Sunday, November 3, 2013

Choosing Fabric Using Illustrations from a Kids Book

There's nothing like getting a Halloween-related post published in early November, right? But although this is a post I've been planning for well over a month, the topic is applicable around the year.

So like many folks on Etsy, I sell there partly to support my habit. And lately my habit for secondhand books, something I've had for years, has grown. As a result, I've started selling books in my Etsy shop. But many of my finds go directly into our household library and some have become very popular with my kids. The Vanishing Pumpkin by Tony Johnston with illustrations by Tomie dePaola is one of those books.
A recent secondhand book find -- it was in much better shape before repeated readings over the past month or so.
This is a fun book to read aloud and kids seem to really enjoy it. After reading it a few times I started to notice dePaola's autumnal color palette.


I liked how well the soft shades of orange, green, brown, and yellow with added blue and purple stayed in a similar value range while varying from one another, sort of a like a great scrap quilt. Soon I had taken the book out of my kids' room and into my fabric room to use as a guide in pulling fabric. Matching my stash to the pictures sounded easier than it ended up being, giving me a whole new appreciation for dePaola's work.



Matching just the right shades was a challenge, and even then I rarely had exact matches. I quickly realized that even the "darker" olives and browns in the book were actually in a medium value range, and I had few fabrics that matched. Above are some fabrics that made it through the first round but that got cut when I reevaluated in better light.



The blue of the old woman's coat was particularly hard to match -- the blue swatch shown above is from Lizzy House's 1001 Peeps line.


In the end I found I mostly had orange and green fabrics that would work, with a few yellows/golds, some neutrals and only one purple. It certainly could work specifically for Halloween, especially with more emphasis on the purple with maybe some black mixed in. Or I could take out the purple and blue and still have a nice selection for an autumn quilt or table setting.


I also have a Kona Solid charm pack -- I think it's the Dusty collection -- that had fabrics that would work, particularly for the olive green range. Which should come as no surprise, really.

I think I might cut some charm squares from the fabrics I pulled from my stash so I have my own precut  set ready to go the next time I want something soft and lovely for fall. And now I'm already eyeing other books in my kids' room for possible quilt inspiration. I wonder what's next?

Sunday, August 11, 2013

Happy Birthday to Me!

I know, I know, I haven't blogged about anything of substance in well over a year, and yet I think I can just waltz back in to talk about my Etsy shop?

Well, yes, actually, that's exactly what I'm doing.

I just want to put it out there that my little shop just celebrated its second anniversary, and to mark the occasion I decided to offer free shipping to the U.S. on any orders placed before midnight (Mountain time) on Sunday, August 11. However, I've been meaning to get this blog post up for the past day or so and am getting to it so late that I'll probably leave the $0 shipping charges in effect through Monday evening.

I've been adding items to my inventory lately knowing that this is the time of year when most people are starting to look for seasonal fabric. Hence, I have some Halloween fabric:
Halloween fabric Spellbound from Maywood Studio 4 fat quarters

Halloween fabric Trick or Treat from Northcott

Halloween fabric Harvest Moon border stripe from Northcott 1/3 yard


And some Christmas fabric:
Christmas fabric 6" charm squares w/gold metallic accents

Christmas fabric 5" charm squares w/snowmen & snowflakes

Christmas fabric Confectionary Stripe from Michael Miller 1/2 yard

And I'll be adding some more I expect.

I also have more vintage items -- to be specific, I have vintage illustrated children's books. I've been collecting kids books for years, and while I love bringing them home I don't always have room to keep them. Actually, at this point I have more vintage items in my shop than I have fabric for sale.

Here are some of the books:
Kid Camping from Aaaaiii! to Zip by Patrick F. McManus


Cat (hardcover book) by B. Kliban

Bernard of Scotland Yard by Berniece Freschet

Tales of Edgar Allan Poe, adapted by Diana Stewart, illustrated by Charles Shaw
 I also have four volumes of the Best in Children's Books series from the late 1950s to 1960: volumes 22, 25 (including illustrations by Richard Scarry), 32, and 37 (also with illustrations by Richard Scarry). I love this series -- each volume offers a fantastic cross-section of mid-century illustration styles.

And there are more. There are some interesting, unique books in there: Bernard of Scotland Yard is wonderfully illustrated throughout but the story and text are involved enough to make it a great book for an early reader to tackle on her/his own. And the illustrations in Tales of Edgar Allan Poe are not for the little ones; in fact, that book would be a great addition to any horror fan's collection. Kid Camping from Aaaaiii! to Zip is a fun guide to what a kid might expect to find while camping, covering silly topics (like the "crouch hop" one does after hammering one's thumb setting up a tent) as well as important ones (like, for instance, bears in the wilderness). And the illustrations by Roy Doty bring me right back to my Judy-Blume-reading youth -- I half-expect Fudge to appear every time I turn the page. You can see examples of the illustrations in the Etsy listings.

