After my original attempt at refashioning this shirt failed (I sized the first one wrong and it was way too small - the post below is my second attempt), I had to come up with a plan B. And the ruffle pillow was born:
I've seen ruffly pillows around online (like here at kelly + olive), so this isn't a new idea, but making a pillow from a shirt is easy and fast, because all the hard parts are already done.
First I removed all the ruffles. Then I cut a 12 1/2 inch square of fabric from the back of the shirt, and a 12 1/2 inch square from the front of the shirt, centering it on the buttons.
I re-attached the ruffles to the fabric cut from the back of the shirt (the solid piece), which now becomes the front of the pillow.
With right sides together, sew around all sides. You now have a cute, ruffly pillow with a button-up back closure. Easy!
Here's what the back looks like:
Have I mentioned how my husband hates this ruffle-craze? Really hates it. And I am wearing a lot of ruffles these days. Oops.
I have a good sized piece of the original shirt left over from this project and I can't bear to throw it away. What do you think I should do with it?
I'm thinking it could be the top of a little girl or baby dress. We'll see!
shirt refashion in two ways - part I
I am really into refashioning lately, so my apologies if this is getting boring. Sometimes macy's just has too good of a sale, and I end up buying things that don't quite work for me. I found a few sleeveless tunic shirts on mega-clearance recently. No before-photo (I am a doofus and forgot), but it's not hard to imagine - it looks just like the shirt pictured above, but sleeveless and about 6 inches longer.
I am a sleeves-wearing kind of gal, so I just chopped off the bottom 6 inches of the shirt and used that extra fabric to make sleeves. I cut the sleeves out of each side of the shirt, since the back wasn't wide enough to cut two. There was a little vent on each side of the shirt, but that worked for me. I just added a button closure to the sleeves (see below) using buttons from the discarded front of the shirt . The sleeves were made exactly like my t-shirt tutorial. The only difference is this shirt was lined, so there are two layers.
I am a sleeves-wearing kind of gal, so I just chopped off the bottom 6 inches of the shirt and used that extra fabric to make sleeves. I cut the sleeves out of each side of the shirt, since the back wasn't wide enough to cut two. There was a little vent on each side of the shirt, but that worked for me. I just added a button closure to the sleeves (see below) using buttons from the discarded front of the shirt . The sleeves were made exactly like my t-shirt tutorial. The only difference is this shirt was lined, so there are two layers.
Hem the bottom of the shirt and bada bing, you're done.
Stay tuned for the next refashion ... same shirt, completely different use.
Labels:
refashion,
sewing for mama
anniversary embroidery
Sunday was our 6th wedding anniversary, so I spent my recent hours in the car making this little embroidery for Jared. The pattern is from the Polka Dot Bunny, and I saw it on Craft's blog back in June. At that point I was leaning more towards an embroidered love note, but the moment I this frolicking squirrel and hedgehog, I knew this was the pattern I needed. Those of you who know Jared understand why. :) I added our wedding date and a bit of embellishment on the animals.
If you are looking for embroidery patterns, check out the embroidery roundups on One Pretty Thing. Here are some of my favorites found through the roundups:
matryoshka dolls at Blue Bird Studio
little dresses at A Print A Day
branch and leaf at BHG
Labels:
embroidery
check me out on ohdeedoh!
I have a little interview on ohdeedoh today as part of their "Big Blog Family" series. Such an honor!
I love this site and poured over all the nursery tours when I was planning Oscar's room. If you have kids, know kids, or just love great design, ohdeedoh is a must-visit.
ummashin winner
Congratulations to Nachelle, who said, "I would be torn between the cute little girl beanies like the flapper above or the headbands, they are all adorable!"
You are the lucky winner of your choice of baby item from Ummashin's Goodies. Please email your contact information to homemadebyjill@gmail.com.
Thanks to Hannah for sponsoring another great giveaway!
If you didn't win, you can still pick up your favorite item at Ummashin's Goodies. Mention this blog and get 5% off your order, this week only.
Sorry I have been radio-silent since last week. I am on a road trip to visit family and am using up most of my creativity keeping a 10-month old happy for hours on end in the car. But I have been working on a project, so I'll try to share it soon.
You are the lucky winner of your choice of baby item from Ummashin's Goodies. Please email your contact information to homemadebyjill@gmail.com.
Thanks to Hannah for sponsoring another great giveaway!
If you didn't win, you can still pick up your favorite item at Ummashin's Goodies. Mention this blog and get 5% off your order, this week only.
