Category Archives: techniques

Flamingo Floyd~converting to applique’

 

Flamingo Floyd dishtowel

I love these “Flamingo Floyd” designs from Embroidery Library.

The folks there have digitized several designs with this goofy flamingo, all decked out for most seasons.   They are great on dishtowels for my daughter and son-in-law. Actually, they are for Harvey’s kitchen since he does all the cooking, but Rebecca does clean up so they both enjoy the towels.

Flamingo Floyd April showers

 

Their charming 1950’s home on a quiet tree lined street looks just like the sort of house and neighborhood where Ward and June Cleaver raised their boys, Wally and The Beaver.  My husband always says he feels like he has stepped back in time when we visit there.

Anyone who has lived very long in Florida will remember the pink flamingo “yard art” that graced so many lawns for several decades. None are on Rebecca and Harvey’s street, but their absence is noticeable. Continue reading

Linen Machine Shadow Embroidered Pillow

linenshadMadeirababypilwhole

 

 

I love projects for babies and this is one of my favorites.  From design to execution, this linen pillow has some interesting details. The open ends of the pillowcase offer the opportunity to give more balance to the overall design, with color and embroidery at both ends.

The handwork techniques used on this baby accessory look convincingly like they were stitched in the traditional manner, but they were all done entirely by machine. Thanks to the miracle advances in sewing notions and machine technology, Madeira appliqué, feather stitch, pinwheel roses and shadow embroidery are quickly, easily and quite perfectly done.

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Liberty Goat Dress

 

R and L goat dress

little goat girl and grumpy little guy

Visions of  a “goat dress” had been dancing in my head for many years. In 1985, after purchasing Sarah Howard Stone’s first book, French Handsewing, I studied it with a passion. One page, in particular, spoke to me. It showed row after row of antique laces, including what I call goat lace. I had to have some of this.

goat lace

antique “goat” lace

 At that time, I was in the middle of my Mother Earth phase. Perhaps some readers  recall  the  publication, The Mother Earth News, or Carla Emery’s Old Fashioned Cook Book. These were daily reading for me.

On our 3 acres stood a 50 year old, formerly upscale, two-room chicken house, where our cocky Rhode Island Red rooster and his girls bunked. The  adjoining room  housed a  gaggle of geese and a few white Peking ducks.   Next door to the water fowl was the pony.  Her stall looked out over our 60’ x 60’ vegetable garden and adjacent to that was the goat mansion, my favorite place in the world except for my sewing room.

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Care Bear Bishop

Care Bear bell post

Laurel asked for a Care Bear dress, specifically Cheer Bear which, she informed me,  is pink with a rainbow “belly badge.”   At the time, I didn’t know what a belly badge was.  I do now. There is so much to learn when you are a Nana!  But I do know that there are no Care Bear smocking plates.   I felt a  challenge coming on.

Looking through my smocking plates, I came across Pandamonium by Little Memories and knew that a single one of those bears could be transformed into a Care Bear.  Hurrah!

I had to regraph a portion of  the panda to get the white belly just right for the outline stitched rainbow.  Then the eyes were changed from the droopy, sad,  slanted straight stitches to perky French knots.  Voila!  I had me a Care Bear!  Continue reading

Strasburg Sailboats

This Strasburg Children ivory linen suit was a beauty, but as plain as Quaker oats, with absolutely no embellishment. It was pristine and charming in its own right.  Nonetheless,  I thought this size 3-month outfit could be made even more wonderful for unborn Alastair.

In anticipation of grandchildren, I had purchased some exquisite  hand shadow work booties from Farmhouse Fabrics. As soon as I had the Strasburg suit in hand, I knew the sailboat pair would be a perfect match.

NOTE: The photos have been edited for greater contrast. In so doing, the color is distorted. After the photo was taken, I replaced the white ribbon with 3/8″ ivory antique silk grosgrain. It was more tailored and more suited to the quality of the booties.

