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Countryside Softies: Make ALL the Things

Countryside Softies

I have in my possession, via my gorgeous Sister in Law Donna, a book called Countryside Softies.  It’s a selection of animal patterns made from felted jumpers (sweaters) and printed fabrics and basically just oozes adorable and cheerful. It’s by Amy Adams, who has created a series of British Woodland Creatures including otters, badgers and hedgehogs.

They are, basically, fantastic. Full of character and joy and whimsy and fabrics and yum. Now, my fabric stash is not by any means huge, but it’s also not by any means being used up. And so, I have decided to make not just one or two things from this book, but all the things from this book.  Oh yes. I have made my start with a set of bees.

Bees

Slightly out of focus due to breeze and also rush – I had the dog out in the garden with me and he tends to wander off and get lost in a bush if he’s not called back.  (He did dash off as it happens, but was found talking to the other dog through the gate, and not splashing around in next doors’ dam like he usually does).

Bee Singular

This is my favourite of the three. I didn’t have any old jumpers to felt, and while I am planning a trip to the Op Shop to see what’s there (yes okay therefore adding to the stash – sssh) I couldn’t possibly wait a single moment to make a bee. These ones are made of fleece. No machine sewing which may explain their slightly distorted forms (the elongated one I suspect was the last of the late night sewing sessions).

They are now cheerfully hanging in the window above my pitcher plants because that amuses me. I’m easy to amuse.

Next project: Not entirely sure, possibly the fox. Or the otter. Mind you the bunnies are cute…

 

Back to the Elna

In 2007 I splashed out on a fancy pants (although heavily discounted) new sewing machine. Gosh it was exciting. Clean white plastic, loads of knobs, dials and buttons, various stitch designs (some of which I even used occasionally) and a complete set of exciting feet (none of which I used apart from the standard one). In 2010, while trying to sew a piece of cotton to a piece of denim, this new machine basically had a nervous break down. The bobbin holder bent rather spectacularly for one, and various other internal bits went out of kilter. While I could probably get it fixed, I’m a bit worried it’ll cost more than the actual machine did.

So, for my current project, I am back on the Elna. The Elna was given to my mother for her 21st birthday, which was in 1968. Solid metal body construction, the Elna is perfectly portable if you lift it with both hands. And warm up first, by the way. You have a choice of zig zag or straight stitch with 4 variations in between. You can also change the tension of the stitch. This is about it for stitch variety.

However, in the 40 or so years it’s been in use, the Elna has only broken down twice. It has sewn horse rugs (made of thick oiled canvas), jeans, curtains… everything you can think of has been under the foot of the Elna and the thing never complains. The only issues with it currently are the kind of thread I’m using, which is admittedly cheap and a bit nasty. The high quality thread just runs on through with blissful ease while the crappy stuff tends to snap and snarl, catching the bobbin into a mess of exploding thread.

I think next time I buy a machine, I will get a second hand oldie. Sure they’re not as whizz bang fancy. They don’t have a line of stitches that looks like little hearts or birds or butterflies, but at least they don’t need to go into therapy if you show them a bit of denim.

As for what I’m working on, well the Platypus Festival is next week so I’m making up some platypi for my stall.  Here are the first three, which I finished tonight.

The pattern is available from Funky Friends Factory.  I have 7 more cut out, one of those is half sewn and also one extra made out of Batman fabric because I’m engaged to a nerd who likes platypuses.

Of Pandas and Gnomes

More stuff sent out for SwapBot! Firstly, a Perfectly Pretty Panda.

Panda here is made from felt, hand sewn. The K embellishment is because my partners name is Kim and she likes blue, so I personalised ol’panda pants up for her.  You can find the pattern and tutorial for Anna Panda at Molly Chicken.

Next up, we have a Gnome with his fungus, which is how gnomes most like to live.

He doesn’t show up so awesomely in the photo, or even that well in RL :( I think I made the wrong fabric choice for him, but I had a hell of a time getting the transfer to work on anything else. My partner seems pleased with him, so that’s something.  The pattern is a freebie from Andrea Zuill.

Aaaaaaaaand we’ll finish with a WIP, this is for the rainbow flower swaps I’m hosting:

I know, it’s currently not so much “Flowers” as “Teeny flat clown hats” but they WILL become flowers. I’m working on green at the same time, but haven’t sewn those yet, just cut them.

