Refasion It! The Embellished Sweater {DIY appliqué}

Last week I went bargain hunting for some easy weekend upcycling projects. (I wrote about it in my “When a Crafter goes Shopping” post and explained my “method” of selecting the clothes.)

Now it’s time to share my first finished project with you: the embellished sweater.
embellished sweater

embellished sweater


When I saw Trash to Couture’s post a few weeks ago, I wanted to try a knock-off project.
Unfortunately I didn’t have any nice appliqués, so I postponed the project.

But when I went shopping last week, lucky me found a nice top with a faux leather insert. When I saw it I immediately had to think of the Trash to Couture DIY sweater, so I bought it. I also found a matching anthracite-coloured sweater that was even cheaper than the top.

embellished sweater

embellished sweater

The faux leather insert wasn’t embroidered, which wasn’t that bad since I had the beads and everything to do it myself at home.

I have to admit, as easy as it was, you need to have patience. A. Lot. Of. Patience.
I am normally not very much blessed with patience, but after weeks of essay writing and other assignments it was a welcome change.

embellished sweater

I started with simply removing the faux leather from the rest of the top. The white fabric will be used for one of the next projects.

embellished sweater

After trying different combinations, I decided to use some dark blue, brown and champagne-coloured beads that matched the sweater as well as the gold-brown faux leather.

appliqué DIY

Appliqué DIYappliqué DIY

To explain the embroidering part: A picture is worth a thousand words. This is a copy of a page of Burda Magazine. I know, it’s German, but the pictures are pretty self-explanatory.burda embroidering instructions

I used the mannequin for pinning and basting the appliqué to the sweater.embellished sweater

embellished sweater

After basting I handstitched the appliqué onto the sweater. Then I cut the remainder of the sweater on the inside, leaving a small seam allowance, and finished the seam to keep the knitted fabric from fraying.embellished sweater

embellished sweater

I love how the sweater matches the petticoat I made a few months ago. Fortunately I still have some of the butterfly fabric left and will definitely make a pleated skirt out of it in the future.
embellished sweater

embellished sweater

 

Free Valentine’s Day Printables

Free Printable Valentine's Day Card

My passion for Photoshop got out of hand today. Here are some free Valentine’s Day Cards I made for you to download and print.

Just right click on the picture you want, save and print. It’s as easy as that.
I left some blank, so you can simply enter your own text with Photoshop, Word or handwritten.

If you have any questions on how I made these, do ask! I’d be happy to help.

Feel free to leave a comment before or after downloading. – I’d love to know what your favourites ones are!

 

Please note: Only for non-commercial, private and personal use! Thank you.

YoureaHoot Free Printable Valentine's Day CardYoureaHoot Free Printable Valentine's Day CardFree Printable Valentine's Day CardFree Printable Valentine's Day CardFree Printable Valentine's Day CardFree Printable Valentine's Day CardFree Printable Valentine's Day CardFree Printable Valentine's Day CardFree Printable Valentine's Day Card I love you more than cupcakesFree Printable Valentine's Day Card
Free Printable Valentine's Day CardFree Printable Valentine's Day Cardit will always be you Free Printable Valentine's Day CardXOXO Free Printable Valentine's Day CardFree Printable Valentine's Day CardFree Printable Valentine's Day Cardthankyou Free Printable Valentine's Day Cardxoxo Free Printable Valentine's Day Card

Free Printable Valentine's Day Card

 

 

Sewing a Jewelry Travel Case


jewelry case tutorialhow to make a jewelry case

“Big girls need big diamonds.” – Elizabeth Taylor

What’s the point of owning a wide range of jewelry, when you can’t take all of it with you when travelling? Well, I probably could live with a single pair of earrings and just one necklace (sometimes that’s enough for weeks), but wouldn’t it be much better to be able to take more than that with you when you travel?

I lost a lot of jewelry by damaging and scratching it through storing it carelessly.