Sorry I have been radio-silent since last week. I am on a road trip to visit family and am using up most of my creativity keeping a 10-month old happy for hours on end in the car. But I have been working on a project, so I'll try to share it soon.
Labels:
giveaway
ummashin giveaway (take 2)! (closed)
I hope you recognize Ummashin's Goodies from one of my very first giveaways. Hannah is still hooking away and making items more fabulous than ever.
Here are some of my favorites from her shop:
Hooray for moms that make beautiful products, right? This is why I love Etsy.
As always, Ummashin's Goodies has free shipping on beanies anywhere in the U.S.
This week's lucky winner will receive their choice of a baby item from the shop (including beanies, headbands, and booties) in their desired size (up to 4T). Adult items are not included in the giveaway. International entries are welcome!
This giveaway is now closed. Thanks for entering!
Here are some of my favorites from her shop:
Hooray for moms that make beautiful products, right? This is why I love Etsy.
As always, Ummashin's Goodies has free shipping on beanies anywhere in the U.S.
This week's lucky winner will receive their choice of a baby item from the shop (including beanies, headbands, and booties) in their desired size (up to 4T). Adult items are not included in the giveaway. International entries are welcome!
This giveaway is now closed. Thanks for entering!
Labels:
giveaway
ruffle t-shirt tutorial
Sorry for the tutorial delay, eager sewers. Let me start my saying that I doubt this is the best or even the right way to make your own t-shirt. This is simply how it occurred to me to do it. If you are a sewing expert and have lots of wisdom on this subject to share, please comment! Also, I do not have a fancy sewing machine or a serger. So we are talking super basic stuff here. Works for me, so I hope it works for you, too!
First, pick your favorite t-shirt out of your closet. You are going to use it as your pattern. Fold the sleeves back inside the shirt and pin them there. You just want the shell of the shirt for your body pattern pieces. Lay it out over your fabric (mine is doubled over so I only have to cut once). You'll want to pay attention to the grain of your fabric and how it stretches - you want it to stretch side-to-side. I used a bamboo/cotton jersey knit fabric.
Cut around your t-shirt, leaving at least a 1/4 inch margin around all sides for seam allowance. Like so:
(p.s. pay attention to how the sleeves look on your store-bought shirt as they are pinned inside. This is how you will pin your fabric together later to attach the sleeves)
You should have two identical pieces. Take one of those pieces and fold it in half horizontally. It should look like this:
Cut your front neckline out of this folded piece. I like to do a scoop neck, but you can cut whatever neckline you want. If you are afraid of cutting too deep, just keep an eye on the bottom of the arm hole, which is approximately even with the middle of your bustline.
Ok, body pieces are ready for sewing. Now you need sleeves. Here is a template I use for my shirts. I have small/medium-ish sized arms. You'll have to adjust the template to fit your arms.
Please note that this template requires you to cut on a fold line - meaning you fold the fabric in half and line up the "fold line" side with the fold of the fabric. After you cut and unfold, you should have something that looks like this:
Cut two. :)
And we are ready to start sewing. Many of you expressed your fear of knits in the other post. They are not so scary. Use a ball-point jersey needle (this is absolutely necessary), and you'll be fine. A zig-zag stitch is helpful as well.
Pin your two body pieces, right sides facing together. Fold your sleeves in half, right sides together, and pin on the short side.
Using a 1/4 inch seam and a zig-zag stitch, sew
Here's where your seams will be:
Make sure you press all of your seams. It makes a huge difference in the finished product.
Next, hem both sleeves. With the sleeve inside out, fold the edge up 1/4 inch and press. Then fold again (about 1/4 inch, or more, if you want a wider hem) and press. Pin in place and sew in place. I still used a zig-zag stitch, so my sleeve would stretch.
Ok, this next part is the lazy measurer's guide to fit. A normal person would measure the arm hole and then cut the sleeve to fit, right? Not me. Too lazy. Instead, I make it fit by adding a little gather to the top of the sleeve.
First, sew a baste stitch (the longest straight stitch your machine will do) along the top arch of the sleeve. You don't need to sew all the way around, just across the middle will do. Leave long threads on both sides. Don't back-stitch, or it won't work! It will look like this:
Pull only the back thread, and the fabric will begin to gather. You suddenly have more feminine sleeves. :)
Now you'll need to attach the sleeves to your shirt. This was hard to photograph, so I'll do my best to explain.
Turn the body of your shirt inside out, and your sleeves right side out. Stuff the sleeve inside the shirt, lining up the raw edges of both pieces. The bottom seam of the sleeve will line up with the bottom seam of the arm hole. Start pinning where those seams align, and move up the arm hole on either side. The sleeve will be inside the shirt, just like when you were using your favorite t-shirt as a cutting pattern. Remember? ;)
When you get to the top of the arm hole, adjust the gathered top of the sleeve (either loosen or tighten the gather) so it all fits together well and finish pinning.
