim 1/2" away from the edges of the fleece all around and center them back on your lining pieces to iron in place.
  9. Go get another glass of wine. You're going to need it for step 10 which should have been the easiest step.
  10. Try to recall the directions for using your Fusible Fleece. You threw away the tissue with the instructions when the cat ripped it to shreds. Instructions are for wimps anyhow, right? <sip wine>
  11. You recall something about water being involved, so use your spray bottle to dampen the lining material which is positioned over your Fusible Fleece and press it for freaking ever, checking now and then for scorch marks or bonding to have occurred.
  12. Scream shrill obscenities and actually spill some wine when you realized you have fused the fleece to your towel which is a stand-in for your ironing board.
  13. Bang around in your closet where you have stuffed all your supplies, swearing about how you are your own worst enemy and why the hell have you never organized this shit? Find replacement fusible fleece and repeat steps 7 through 11 but make sure the bumpy side of the fleece is adjacent to your wrong side of your lining material.
  14. When you have successfully adhered your fusible fleece to your lining (which took damn near 2 hours and the whole project could have been completed by now if you were an expert – or at least sober) go reward yourself with a glass of wine... and what the hell? weren't there some brownies left? Screw the diet! Have one of those, you're doing good!
  15. When you have your two lining pieces and your two embroidered linen pieces ready to proceed around midnight, go watch Arrested Development on Netflix and forget about it for a while.
  16. Next day: Take two Motrin for the wine headache and feel determined. You are NOT going to let this tattered, torn-in-half bit of rag that's full of itself and all snobby-from-the-past get the better of you.
  17. That was the headache talking. Pay no mind to the attitude from step 16. You got this! Grab a juice box.
  18. THE ZIPPER (say no more. is that juice box from step 17 of the grape variety and fermented? We're gonna need a bigger juice box.)
  19. Ok, I don't have a picture for putting the zipper sandwich together, but if you look closely at the image above you will see the line of holes where the first pass under the needle secured all layers together (1 piece of outside, zipper, and one piece of lining) together so that the zipper pull tab thingy was on what will (EVENTUALLY, someday  maybe) be the inside of the finished bag.
  20. Rip seam, start over. Pour wine. (whenever you doubt a step, or don't understand it, always best to pour more wine until you figure it out).
  21. Go Google how to install a freaking zipper because ain't nobody got time for that! Then come back and pick up with step 22. Remember, Google Is Your Friend.
  22. When you have installed the zipper, go take a nap.
  23. Awake refreshed and determined. Hey, now you have not only wasted 2 days, a priceless vintage linen, some lining material, and twice as much fusible fleece as you needed... You have also wasted a zipper. No turning back now.
  24. It's hard to explain with yet another wine headache, but for God's sake, look at the picture and just do this, okay? And keep your voice down my head is pounding and it's like nails on a chalkboard.
  25. Sew right up against the edge of the fusible fleece all the way around from zipper seam to zipper seam. Make sure you keep the precious piece of special cloth <extra sarcasm intended> out of the freaking way.
  26. You didn't, did you. <--Said as a statement intentionally because there's no question - you snagged the Special Cloth because you thought you could do this simple step without using pins and it got in the way. Get out the seam ripper and join me at step 27 when you have repeated step 25 but for cryin' out loud keep that tattered bit of linen which is acquiring more and more unnecessary needle holes OUT OF THE WAY!
  27. Now, trim away the excess in the seam allowance and flip the outside pieces down over the lining. The idea is that you want the lining part a tad smaller than the outside pieces so you can sew both sides of the outside together, trapping the completed lining section inside? Follow me? NO! I did NOT say to go get more wine! Where are you going? COME BACK HERE THIS INSTANT!
  28. Feel thoroughly reprimanded from step 27 and be ashamed of yourself for causing my elderly mother to yell out from the other room asking if everything is okay.
  29. <whispering> seriously, that wine is mine, back off.
  30. Ahem.... where were we? Okay trim both ends of your zipper off, but leave some sticking out because you're not sure where this is going and you can never un-cut a zipper later.
  31. Realize you have no clue what to do with the one end of the zipper, so fold it down over the lining seam you just sewed and tack it into place. Who cares, right? I mean it's not like you're going to try to sell this or anything. <sigh and look at the stack of other stuff you can never sell because you went all improv on the instructions>
  32. See picture above.
  33. Sew around the lining going a little farther inside the first pass (making the lining smaller) because you can't pull the outside pieces together to trap the lining inside yet.
  34. Try to figure out what the hell step 33 meant but don't waste too much time. Move on to step 35 while realizing you are reading something written from the computer in the day room at the insane asylum.
  35. Turn the outside (Special freaking-bane-of-your-existence Cloth) down and matching up the outside edges, PIN IT TOGETHER. For the love of GOD, use pins this time, okay???
  36. Sew along the edge as close as you can get, making sure not to catch the lining in between.
  37. Stop right there if you only want a clutch, but figuring out what to do with the other end of the zipper you trimmed is all on you. I'm raising my hands and stepping back. 
  38. I decided to make a pull tab thingy square piece of cloth to trap the end of the zipper. I've seen lots of bags that have these, so apparently there are other people who get this far and don't know what to do with the zipper end sticking out either.
  39. Start cussing. You'll need a head start for step 40.
  40. Realize you have no clue where you're going to attach the loop strap (because you're calling this a wristlet after all) and then have a great idea. (see step 41.)
  41. (see step 32 and meet you back here)
  42. Swirl the wine in the glass and sniff it. Ahhhhhh! All better now.
  43. Get out the bag of those things you just had to buy off Amazon because you got a gift card and like a rabid dog you went in search of something you couldn't live without but didn't even know they existed before surfing Amazon... See image above.
  44. Make your strap. No, I'm not going to tell you how. Oh for God's sake, okay! Cut cloth, fold in half, iron. Open, fold sides to center, iron, fold in half again, iron. Looks like this.
  45. Put ends together and attach the hardware.
  46. Because you realize the other end of the bag is sewn up tight, you use another one of the metal doohickies to attach the handle to what use to be the pull tab. 
  47. You hook handle to pull tab and stand back to survey your improv solution. The damage isn't too bad and it almost looks intentional.

