Saturday, January 31, 2009

Slipcovers: the Plan and some progress

I've pretty much finished Joseph's 2nd birthday gift, but I won't be writing about it until after his February birthday.

Next up on my project list are slipcovers for my 10+ year old couch and ottoman, which I've wanted to make since -- forever.



I've been changing over the color theme in our "great room" little by little from the green/red/gold combination of colors in the couch to more blue/off-white/beige with red accents. My "inspiration piece" is this set of red, white and blue storage boxes:



So far I've changed the rug and window coverings to blue and a few months ago we bought a new couch and love seat in a more neutral golden caramel brown (photo, left). At first we were going to give away the old couch, but after living with the extra furniture for the last few months we've decided to keep it.

Our original configuration was a little too crowded; we kept both the old couch and chair and the new couch and love seat all in the same room for the holidays. We've since moved all the pieces around and have come up with a less crowded layout that works for us and provides a lot more comfortable seating for when we have company. Now, a new blue-ish slipcover for the couch has become a higher priority.

A few years ago I re-covered these cushions on a pair of chairs in our "Westie Wing" (known in most homes as the "formal living room"):



The fabric is called Miss Kitty Denim. The blue and khaki print is just whimsical enough for me and not too feminine for Rich. The name makes me giggle too -- especially since Keli goes bananas anytime she sees a cat or hear's the word kitty. I got a little silly and sewed these cushions with blue fringe in place of piping.

Anyway -- I had about 5 yards of this fabric left over after recovering the chair cushions, and since I like this fabric so much, decided to test it out in the great room as a potential fabric for the new slipcover for the old couch. We all liked the combination, provided I could find a *lot* more yardage. I had some doubts I would be able to get more after so much time had passed -- usually when I finally make up my mind on a home dec fabric, it's been discontinued (which is one reason why I haven't gotten around to recovering the couch until now).

Fortunately, I was able to get to a JoAnn Fabric store not too far away in Middletown, NY, where they had almost a full bolt of our Miss Kitty Denim on sale at 50% off. And I had a coupon for an additional 10% off home dec fabric, so it was definitely worth the trip and now I have all the supplies I think I'll need.

It has been a few years since I've made a slipcover, so I decided to start with the ottoman. You can see some discoloration on the skirt in the photo at left and at the top of this post (the spots are more exaggerated in the photos than in real life); also the top cushioned section is a little lopsided and wonky from 10 years of use.

I never minded the discoloration because the spots were caused by our first Westie, Wyndi. She was blind her last few years and walked alongside all the furniture to feel her way around the room; I think some of the medications we used to treat her skin problems must have rubbed off onto the skirt of the ottoman and the matching chair (which has been relocated to a corner of the dining room for now).

Now that the "great room" has a more dominant blue color theme, the ottoman needs a makeover. I wanted to use a blue corduroy-type home dec fabric from my stash that coordinates with the Miss Kitty Denim, but I had only about 1.5 yards left from the original remnant pieces in my collection. I thought I could squeeze just enough out of that to make the ottoman slipcover. I was wrong.

Carefully, I cut all the main pieces -- the top, "boxing strip" side panels and the skirt sections. I didn't have enough fabric to make as deep a box pleat for the skirt as I would have liked, so I pieced together the inside of the pleated sections. I knew the skirt might also be a little bit on the short side, with maybe only 1/2" allowance for a hem. I used length-wise scraps to make the piping (instead of bias strips).

Unfortunately, I didn't add in any allowance for "ease" and my first pass at assembling the skirt was more than an inch too short. I ended up ripping out the skirt, adding a coordinating blue fabric sashing strip about 3 inches wide and then re-attached the skirt to the sashing strip. That solved the hem allowance problem and gave me just enough of a drop in the skirt to skim the ground.



In spite of having to improvise a little, I think this cover turned out rather well, and now I feel more confident about starting the slipcover for the couch.

I'll start with the cushion covers, since they require the most amount of piping. I want to be able to machine wash the slipcovers, so to prevent them from shrinking up too much, I'll be pre-washing and drying the Miss Kitty fabric later this week.

Slipcovers Picasa photo album showing all the before and after photos for this project is embedded below:
Slipcovers

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Ryan's 2nd Birthday

This year, I'm keeping all the niece and nephew gifts simple so I will have more time to finish the backlog of projects planned for myself, some of which are over a year behind schedule already. Also, I'm trying to use up as much as possible from my stash of fabric and other supplies.

Last weekend was nephew Ryan's second birthday party, and the theme was Thomas the Tank Engine. I purchased a train design from EmbroideryDesigns.com and did a little editing to insert color changes so that it would look similar to the invitation:

Ryan's Birthday Gift

I embroidered the design onto a scrap piece of sweatshirt fleece, then fused the fleece with Steam-A-Seam 2 to the front of a previously purchased and laundered shirt (from the stash). I used a simple zigzag stitch to tack down the raw edges of the fleece. This way, the back of the embroidery won't touch the skin, and hopefully won't be too itchy.

Ryan is also a fan of the Disney Cars characters, and since the no-sew fleece pillow sham was such a big hit with our other nephews at Christmas, I made up a smaller version (purchased from JoAnn Fabrics), which fits an 18x18 inch pillow form (also from the stash):

Ryan's Birthday Gift


I also bought some coloring books with the Cars characters and a Thomas sticker book.

And to wrap it all up, since I can't possibly bring myself to use paper wrapping if I can avoid it, another over-sized Lazy Girl Designs' With Love Tote:

Ryan's Birthday Gift

Recognize this fabric? I originally used it on Ryan's mom's "non-diaper bag" in 2007:



The handles of the tote are made of cotton belting. Not only does the new tote coordinate with the "old" bag, I used up the bulk of what was left over, so cleared up a small space in the fabric stash.

Link to last year's birthday gift for Ryan: Kooky Monster book and stuffies

I have one more birthday gift to finish up for nephew Joseph and then I'm going to get to work on slipcovers for my old couch - a project that is at least 3+ years overdue!


Sunday, January 18, 2009

Our Feedburner feed has migrated to Google

As a result of Feedburner being integrated into Google, we've migrated our feeds over to Google, and everything appears to have successfully transferred.

If you subscribe to either our Keli's Korner or SewAmazin blog feeds through a reader such as Google Reader or Bloglines, the feed address is slightly different now.

As I understand it, the old feed address will automatically forward to the new feed address; however if you find you have problems receiving our feed, you may want to unsubscribe and then re-subscribe using one of the links or buttons on our blog sidebar, which are all updated with the new feed address.

I don't think email subscribers will be affected; consider this posting a test of the email delivery under the new system.

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