OK, I'll stop now. Thanks for reading.


Sunday, May 27, 2012

What can you make with 6" charm squares?

Autumn fabric 6" charm squares

It's been interesting to get into my stash and try to pare it down by cutting 6" charm squares to sell on Etsy. I've decided to cut a set of squares for myself alongside the sets I'm cutting for potential sale. I want to challenge myself to make something out of a charm square set.

In addition to just using them as is, here are some things you can do with 6" squares that have come to mind while cutting:
  1. You can get two half-square triangles that will finish at 5" from two 6" squares. You could either trim the squares to 5 7/8" first, or sew the HSTs first and then trim them to 5 1/2".
  2. Cut two 6" squares into four equal 3" squares each. Pair the squares up and sew eight HSTs that will finish at 2". (Same as with #1, either trim the squares to 2 7/8" or trim the HSTs to 2 1/2".)
  3. Cut two 6" squares into nine equal 2" squares each. Pair the squares up and sew eighteen HSTs that will finish at 1". (Again, trim squares to 1 7/8" or HSTs to 1 1/2".)
  4. Cut one 6" square into two 3" x 6" strips. Cut another 6" square into four 3" squares. Use quick piecing methods to make two flying geese units.
  5. Cut 6" squares into 2" or 3" strips for use in a roman coins quilt, rail fence quilt, or piano key border.
  6. Cut two 6" squares across both diagonals into 4 triangles each. Sew two triangles of each print to make an hourglass block that finishes at 4 3/4".
  7. Cut a 6" square into four 3" squares, and then cut one of the 3" squares into four 1 1/2" squares. Cut two 3" squares from a neutral or solid fabric. Use quick corner piecing to sew a 1 1/2" square to one corner of the neutral or solid squares. Sew two of the 3" charm squares to the two neutral/solid squares to make a bow tie block.
The ideas... they just keep coming! I need to stop cutting and start sewing...
Blue 6" charm squares

Food and drink novelty 6" charm squares

Saturday, April 7, 2012

Fabric gift wrap

I had an overdue baby shower gift for my cousin and his wife that I needed to wrap before mailing. I was just about to dig out some wrapping paper and ribbons when I thought, "I must have fabric in my stash I can use."


I think these bits of the Cogsmo panel and circuitry print were just what I needed. I fussy cut two images from the panel, sewed a narrow channel across the top of each, sewed them together on three sides to make a simple bag, and then pulled (or rather, pushed with a bamboo skewer) a piece of wool yarn through each channel and tied them together to form a drawstring. Into the bag went a book. The shirt I just rolled up in a piece of the circuitry print and tied on either end with yarn so it looks like a big piece of candy. I hope they like the gifts, and I hope they can re-use the wrapping!


Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Placemats will save us all

I have decided that, in order for my children not to give the impression to the world at large that they were raised by wolves, I need to make placemats. I didn't realize until very recently the civilizing force of a simple set of placemats, but now that I don't have any, I miss them tremendously.

Actually, I think we do have some "special occasion" placemats tucked away in the linen closet, probably under the table cloth we use once a year at the holidays. Oh that's right -- we have that set my mother-in-law gave my husband before I met him, most likely in the hopes that he would use them and thereby show the world that he was not in fact raised by wolves despite his bachelor (read: light on the housekeeping) ways.

When I was growing up, every night my brother and I would have to set the table for dinner, which included putting out placemats, napkins (paper), and silverware. It was hardly Downton Abbey-esque in terms of formality, but there were rules and expectations for how we behaved at the dinner table. The hubby and I have been exceedingly casual about mealtimes up until now, doing a lot of eating in front of the TV, or on the go, or whenever the mood strikes. But Little H (our toddler) has been old enough to eat at the table with us for a while, and it's time to indoctrinate train teach her how to eat at the dinner table.

When the three of us sat down to eat last night (Littler J the baby was taking a late nap) it wasn't just the odds and ends that had been pushed to one end of the table to make room that made it feel like it wasn't quite the family table I want. It just seemed so unfinished and bare without the unifying effect of placemats.

Am I making too big a deal out of this? Perhaps. Maybe I just want an excuse to sew something relatively quick and easy. I do know that deciding to pare down my stash by trying to sell precuts has been one of the best motivators to get me to want to sew from my stash and not just look at it from afar. Getting in there, pulling out fabric, trying to figure out what goes with what and how it could be used has made me think, "Well, if this doesn't sell, I'll just make [fill in the blank] out of it."

Doesn't matter the reason. I've decided I want placemats, so placemats I shall have!