I wish I was more of a fan of pink.

Behold! Tenticlo!

Alrighty, so I posted this guy a few days ago and promised I would post the pattern, so here it is, with tute. Gosh I’m lovely.

Making Tenticlo
You will need:

  • The Tenticlo Pattern – which you can find right here.
  • 2 sheets of felt in the main body colour
  • Around half a sheet of felt in the underside colour
  • Felt scraps for the eye and mouth
  • Marker pen – either an air or water fading one, or a very fine permanent marker
  • General sewing notions – needle and scissors
  • Embroidery thread
  • Polyfill or other toy stuffing
  • Stuffing stick, crochet hook, knitting needle or whatever to help push stuffing in
  • Beads, sequins, ribbons etc etc – whatever you like to embellish the beastie.

Ready? Let’s go!

Step One: Print and cut out your pattern. It SHOULD print over most of an A4 sheet, you may want to change the size. Make sure the pattern will fit entirely in one felt sheet, it’s just easier.

Step Two:

Lay your patten on one felt sheet and draw around it with your marker. Cut it out, and repeat on the other felt sheet so you have 2 body pieces.
If you’re using permanent marker: Flip the pattern the second time. That will mean you can hide the marker lines inside the stuffie.

Step Three: Take your underbody colour and fold it in half. See the line on the pattern? Line that up with the fold and trace around the tentacles.  You should end up with something like this:

Keeping the fold folded, cut around the line. You’ll end up with a mirror image tentacle dealio, which is exactly what you want.

Now you have 2 body pieces, and 1 underbody piece.

Making them rock out is optional.

Step Four: Eyeball time! Cut a circle out of your felt scrap. I used white, but whatever. It doesn’t have to be a perfect circle, but should be a bit smaller than the end of the eyestalk.

I also cut a smaller circle to enclose under the big circle, this is to give the eye some dimension. Optional!

Sew the eye ball into place. I’ve used blanket stitch, but any stitch you like will do.  In the photo above you can also see the fabric marker that would not photograph for the earlier shot I wanted to put in. Curse you fabric marker!

Step Five: Finish your eyeball!

Add an iris or three, this is a monster after all, and if you like, a pupil. I’ve used a button, but you could use felt. You could embroider it. Do what you like, I’m not your mother.

Ahem.

Step Six: Getting mouthy.
Cut a mouthy sort of a shape from felt, and sew it on where you like it best. I went for a smile, but you could easily make a frowny monster, or a shouting one or a shocked one or…

Step Seven: Pretty Little Monster!
Embellish your pieces to your hearts content. I went for a simple texture sort of finish, with circles cut out from the scraps left after I cut the bodies. It doesn’t show up so good in the photo, but it made Tenticlo sort of nubbly and interesting.

For the underbody, I cut circles in the same colour as the underbody, and snipped a hole in them to make little donut shapes which I sewed on.

These are just suggestions – go as mad as you like. Sequins would look awesome if you can be bothered, but you could embroider, paint, use beads etc etc. Since you don’t have to turn the toy out once you’ve sewn it, you can be as elaborate as you like.

REMEMBER! You will have to turn one body piece over before embellishment, otherwise all your hard work will be hidden inside the toy.

Step Eight: Sewing the little suckers.

Fold your underbody piece in half, embellished side inside the fold. Line it up to one of the body pieces wrong sides (unembellished sides) together.

Pin the underbody piece at the folds – this is going to mark where you start and finish sewing for this section. You can also pin the tentacles if you like. If you find at this point your shapes don’t match at any place, just trim off the extra so you have a nice edge.

With embroidery thread, sew around your matched up tentacles from one pin to the other. I’ve used more blanket stitch, but whipstitch or whatever will be fine.

Step Nine

Fold the underbody in half again, and place the other body piece on top of the sandwich. Sew around the second set of tentacles.

Do not be alarmed if a miniature border collie joins you for this step, they know a lot about sewing felt and whatever lands on your workspace is only there to help (and also to have tummy rubs).

Step Ten: Get stuffed.

You may find you need to wiggle your stuffing stick around in the tentacles first to separate the felt.  Using small bits of stuffing at a time, stuff the tentacles firmly. They need to be firm or Tenticlo will not stand up, which would make Tenticlo sad.

You will now have your very own alien autopsy.

Step Eleven: Sew, a needle pulling thread.