 

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Pack ‘n Play

Good bye playpen. Hello Pack ‘N Play!

pack play all

As soon as I knew that our first grandchild was on the way, I found myself at Babies R Us in a state of shock. I had birthed, burped, breastfed and badgered two beautiful, bouncing babies into happy, successful adulthood.

And yet here, in the mall of moppets and mothers, I was a stranger in a strange land. Nothing was the same, nothing was familiar. I had less than 6 months to get up to speed, to be knowledgeable about a grandmother’s tools of the trade.

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Machine Shadow Embroidery~ Baby Pillow

shadmadpilo

 

This sweet little baby pillow was a joy to stitch and makes such a pretty and practical baby gift.  With its shadow embroidery,  featherstitching and Madeira applique hem,  it looks delicate and delightful.

Made of good quality domestic cotton batiste, it needs no lace or trim to complete its tender look.

In my humble opinion, shadow embroidery is one of the prettiest embellishments that can be added to a project.  For babies, children, ladies or linens, its delicacy is stunning.  Much as I have always enjoyed doing it by hand, I was absolutely enthralled when my friend Suzanne Hinshaw developed her techniques for achieving the identical look with machine embroidery.

 

machineshadmadhem

The technique is so simple that it’s hard to go wrong.  You simply hoop up a very sturdy water soluble stabilizer with no fabric and then stitch the portion of the design that, when done by hand, would have been on the back of the fabric.  Think of it as the fill pattern.

Then, after placing strips of double sided tape around the embroidered design, you press sheer to semi-sheer fabric to the stabilizer such as batiste or even light weight linen.  Of course, you would have marked where you want the design to be so you can position the design perfectly.   And Suzanne’s instructions make it clear just when the fabric is placed on the stabilizer.  In fact, all of her directions are very clear.

The next step is to stitch on the fabric.  The design is sized such that the underlay portion of the design which is stitched only on the stabilizer is just ever so slightly larger than the outlining stitches that are worked on the fabric itself.  The top stitches catch the underlay stitches which create the shadow effect.

Finally, you remove the piece from the hoop and gently peel the stabilizer away from the linen where the double sided tape has held it in place.  Cut away as much of the remaining water soluble stabilizer away as possible.  Then immerse the piece in water and let the stabilizer dissolve away.  When all signs of stabilizer are gone, let it dry and then press.

When it is finished, you will have shadow embroidery so credible that no one would even think to examine the back side.  And if they did, they would be hard pressed to recognize the slight difference in the look.

In subsequent posts, I will have more shadow embroidery, some by hand and more by machine using Suzanne’s gorgeous designs.  I might even persuade her to make her designs available again.

T-Bonnet

T-Bonnet-MCSAll-BR

Just before Laurel was born, I made this T bonnet for her.  Is there any sweeter sight than a baby in a bonnet?  And she did look absolutely precious in it.  Why I have no picture of her wearing it,  I don’t know.  I suppose I was so overcome with the emotion of holding my first grandchild that I missed many photo opportunities.

Like so many of my projects, this T-bonnet incorporates two of  my favorite techniques, heirloom sewing and machine embroidery.  Continue reading

Brother-Sister Wiggles Outfits

zwigglesrl

My precious daughter-in-law really likes brother-sister outfits for Robert and Laurel.  So for their birthdays, I usually make themed, matching clothes.

Since their birthdays are only 15 months apart, their interests are not so unlike as to make that a problem, at least not until 4 yo Robert’s Spiderman party. But that’s  another story, another post.

 

R red car

Robert in his Big Red Car gifted by his great-grandmother, Neenie.

 

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Turn Tube Pillowcase Hem

4th parade pillowcase

My grandchildren love having special holiday pillowcases. My personal favorite for bed linens is pima cotton, so I normally use pima for the pillowcase body and a seasonal or novelty cotton print for the contrasting hem.

 

parade pc CN

Photo courtesy of Creative Needle magazine

 

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