I sincerely hope that all made sense. Here's what it should look like:
Sew around the arm hole using a 1/4 inch seam and zig-zag stitch. Finish off the seam with another zig-zag along the edge, or using a serger.
Turn your shirt right side out, and what do you know ... it actually looks like a shirt!
This is a good time to actually try the shirt on. Do you like your neckline? If not, you can still trim it to the desired shape.
When you are satisfied, sew a little zig-zag stitch all the way around the edge.
Turn the shirt inside out again. Fold over approximately 1/4 inch around the entire neckline and press. Pin in place. Then sew it in place (I am still using a small zig-zag stitch here).
Now hem the bottom of the shirt the exact same way. You could also do a double fold hem, but this is faster, and I think looks just as good.
Your shirt is officially done, but stick with me if you want to add a ruffle.
Cut a long 1 1/2 inch strip of fabric to make the ruffle. It needs to be approximately 1 1/2 to 2 times longer than the circumference of your shirt's neckline, but I just eyeball it. Better too long than too short, because you can always trim it later.
Sew a zig-zag stitch all the way down each side, as close to the edge as possible. Then sew a basting stitch all the way down the center of the strip, leaving long threads on each end. Remember, no back-stitching on the baste stitch!
Pulling gently on the back thread only, carefully gather the strip of fabric into a ruffle.
Starting from the middle of the neckline on the back of the shirt, pin the ruffle to the neckline, right over where you hemmed it. You can adjust the tightness of the ruffle as you go, making sure it is consistently ruffly.
When you get back to the starting point, cut off any excess ruffle length, leaving just a little bit to fold under. Sew the ruffle in place using a straight stitch, following the baste stitch as a guide.
And that's it! See, sewing on knits is not so bad, right?
Sorry for the less-than-great finished shot (it actually does lay flat in front - oops). Maybe when the shirt reaches its intended recipient she will take a photo of how fabulous she looks in it. :)
Ruffle T-Shirt Tutorial
First, pick your favorite t-shirt out of your closet. You are going to use it as your pattern. Fold the sleeves back inside the shirt and pin them there. You just want the shell of the shirt for your body pattern pieces. Lay it out over your fabric (mine is doubled over so I only have to cut once). You'll want to pay attention to the grain of your fabric and how it stretches - you want it to stretch side-to-side. I used a bamboo/cotton jersey knit fabric.
Cut around your t-shirt, leaving at least a 1/4 inch margin around all sides for seam allowance. Like so:
(p.s. pay attention to how the sleeves look on your store-bought shirt as they are pinned inside. This is how you will pin your fabric together later to attach the sleeves)
You should have two identical pieces. Take one of those pieces and fold it in half horizontally. It should look like this:
Cut your front neckline out of this folded piece. I like to do a scoop neck, but you can cut whatever neckline you want. If you are afraid of cutting too deep, just keep an eye on the bottom of the arm hole, which is approximately even with the middle of your bustline.
Ok, body pieces are ready for sewing. Now you need sleeves. Here is a template I use for my shirts. I have small/medium-ish sized arms. You'll have to adjust the template to fit your arms.
Please note that this template requires you to cut on a fold line - meaning you fold the fabric in half and line up the "fold line" side with the fold of the fabric. After you cut and unfold, you should have something that looks like this:
Cut two. :)
And we are ready to start sewing. Many of you expressed your fear of knits in the other post. They are not so scary. Use a ball-point jersey needle (this is absolutely necessary), and you'll be fine. A zig-zag stitch is helpful as well.
Pin your two body pieces, right sides facing together. Fold your sleeves in half, right sides together, and pin on the short side.
Using a 1/4 inch seam and a zig-zag stitch, sew
- each side of the shirt (DON'T sew the arm hole)
- the tops of each shoulder
- the seam on each sleeve
Here's where your seams will be:
Make sure you press all of your seams. It makes a huge difference in the finished product.
Next, hem both sleeves. With the sleeve inside out, fold the edge up 1/4 inch and press. Then fold again (about 1/4 inch, or more, if you want a wider hem) and press. Pin in place and sew in place. I still used a zig-zag stitch, so my sleeve would stretch.
Ok, this next part is the lazy measurer's guide to fit. A normal person would measure the arm hole and then cut the sleeve to fit, right? Not me. Too lazy. Instead, I make it fit by adding a little gather to the top of the sleeve.