    All done! This wristlet makes the perfect accessory to carry your wallet, keys, ID, lipstick and a comb as you head out the door for your trip to the Betty Ford Clinic where your family has scheduled a nice surprise vacation for you.

    Looking fabulous, now go have fun!

Friday, December 28, 2012

How to add a badge that links to a friend's blog

So you have a group of friends who all sell stuff or make stuff or share common interests. You want to share your cute little badges with each other to create a way for your readers on one blog to find all the rest of your friends.

 Here's how to do it. 


Things you will need.
Blog
Badge image or photo
Hosting space for image
Links to your friends' blogs

  1. You already have the badge/photo you want to use (if not, there will be another tutorial for that soon). 
  2. You need to have it "reside" somewhere on the internet so that your blog can serve it up to viewers. There are lots of free image hosting places. Photobucket.com, flickr.com, and my personal favorite for image storage, www.dropbox.com are just a few to choose from. 
  3.  Upload your badge to your hosting place and get the link to your image. This is the link you will give to your friends so THEY can show your badge on THEIR blog. In order for you to show theirs, you will need a) a link to their image and b) a link to their blog.
  4. Now you have the images/links you need, go to your blogger dashboard and click on Layout


  5. Next click top right to "Add a Gadget". This will give you a popup window with lots of gadgets to choose from.


  6. Choose the one that says HTML/Javascript.


  7. You will get a screen that looks like this:
  8. The title you enter will be the title of that section of the right column of your blog where you are going to display your badge collection. I recommend using just one gadget to display all of your friends' badges. Keeps it neater and shorter that way. :)
  9. Here's the tricky part. You need to enter HTML here and you are going to need both the image link and your friend's blog link. This will be the format you will use, and just replace the bold text with the respective link...

    <center><a href="http://Link-to-your-friends-blog.com" target="_blank"><img src="Link-to-your-friends-badge-image.com" /></a><br /><br /></center>
  10. Click the button to save your gadget and you're done!

Add more friends' clickable badges to this gadget by editing the gadget, then copy/paste all of the code you just used from above to make this first badge, and paste it above or below the other one. Change out the image links and blog links same way you did the first time and then save again.

You can change where your badge appears by dragging it around the layout screen and dropping it.