To keep that from happening, I had the idea of sewing a jewelry case that’s soft enough to keep my stuff from being scratched.

I came up with this soft jewelry roll which has different compartments for rings, ear studs, necklaces and bracelets:

jewelry roll 1 jewelry roll

I love travelling with this one, the only disadvantage is that it’s open on the sides. I haven’t lost anything yet, but I’m a little afraid stuff might fall out.

Anyway, I made another one as a gift for Christmas, considering the problem this time.

And – of course – I didn’t forget to take pictures of the process.

*drumroll* – Here comes the tutorial!

draft handwriting tutorial

#1 What you need:

– at least two different matching kinds of fabric (depending on how large you want the jewelry case to be, about 40-50 cm/0,5 yd should be enough)
– matching thread
– a zipper (approx. 20 cm/8”)
– small decorative buttons
– two buttons and ribbon or some other kind of fastener

for embellishing:
– iron-on transfers/ fabric with a cute imprint/ beads/ sequins etc.

jewelry case tutorial

#2 The fabric cutting.

*Plan your pattern!
*Draft your pattern!
*Be accurate and check twice before cutting.

jewelry case tutorial cutting instructions

This is a draft of the “pattern” I used. (Actually, I didn’t use a pattern, I started cutting right away, but this requires you having a precise plan in your head. It’s not that hard, since the shapes are all angular).

I used 3 different kinds of fabric. This is colour-coded in the picture above.

Also:
A – outer fabric
B – parts of first layer of lining
C – parts of second layer of lining

I’ll refer to the letters in the above key in the next steps.

*Dont forget the seam allowance before cutting everything out!*

#3 The Sewing Together.

*Adding the iron-on transfers/imprints.

jewelry case tutorial

I found the cute hippo picture online (here) and just printed it with my normal printer on white cotton. I explained how I did that in the comments of this post.

Printing with normal ink means it’s not waterproof!

Tip: I’ve read that black ink can be made waterproof, when you dip it into vinegar, let it dry and then press it. I just pressed it (imprint facing down), which should be enough for normal use. It shouldn’t be machine washed though.

Add any embellishments before sewing (I added some sequins and beads).

Make sure whatever you want to add is in the right place before you sew/iron. Especially when it’s intended to be centered (consider the seam allowance etc.)

If you want to use decorative buttons as I did (e.g. for earrings) sew them onto B2 before  sewing together the other pieces.

*Adding the zipper.

jewelry case tutorial

I applied a zipper to B1, which will be the front of an inside pocket in the lining.
To do this, pin the zipper, mark it’s position and then cut out a slit, as seen above.

Pin the zipper in the right place and sew. I just used the normal presser foot.
jewelry case tutorial

jewelry case tutorial

jewelry case tutorial

Sew together B1 and C3, both right side up. Be precise with the seam allowance. You don’t want the seam to be seen later on, it might be even better to use a slightly narrower seam allowance.

jewelry case tutorial For the flaps: Sew together A2+A3 (2x), right sides together. Turn inside out.

jewelry case tutorial

Sew B3 onto B2 (right sides together) along the outer edges (leaving out the fold line as marked in the cutting plan). Then turn inside out.

jewelry case tutorial

After turning inside out, stitch along close to the edge.

jewelry case tutorial 4

Fold the side edges of B4 to center line (2x) and stitch as seen in the picture below. jewelry case tutorial 4

Stich B4 onto B2 as shown in the picture below.jewelry case tutorial

jewelry case tutorial Do the same with C2 (3x) and C1. Here you don’t have to extra stitch the C2 pieces, if you sew them onto C1 with the open seam facing down.

jewelry case tutorial

Sew B2 onto C1 (both right side facing up), sewing along the fold line of B2.

