Tag Archives: tutorial

Quick Christmas Gift – Tea Towel Tutorial

I needed a gift for a Christmas exchange and I came up with this little project.  Trimming blank tea towels is easy and takes little time to do.  And there is an endless variety of fabrics to choose from!  It doesn’t have to be limited to a Christmas project!

It is not mentioned in the tutorial, but you could certainly be creative and embellish with ribbon and lace too. 

Click on the Tutorial tab above for a link to a pdf that you can print if you like.

Enjoy the season!

Baby Quilt and Japanese Gift Bags

My sewing machine is home from the hospital (Yes) and we’ve (my Bernina and me of course) finished the doll quilt:

And the baby quilt is done too:

Now to move on to other projects.

I came upon a tutorial and decided the Little Japanese Bag project was perfect for small Christmas gifts.  Here’s how they look finished: 

Don’t they look sweet?  They are even sweeter filled with foil wrapped chocolate treats!

I used my handy dandy trusty tri-tool ruler to cut pairs of triangles.  Next time, I won’t be so lazy…I’ll make a large triangle template.  This size is cute, but it is small (which is a fine size for an ornament, party favor, or just that “little something extra”).

Cut pairs of triangles (right sides together):

Pairs are sewn, turned and pressed:

Petal points turned and pinned:

Closer look:

Sewn petals:

Closer look:

One seam sewn (the left is the petal seam…the bottom is the side seam…stop at the petal seam):

All side seams sewn:

Turned…they are lookin’ like bags now:

Isn’t this just the cutest little mini pouch?

See?  I told you these are small!  And so cute!

These would look terrific in any fabric…think Halloween or a birthday or any other occasion.

You can find the link for the tutorial on the Tutorial Tab of this blog.  Thank you to Hannelore Nunn for sharing !

Pin Basting

Since I quilt using a domestic sewing machine, I am sharing my method of pin basting, or prepping for machine quilting.

I am blessed to have a banquet table (2, in fact).  If you don’t have one, perhaps your church will let you use their’s (this is what I did before I got mine).  It is important to have the type of table that has a small enough lip on it that you can clamp office clamps to.  I bought these tables with the intention of using them for pin basting…do not use your dining room table unless you don’t mind the distressed look!


I use risers to gain height and make this much easier on my back.  You can use coffee cans, pvc pipe or whatever works for you.

I know my floor needs repainting!

If I am basting a large quilt, I will match the center of the backing to the center of the table.  However, this is a baby quilt and I am not concerned about it.  Clamp the backing to the table.  Allow for an inch or so of excess backing all around.  Do not stretch the fabric!  We want it taut, but fabric has memory and we do not want it bouncing back when we unclamp it.  This will cause puckers in our machine quilting.

This particular quilt is shorter than my table on one edge.  Therefore, I will secure it with tape.  I like to use painters tape, but I’m improvising and using transparent tape since I don’t have any painters tape left (I’ve actually used it for painting  trim and walls!).

Smooth out the batting onto the backing.  No stretching; no wrinkles!

In this case, I am using a low-loft Dream Poly.  The thicker the batting, the harder it is to machine quilt on a domestic machine, so ya might want to stick to low-lofts.

No, my baby quilt isn’t a queen size. I’m cutting the batting to size.

Hubby brought sweet goodness home!

It is very yummy indeed!

Smooth the quilt top on the batting.  Again, no wrinkles and no stretching!  Pin baste about every 4″ (I pin about a fist apart).

Cut off the excess batting and backing if there is any.

 

Unclamp and slide the quilt sandwich over.  Reclamp the pin basted side.  Move the unpinned quilt top and batting out of the way and clamp the unpinned backing.  No stretching or wrinkles; just taut!  Continue as before.

Unclamp and we are ready to machine quilt!