Saturday, December 31, 2011

The Sharpie Doodle Bag Tutorial

I have been hanging out a lot on Pinterest.com lately and came across how to "tie-dye" using Sharpie markers. Since I like to do my tie-dye the original way, I was mildly curious about how these folks thought the process was anything remotely like tie-dye, however it did pique my imagination and get me fired up about a new project...

Doodling my own pattern pieces for hand bags.

Here's the end product, my "Doodle Bag".


It was inspired in a vague sort of way by this Anthro bag that sells for $88!! I didn't have the tassels or bangles handy and I have to have a strap on my bag, but the pattern is reminiscent. :P


And here's how I did the doodling. You can do this for any bag pattern you might want to use. I didn't use a pattern but traced the general outline of one of my favorite small bags and basically "winged" it. This tutorial is more about the doodling process and less about bag construction. Just use your favorite pattern and do the doodling on the cloth using this technique.

Using a pencil, I traced a favorite small basic bag's shape onto plain 100% cotton cloth, similar to sheet material. I made sure to leave a generous 1/2" of seam allowance all the way around. If using a pattern, cut the pattern pieces out along the outline and then trace the pattern pieces using a pencil onto the cloth.

DO NOT CUT IT OUT AFTER TRACING. 

Draw some general guidelines for your design in pencil if you like.

Next, using an embroidery hoop, circle a portion of the traced pattern piece and tighten down the hoop.


Using Sharpie fine point colored markers, begin to color in background areas. If you want to make these colors looks a little like "watercolor", you can use a dab of rubbing alcohol applied with a Q-tip to the areas. Be sure to use VERY SPARINGLY!! It will totally ruin your design if you use to much -- practice on a test piece of cloth you have colored on to get the *feel* for it.

The example below was gently touched with an alcohol Q-tip in several places. If you look close you can see that the color bleeds a little.


Continue to color in your design however you like. For larger areas of color I like to use a crosshatching technique or scribbles that are in small sections at varying angles.


When coloring sections where you want black to outline lighter colors, apply the lighter colors first. Outline in black afterward.


When you've completed a section, move the hoop to a new blank area and continue until you have the whole pattern piece covered with doodles. Don't be afraid to let your mind wander while your hand takes over. Some of my best doodles are done while watching TV or talking on the phone. There doesn't have to be any rhyme or reason to the design for something beautiful to happen.


 Cover each piece of cloth where you traced the pattern with doodles and then cut them out. After you have them cut, depending on your pattern, you may want to apply fusible fleece to give the bag some body/stiffness.



Assemble your bag according to whatever pattern instructions you are using and you now have a one-of-a-kind piece of functional art! The Doodle Bag!




The

Friday, December 23, 2011

How to Side Load Android Apps onto the Amazon Kindle Fire

Yeah, I know this isn't a craft tutorial or anything but I just got a Kindle Fire and I was all hyped up about it until I realized that when I tried to go to the Android Market for apps not available on Amazon's app store, I kept getting redirected back to the Amazon app store. Grrrr!

So a friend of mine turned me on to a way around it. Without having to jailbreak or otherwise hack the Kindle, I am now able to get any apps I want and put them onto the Fire successfully.

What you need:
A Kindle Fire
An Android Phone
A Computer
A USB cable to hook your Kindle Fire to your computer. The Kindle didn't come with one, but the one for your phone should probably work. Try it before you go buying one.
A free account at www.Dropbox.com

What to do:

1.PREP THE KINDLE Go to the settings on your Kindle Fire (the quick drop down at top right of screen that looks like a gear). Choose "More...", then select Device. Scroll down until you see "Allow Installation of Applications from Unknown Sources". Turn that to ON. Now your Kindle Fire is all set to install apps. The trick is getting the apk file onto the kindle. Go to the Amazon App Store. Search for “file manager” and take your pick of the choices. I used ES File Explorer. Install this so you can navigate your file folders on the Kindle.

2. PREP YOUR PHONE From your android phone, you need to go to the android market and get a file manager app. Astro is the one I use. Install that on your phone. After you have it installed, open it up and go to Menu > Tools > Application Manager/Backup. Select the apps you want to transfer and check them. Then click "Backup" at the top. This will put the apk for the app in a folder on your phone called "Backup".