Sew B1’s upper edge onto B2’s bottom edge (right sides together). Now you’re done with the lining! It should look like this:

jewelry case tutorial Before sewing together A and the lining, don’t forget to add the flaps. Pin them (lining fabric facing up) onto the A piece (right side up). Stich close to the edge (about half of the seam allowance).
jewelry case tutorial jewelry case tutorial jewelry case tutorial Also, add the fastener. I made two small loops out of ribbon and stitched them onto A1.

Before you pin A and the lining together (right sides together), make sure you fold down the B2-B3-flap to avoid stitching it down accidentally. (Things like that always seem to happen to me…!)jewelry case tutorial Leave a big enough gap to turn the whole thing inside out (approx. 5-6 cm should do, you can handstitch that part later on). jewelry case tutorial jewelry case tutorial Press everything and apply the two buttons for the closure. Done!

jewelry case tutorial jewelry case tutorial jewelry case tutorial jewelry case tutorial

jewelry case tutorialtutorial jewelry casejewelry case tutorialjewelry case tutorial

jewelry case tutorialjewelry case tutorialjewelry case tutorial
jewelry case

 

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Boogieboard Cottage

When a Crafter goes Shopping

Over the whole last week I was planning to do something crafty this weekend. Last night I sat down with a bunch of Burda magazines and a cardboard box full of fabric, determined to find the perfect weekend sewing project. Well, things always end up differently than you think. In the end, no fabric and no pattern was good enough and the only thing that I really liked would have been another massive project. This morning I decided to try something quick and easy – quick success can be really motivating!

I went shopping.

This sounds easy indeed (it wasn’t that quick though).
I must have looked a little weird wandering through the store, touching this garment, touching that garment, trying on nothing and in the end buying oversized clothes from the men’s department. If someone had asked me what I wanted to do with those I would have said “Cut them to pieces.”

upcycling cheap clothes 1

And this is what I will do this weekend. Making pretty garments out of cheap, too big and poorly-made clothes. This is also why I tried to buy them as large as possible – more fabric, more options.

Why I bought men’s clothes? Well, for some projects I have on my mind, I’ll need shirting fabric and it’s really hard to find other than white one in the women’s department. And, guess what, men’s XL is bigger than a women’s XL. Plus, there are a lot of great fabric stores in London, but fabric’s rather expensive there.

I also came up with a new resolution for this year: Not to buy clothes from cheap and popular department store chains without completely altering them from scratch. For when I went shopping the last time and was really satisfied with my finding, I ended up wearing the same thing as two other people from my class. What a bummer!

Here are the “rough diamonds” I found:

black lace

Beautiful black lace that was supposed to be some kind of ill-fitting dress.

shirt fabric white bicycles

 A navy blue men’s shirt with cute little bicycles on it.

shirt fabric white dotsThis shirt is so big, it’ll make a cute little summer dress!

 upcycling cheap clothes

This one is my favorite! It’s exactly what I needed for a DIY project knock-off I’ve been itching to do for weeks! Be ready for suprises! I’ll keep you posted.

chocolate bean pillbox {DIY in 15 minutes #3}

chocolate bean pillbox DIY

Another DIY I did before Christmas: “anti-stress” and “anti-wanderlust” pillboxes!

All you need:

– tiny empty jars and bottles
– chocolate beans
– vintage printables + paper
– twine
– glue stick

chocolate bean pillbox DIYchocolate bean pillbox DIY

I used a tiny jam jar and a mini brandy bottle that I cleaned and dried up thoroughly. I sorted the chocolate beans by colour, to make the two sorts of pills look differently.

For making the labels I used free vintage printables I found online. Here are some of my favorites:

– free collage sheets

– vintage grunge printables

I altered the label in Photoshop and gauged the correct size. Cut the label out and glue it on the lid or on the front of the bottle.

I printed out some pretty vintage tags, punched holes in them and tied them up with the twine.

Maybe you know someone that could need some anti-stress pills, anti-lovesickness medicine or frustration-protection?

Have fun!

chocolate bean pillbox DIY chocolate bean pillbox DIY
 chocolate bean pillbox DIY