Pinch the felt above the end of your stitching together and start sewing up the sides of Tenticlo – doesn’t matter which side.  You may find at this point that your felt body pieces no longer match – the stuffing in the base can woodge them a bit. You can gently pull your felt back to match at the edges.

It’s easier to stuff the arms as you go! Once you’ve done one side of the arms, being stuffing as you close the other side. Trust me, otherwise you’ll spend a year trying to poke stuffing into them, weeping and wishing me dead. No one wants that – stuff as you go.

Finish your sewing at the shoulders, the base of the eyestalk. Stuff the body firmly. You should now have something like this:

Step Twelve: Are we there yet?

Almost! Sew up one side of the neck, and around the eyeball. Stuff the eyeball and add stuffing to the neck as you sew down to the other shoulder. Make sure the neck is firmly stuffed so it won’t go all floppy at the wrong moment.

Once you have the neck fully stuffed, close off the gap and finish your thread.

BEHOLD! Tenticlo!

Fin!

I hope that was good, was it good? I hope so. If you happen to make a Tenticlo, I’d love to see him. Or her. Leave a link in the comments so I can take a peek :D

Remember, colours and embellishments are all up to you, so go wild and make Tenticlo your very own. Have fun with him! Or her.

A Honey of a Panda

Since Australia Post suddenly remembered the “delivery” part of the mail system and delivered this to my friend Julie, I can now reveal the secret project I didn’t post last time.

See, Julie is obsessed with pandas, so I figured hey! I could make one! Turns out I could, although not terribly professionally.

The pattern is adapted from the Honey Bear pattern that you can get for no money by signing up for the newsletter at Funky Friends Factory.

When I saw the pattern printed out I thought “Oh holy shit, there is no WAY this is sewable!” but I have to say, like all the Funky Friends patterns, if you follow the instructions step by step you end up having no trouble at all.  Honey the Bear is also the official bear for an initiative called “A Billion Bears for Charity” which means you can make as many bears from the pattern as you like to sell to raise money for whatever charity you like – the designer simply asks you send her a photo of your bears and a count of how many you made so she can know when she hits a billion!

Panda-ising the pattern wasn’t complicated, it was just a matter of making different bits in different colours. The tricky part was the two tone body, which I did by marking on the pattern where the colour change would be, and then laying the pattern over a pre-prepared black and white block.  I didn’t quite match it on the back, but the rest worked out not badly.

The other thing was googling for “Panda butt” to check the colour and placement of panda tails, because most plush pandas seem to have black tails, and it turns out the real ones have a little white nub. Trust me, I’ve seen a LOT of panda butt of recent.

Julie loves him to bits, so despite all his wonky bits I think he worked out :D

Crafty Little Cactus

I’ve not been blogging so much but I have been crafting my fingers to the very bone (well maybe not actual bone) for various swaps. So, let’s review! Over the past couple of weeks I’ve made:

1. A Dashing Dachshund

He looks all flat because he IS all flat, with postage being what it is now we try to save a couple of cents by sending larger softies unstuffed.

If  you’d like to make your own dachshund (it’s a super simple pattern) you can grab the pattern and directions right here.

2. Some recycled brooches

These are made from bits of soft drink cans and postcards, but you could use anything on the inside. The red one is 3cm by 3cm and the blue one is 4cm x 4cm. They’re easy to make, though a bit fiddly. Cutting the cans is no drama, you can use ordinary scissors. For the directions, check this thread on Craftster.

3. More Abraham Owls

A gift for my Aunt’s birthday (she was born on the 4th of July yanno). The Abraham Owl pattern is free from LollyChops.

4. A Heart Pincushion

All 4 of the fabrics for the heart came from the same shirt, so you can imagine what a freakish disaster that shirt was before I hacked it up for my own needs. Thank you Savers! The pattern and tutorial for this pincushion (which would be easy to adapt to shapes other than hearty ones) can be found at So Happy Together.

5. Tenticlo

Tenticlo is my own design, made for a Free Range Monster swap (ie, design and sew a monster). I’ll be posting a pattern and tute for this guy sometime in the next few days. He came out pretty well, he’s entirely hand sewn in felt.

So that’s most of what I’ve been up to, I’m in the middle of some flowers for a swap right now, and there’s 1 other thing I made which I can’t post pics of yet because I want the person who is getting it to be surprised, and Australia Post is being a bitch about mail delivery.

