The Things They Outgrew

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I’ve been feeling a bit nostalgic for those baby days.  As I was going through the girls’ closet today, I saw all of the things that they have outgrown.  A bit sad for me knowing that we likely won’t have another baby to wear them.  I know with all my rational senses that two children is enough for us (and some days it’s completely overwhelming!).  Three of these dresses were mine as a child and all were completely handmade and are so sweet.  Hand-sewn button holes.  What dedicated person had the time for that?  Hey Mom, who made these?  Did you make the yellow one?  Really sweet.  I am going to save them for grandbabies.

Heidi Headbands

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I saw the pattern for Heidi Headbands in Amy Karol’s book Bend the Rules Sewing. But in typical fashion I didn’t read the instructions. I am looking at the instructions now, and it does seem that I made them a bit differently. I just made a fabric tube, turned it right side out, pressed it with seam in the center on reverse side, sewed the ribbon, inserted the elastic, then closed the ends. I also sewed some thin grosgrain ribbon on top of the elastic to hide it a bit since my three-year-old has short hair. Turns out headbands aren’t really the best accessory for her thin hair.

I discussed the project with my five-year-old repeatedly and she chose her ribbon and fabric, but after I made it she refused to wear it because it was a circle rather than a u-shaped hard headband that she had imagined. Ugh.  So here it is sitting on a table. Next up, headbands for me!

Place Mats and Napkins for Kids

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We have eliminated paper napkins around our house, so thought I’d share this project for kids’ place mats and napkins. Obviously you could use this pattern for adult-sized napkins and place mats by increasing the dimensions (I’ve made some suggestions below). This is a super-easy project and a great one for beginners. I also think that some plain fabric with appliqué monsters or flowers would be really cute. We just happened to have this Wizard of Oz canvas from Reprodepot and my kids love it. I backed the mats with a ticking stripe.

Supplies for 4 Place Mats and Napkins:

  • 1 yard main fabric (heavy weight cotton or canvas)
  • 1 yard contrasting fabric (heavy weight cotton or canvas)
  • 1/2 yard napkin fabric (cotton twill or similar)
  • scissors
  • matching thread
  • measuring tape

A note about fabrics: Working with a striped fabric will help you cut straight lines. If you choose to use a lighter weight cotton or even linen for the place mats, you could add a layer of interfacing. And for the napkins, I wanted to use a fabric that was the same on both sides so that a bad side wouldn’t show as you are using the napkin (this is just my personal preference).  I’d recommend washing and drying your fabrics before you begin.

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Place Mats

Step 1:

Cut your fabrics to the following specifications:

Napkins 10″x 10″ (cut 4). Try 18″ x 18″ for adult-sized napkins.
Place mats 14″ x 12″ (cut 4 of each, main and contrasting fabrics) . Try 20″ x 14″ for adult-sized placemats.

A clear square ruler like one of these will help you get straight lines and achieve 90 degree corners easily. A rotary cutter and mat are also helpful for this project, but not necessary.

Step 2:

Pin place mat fabrics right sides together and sew a straight stitch about 1/4″ around the edges (pictured below), leaving about 4 inches open. Then turn place mats right side out. Push out corners with the blunt end of your scissors or the end of a pen. Press place mats flat, turning in the open edge.

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Step 3:

Sew around edges 1/4″ from edge. Then sew another straight stitch 1/2″ from edge. This will leave you with a nice double-stitched edging. Alternately, you could sew a nice decorative stitch or ric-rac trim around the edges. I didn’t think this fabric needed any embellishment.

Napkins

Step 1:

Fold and press napkin edges 1/4″ towards wrong side of fabric. Then bring napkins to the sewing machine. Fold again about 1/2″ and place under the presser foot. Hold the bottom of the fold as you sew (see picture below). Then sew the opposite side.

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Step 2:

There are two ways that you could do the corners of the napkins. You may fold corners over at a 90 degree angle like this:

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Or tuck under for an angle like this (works best with thin fabrics):

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Either way you do it — fold a bottom corner, pin it in place, then make top corner and sew it, then continue down the seam. Repeat for the other side.

Another project finished! Please let me know if you have any comments or questions.

Stormy Day Dolls

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After seeing this post at Sugar City Journal I’ve been thinking about making some personalized paper dolls, but it seemed like so much work to cut out all of their clothes and my kids get frustrated when the clothes don’t stay on the dolls. We have a toy similar to this one from Woodkins, so we made some personalized dolls from cardboard and card stock. The hardest part was trying to get the kids still for a picture. They drew some hair, but you could add some with yarn or make changeable hair cut-outs. I then cut some fabric scraps and let them change the clothes around. You can make a dress by slipping the fabric over the leg separation. Creating and playing with these dolls occupied them for much of the afternoon!

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The Toymaker

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We made some sweet little paper toys from The Toymaker site yesterday. Artist Marilyn Scott-Waters creates beautiful drawings for these free and downloadable paper toys.  There are many others available including animals, fairies, gift boxes, pinwheels, mini-books and more. If you haven’t seen this site, go check it out. I think these would be great to take on a trip. Just print them out, pack them up with scissors and a glue stick, and you have instant toys. As you can see, my kids couldn’t keep their hands off of them!