3. PHONE AND COMPUTER: Next you'll need a way to get them off the phone and onto your computer easily. There's an app called "Dropbox" that works beautifully for this purpose and you need to have an account (free) at www.dropbox.com. What this does is give you online storage that will sync to any computer or device on which you have dropbox installed. Once installed, it's just a file sharing system of folders.

Get the program for your computer at the www.dropbox.com website. Get the app by searching Android Market for Dropbox. Install them accordingly.

4. GETTING THE APP TO THE KINDLE Once you have Dropbox on your computer and on your phone, go into Dropbox on your phone and select "Upload" at the top. In order to get to your backups folder you may have to select the "other files" button at bottom right of screen.Once in the "backups" folder, select the apps you saved in step 2.

Now time to put them on the Kindle. Plug your Kindle Fire into your computer via a USB cable. Go open the Kindle on the computer (It is one of your USB drives now and it should say "Kindle"). Make a new folder called "My Android Apps" or whatever you like. Open that folder. With your Dropbox folder open on the computer (where you just uploaded the apps off your phone), simply drag and drop from the Dropbox folder to the Kindle folder any apps you want to install.

Go back to your Kindle now and open your ES File Explorer. You should be able to see your newly created folder and the apk files inside.

Select one and click to install. You're done.

HOT TIP!:
After I was done, I also installed Dropbox on my Kindle. That makes the final step about plugging your Kindle to the computer unnecessary.

Now, I back up the apps on my phone using Dropbox, then go into the Dropbox on my Kindle and it shows up there due to the magic of syncing. All I have to do is click the apk I want from the dropbox window on the Kindle and it starts to install.



Sunday, December 18, 2011

Ribbon Dragonfly

I saw a cool tutorial for making a braided ribbon headband refashion and decided to try it out to see how easy it was to do (the ribbon braiding part). It didn't involve actually having to cut the ribbon, but consisted of interlocking loops. With a single tug of the ribbon it could all be undone if you weren't careful.

I got the tutorial here after finding it on Pinterest.com:
http://www.skiptomylou.org/2010/08/19/headband-refashion/

So I had some extremely skinny white ribbon I got from the thrift store for a quarter and decided to practice.

First I spooled out about 2 feet of ribbon to start with my "center". I didn't cut it since this was just practice and it could all be easily undone.

Then I tied a bow as if tying shoestrings. I followed that with another bow, trying (somewhat successfully-I think one side got flipped before I could get pics) to make the second set of bow "wings" to be slightly smaller than the first.

I pulled these 4 wings just as tight as I could and then started with the headband weaving tutorial from there on out.

Here's what I ended up with:

You could use these as package toppers in place of a bow for something a little different. So cute! Might also make a nice key fob or zipper pull, or even tree ornament.

I love anything dragonfly. <3

Thursday, December 15, 2011

Anthro Inspired Braided Cloth Bracelet

I had no idea those little bits of scrap fabric were worth so much!

Check out this Anthro bracelet that sells for $58!

I'm inspired to make a cloth bracelet for my granddaughter to match her new cast-friendly shirt I'm working on. I can make the bracelet from the cut-off sleeve.

I got kind of carried away when I was trying to think of what to use in place of the star. I found beads, one thing led to another and next thing you know I have a bracelet that looks totally different but, in my opinion, much nicer than this expensive one. Best thing is, she loves it.

I used scraps from a shirt I made her from a piece of fabric my sister had hand tie-dyed. I made 4 strips by folding 2 long ones in 1/2. Then I made the loop (see right below the long tail at top). Then I used these instructions to make a 4 strand round braid:
http://www.seekyee.com/Slings/howtos/4strand.htm

I tied it off in a big knot that doesn't easily slip through the initial loop.

Then I strung a long strand of beads from my granddaughter's massive bead collection and wrapped them around the braid.

Finally I found some bigger pearl type beads and sewed them randomly to the bracelet.

Here she is modeling it and she loves it.


I know it was thrown together fast and could have been perfected more, but she was going to a movie with friends and I wanted to surprise her with something silly but beautiful to wear. It passed the test as you can plainly see. :)

Tuesday, December 13, 2011

DIY Gift Wrapping Tutorial

Found this video while surfing this morning and thought I would share.