First, sew a baste stitch (the longest straight stitch your machine will do) along the top arch of the sleeve. You don't need to sew all the way around, just across the middle will do. Leave long threads on both sides. Don't back-stitch, or it won't work! It will look like this:
Pull only the back thread, and the fabric will begin to gather. You suddenly have more feminine sleeves. :)
Now you'll need to attach the sleeves to your shirt. This was hard to photograph, so I'll do my best to explain.
Turn the body of your shirt inside out, and your sleeves right side out. Stuff the sleeve inside the shirt, lining up the raw edges of both pieces. The bottom seam of the sleeve will line up with the bottom seam of the arm hole. Start pinning where those seams align, and move up the arm hole on either side. The sleeve will be inside the shirt, just like when you were using your favorite t-shirt as a cutting pattern. Remember? ;)
When you get to the top of the arm hole, adjust the gathered top of the sleeve (either loosen or tighten the gather) so it all fits together well and finish pinning.
I sincerely hope that all made sense. Here's what it should look like:
Sew around the arm hole using a 1/4 inch seam and zig-zag stitch. Finish off the seam with another zig-zag along the edge, or using a serger.
Turn your shirt right side out, and what do you know ... it actually looks like a shirt!
This is a good time to actually try the shirt on. Do you like your neckline? If not, you can still trim it to the desired shape.
When you are satisfied, sew a little zig-zag stitch all the way around the edge.
Turn the shirt inside out again. Fold over approximately 1/4 inch around the entire neckline and press. Pin in place. Then sew it in place (I am still using a small zig-zag stitch here).
Now hem the bottom of the shirt the exact same way. You could also do a double fold hem, but this is faster, and I think looks just as good.
Your shirt is officially done, but stick with me if you want to add a ruffle.
Cut a long 1 1/2 inch strip of fabric to make the ruffle. It needs to be approximately 1 1/2 to 2 times longer than the circumference of your shirt's neckline, but I just eyeball it. Better too long than too short, because you can always trim it later.
Sew a zig-zag stitch all the way down each side, as close to the edge as possible. Then sew a basting stitch all the way down the center of the strip, leaving long threads on each end. Remember, no back-stitching on the baste stitch!
Pulling gently on the back thread only, carefully gather the strip of fabric into a ruffle.
Starting from the middle of the neckline on the back of the shirt, pin the ruffle to the neckline, right over where you hemmed it. You can adjust the tightness of the ruffle as you go, making sure it is consistently ruffly.
When you get back to the starting point, cut off any excess ruffle length, leaving just a little bit to fold under. Sew the ruffle in place using a straight stitch, following the baste stitch as a guide.
And that's it! See, sewing on knits is not so bad, right?
Sorry for the less-than-great finished shot (it actually does lay flat in front - oops). Maybe when the shirt reaches its intended recipient she will take a photo of how fabulous she looks in it. :)
Labels:
sewing for mama,
template,
tutorial
Helen's Chocolate Pie
I almost finished that t-shirt tutorial this weekend, but then I got distracted by High School Musical 3. Did you know that I am 12 years old?
So while you wait, I'm offering the recipe to Helen's Chocolate Pie. It is exceptionally delicious, and I made it for Jared this weekend in celebration of his completing the CA Bar Exam. What a trooper.
Helen's Chocolate Pie
- 1 1/2 C. sugar
- 3 Tbsp. cornstarch
- 1/2 tsp. salt
- 1/2 C. cocoa powder
- 3 C. milk
- 3 egg yolks, slightly beaten
- 1 Tbsp. butter
Gradually stir half of the hot chocolate mixture into the egg yolks, then add egg mixture back into saucepan, stirring to combine. Boil 1 minute more. Remove from heat and still stirring, blend in butter.
Pour immediately into baked pie shell and cool in refrigerator. Top with fresh whipped cream to serve.
enjoy!
Color and Scheme winner
Congratulations, edeenut! You are the lucky Color and Scheme winner.
Your new pillow covers will look fabulous on your newly improved couch. I have to say, your slipcover is impressive. Please email your contact info to homemadebyjill@gmail.com to claim your prize. And enjoy!
Many thanks to Color and Scheme for a lovely giveaway.
(Don't forget to check out the new fabric options available August 4.)
Your new pillow covers will look fabulous on your newly improved couch. I have to say, your slipcover is impressive. Please email your contact info to homemadebyjill@gmail.com to claim your prize. And enjoy!
Many thanks to Color and Scheme for a lovely giveaway.
(Don't forget to check out the new fabric options available August 4.)
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