Till next time, tarah!

Kokopelli, ya chicken.

Swap Bot is most certainly making me get my crafty arse in gear. Today I sat myself down on said arse and made something for another swap. In this one, which I hosted actually, participants had to create some art to fit into a mailable photoframe. I still have one to make (but it’s for Angela, so she can wait if I can’t get it done), but this one is going out tomorrow:

My partner for this swap mentioned she collects kokopellis, so of course I had no idea what a one of those even was. Thank you google! The kokopelli is a Native American fertility deity who overlooks childbirth and crops.  Now you’re saying “Well DUH Frog, what ELSE would it be?” to which I can only say “Nertz to you, I’m Australian”. Of course I’d seen a kokopelli before, I just didn’t know what they were called. Stop picking on me!

Uh, anyway, this one is made from fabric, as you can see.  I made the background from some offcuts I had to hand. The kokopelli itself is felt, hand sewn on (no iron on adhesive for this little black duck [only because I didn't have any to hand]), with the flute and headfeathers added later in 6 strands of embroidery thread.  I sewed the whole lot to the back of the felt frame and tucked it into the frame, ready to send.

*Takes bow*

Another something heading out in the mail tomorrow is ma chicken.

Just kicking on back and enjoying the Aussie sunshine before being stuffed in a postpack and mailed to America. She’s actually a Chickummyjig, and you can find the pattern for her at Myrtle and Eunice.  If you’re observant, you’ll notice the same two fabrics I used to back the kokopelli. Which means I’ve blogged these in the wrong order, really.  I chose felt for the wings, but to be honest I regret it, they’re a bit too sticky-to-the-body (stop me if I get technical on you here). However overall I’m pleased with her, and I hope she’ll be welcomed in her new home.

I don’t think Chook the Budgie will be sad to see her go.

Evil Budgie Eye says “Get out of my space, overgrown sock puppet”.

Oh Really, Owls?

Really! Again for Swap-Bot I finished these guys today.

They’re not QUITE as classy or well made as the originals which I shall link to later on in this post, but I think they came out pretty cute.  The main bodies are just three pieces, the pointy owl top and the base.

The base, being round, is a touch tricky for people like me. I suggest when you make them (there is no IF you make them, it’s all WHEN. I mean seriously, LOOK at them) you just take it super slow and careful. Unless you’re an amazing sewing person, in which case – bah on you.

I also recommend leaving a much larger gap in the side for turning and stuffing as you need to slip a cardboard base in there. Lots easier without having to fold the card.

Here they are having a little conflab about the future, they are destined to be shipped off to the US tomorrow or Monday for my swap partner.

And here they are rushing off to find their passports and pack their luggage, which consists of a collection of magazines for the plane, and hats in case of hot sun conditions.

Mama has “ordered” two of these for my Aunts birthday, so there’s more to come. Now you’ve seen them and want some for yourself, the best thing to do would be to wander on over to the tutorial and pattern on Lollychops.  It’s possibly the most entertaining tutorial ever.

Of Ankles and Frogs.

pollyfrog

The many moods of PollyFrog. I finished her today with the coconut  buttons for her eyes. The material is from a skirt I picked up at Savers for $3. Whoot whoot cheap fabric! She came out super well, her limbs are nice and dangly and her body is very firm and snuggle-able. I put a bag of plastic pellets in her butt to allow her to sit which she does pretty well, though sometimes you have to thwack her into place. She’s really rather dee-vine darlinks.

The other thing I did today was crack my ankle – again. As a teen I had very weak ankles which would give up on me when walking down steps or slops, leaving me to fall in a heap at least once every couple of weeks. Seems like this is happening again, as two mornings this week I’ve cracked it getting out of bed. Today it actually made a noise when it did it, so that’s new. I know it’s directly related to my weight.  The other day when it happened I was mostly alright, except for when I’d been sitting. Then it would give way as I stood up and send pain up my leg. This morning and until lunch time the whole lower leg throbbed. It’s better now I have it braced. I’m waiting for the other one to go now, which it will as it’s been aching for a while. Oh the fun of a collapsing skeleton!

It always starts in the left side, which the physio pointed out is again about an inch lower than my right. Which is a sign I really do need to pull my finger out and get some weight off as I was aligned quite nicely for a while.