Friday, 27 March 2009

Rainbow Daze

I've been doing a lot of playing recently. I've been experimenting with different dyeing techniques (and generally making a big mess in my kitchen!) I saw a competition on the I'd Dye For Britian group on Ravelry for Spiral Dyeing so I thought I'd give it a go.

My attempts at dyeing wool fibre so far have been a little sketchy. Only I could manage to felt superwash! Anyway, I followed a great tutorial and managed to create some pretty cool rainbow fibre - AND I DIDN'T FELT IT! Woo hoo!

I'm really pleased with how it turned out. I can't wait to spin it!





Thursday, 5 March 2009

Turning Japanese!


A couple of days ago I took delivery of a very special parcel. I was given some money for my birthday so I spent it on Japanese craft books. I bought a book of childrens dressmaking patterns, a crochet accessories book and a sashiko embroidery book. They are fantastic! I can't read Japanese but the directions are so clear it's very easy to understand. Now I just need more hours in the day to do all the projects!

Thursday, 19 February 2009

New Shoes!



I have a thing for shoes. I like shoes but I sometimes have trouble getting ones that fit me right because I have short, wide feet.

Recently I've had the urge to buy some red shoes. I found this pair of Hush Puppies on eBay and thought I'd put in a bid for them. I didn't think I'd win but I did! A brand new pair of Hush Puppies in red leather for only £13!!! Bargain! They arrived today and they fit perfectly (please excuse the purple socks, I know they don't exactly go with red shoes but I was too excited to change them). The bestest thing is they are Hush Puppies Harmony range, they are eco friendly and made from recycled materials. Happiness = new red shoes!

:D :D :D

Saturday, 14 February 2009

I NEED this bag!

I have my little obsessions, currently I'm on a major Japanese kick. I am buying Japanese books and fabrics, playing Japanese games, cooking Japanese food and even learning some of the language! I am particularly loving Japanese craft books, they are so far ahead of what you can get here in the UK or USA. I love their attention to detail, the simplicity of the designs and the cuteness without been too cutesy if you know what I mean.

On my quest to buy more Japanese craft books I visited YesAsia.com. BIG MISTAKE! Ok, I could have maxed out the credit card several times over with all the wonderful stuff they sell there. I was good and only ordered 3 books but I did stumble across their sister website YesStyle. It's full of asian fashion and accessories. As much as I love the clothes I no longer have the figure to fit into them, so I started browsing the accessories and fell in love with this bag.



It's not Japanese (it's from Hong Kong) but it's just so brilliant! They do puppies, bunnies and pandas too. Better hide the credit cards as I feel another shopping spree coming on!

Friday, 23 January 2009



I've been busy with my sewing machine again. I got a wonderful pattern book for Christmas full of girly clothes and I decided to make this top for my daughter Emily. I'm really pleased with how it turned out, especially seeing as the pattern was quite a challenge. The pattern book was called Girly Style Wardrobe and it's written entirely in Japanese! Now I don't know much Japanese but thankfully the instructions are in the form of wonderfully drawn pictures so it wasn't that hard to figure out. I think it's pretty cute and so does Emily!

Friday, 31 October 2008

NOT Sew Hip!

There is a new sewing magazine hitting the newstands today, Sew Hip. Hooray! I hear you shout! Erm, well, no actually. On the surface it looks fab, all bright, colourful and full of promise but on the inside it's a little lacking in substance.

Sew Hip is a British magazine and you'd image the contents would be British too? Erm, no. Most of it is American and Australian. You'd think they'd have chosen the best patterns for the first issue? Erm, no. Amongst the patterns are 2 tote bags, 2 quilts and 2 needle cases? Hardly inspiring!

There is a cute toddler outfit and I thought I'd give it a go. I started with the blouse but had a little trouble with the pattern. I had a look at the instructions, the picture captions are wrong but that happenes sometimes in magazines. Getting the pattern is a little tricky as you have to enlarge it 200%. I have one of those all in one scanner/copier/printer things and after an hour of tracing, cutting and cursing I managed to get the pattern the right size. That's when I realised the first problem.

Problem number 1.
The pattern parts are labelled the wrong way around! The "sleeve" part is wider than the body and the "body" part tapers towards the bottom. Hmm, that doesn't sound quite right does it.

Problem number 2.
The cutting instructions are awful!. It tells you to fold the fabric with the selvages together and cut the pieces. Erm, we're doing a toddler top here, the pieces are pretty narrow so you're going to waste a heck of a lot of fabric doing it like that and you'd wouldn't fit all the pieces on 1m of fabric doing it that way. I used my brain and folded the selvages to the centre of the fabric giving me 2 folds across the width. The pattern doesn't actually say to cut 2 of each pattern piece, you are left to figure that out for yourself. It's nothing to an experienced seamstress but a beginner may get confused. Also it says to observe the grain lines and fold lines but there aren't any on the pattern!

Problem number 3.
The elastic guides seem to be a little out. The cuffs end up 4" wide and the neck only 7" wide. I made the cuff elastic shorter but used the 14" measurement for the neck but the neck looked much tighter than the one in the magazine.

Problem number 4.
I should have realised earlier but the sizing of the pattern is really big. It's supposed to fit a 6-12 month old baby and I know peasant tops have a lot of ease across the chest but this one measures 30"!!! If a 6 month old has a 18" chest that gives 12" of ease! I tried the top on my 4 year old daughter, the sleeves and body length were a little short but it fitted her!

I had wanted to make this top for a 1 year old but I'm going to have to draw my own pattern from scratch as this one is awful. I haven't tried to make the bloomers, the top put me off!

I looked at the other patterns to see if they were any better. They aren't. There is a pattern for a felted bag. It says you can felt any pure wool fabric, not just old sweaters. Erm, no. You can only felt handwashable wool because superwash/machine washable wool has been chemically treated so it won't felt in the washing machine. Trying to felt superwash wool is a common mistake to make and you would have thought they'd put something about it in the instructions as it is rather important but no, they didn't.

Now I appreciate there are often teething problems with new magazines but this was too much for me. Did ayone proof read it at all? Do they actually know what they are talking about? I honestly don't know!

I don't think I'll be buying any more issues of Sew Hip and I won't be recommending it to my friends.

Saturday, 16 August 2008

My latest project: A Feeder Cover Version!

Last week I took a little break from the needles and did a different kind of project - recording a cover version of Feeder's Silent Cry.

A few years ago I did a few cover versions of Feeder songs for a fan tribute CD, A Place Inside Our Minds. The lad who organised it got in touch with me recently and asked if would be interested in doing another track I haven't done any music in ages and thought it would be nice to dust off the old gear and give it a go.

6 days and a lot of hard work later my DH and I produced this. Enjoy!



To see more Feeder fan cover versions please visit www.silenttribute.co.uk