Atti’s Mobile and Door sign

I’ve been meaning to share this forever, but you know, life and all.

I made a couple additions to Atti’s room in between the time he came home and the time we transitioned him into his own crib.

PA164605
For starters, I made this cute little door sign. The same friend who cut all the vinyl lettering for his walls made this little vinyl cut out for me as a gift tag. So I just grabbed a little chalkboard from Michaels, painted the outside in a color from his room, slapped the vinyl on and drew the little lightening bolts with a paint pen.

Then I had to make him a mobile. I couldn’t put my little guy to sleep in his own big boy crib without something to look at.
homemade baby mobile

This one came after several failed attempts with wool roving. I finally just got too impatient for wet felting and used the leftover bedding fabric to sew up some balls of different sizes with one of the 800 patterns available on line. I found a pattern I liked (can’t remember where I got it now), brought it into a Word document, and then copy/pasted until I had three different patterns I could enlarge and shrink to the size I wanted.

homemade baby mobile again
I strung them together with long lengths of fishing line, tying a knot at the bottom of each ball for it to sit on.

The top of the mobile is made from two wooden square-ish pieces I found in a random little craft shop nearby. I was looking for something I could use besides an embroidery hoop because anal little me just had trouble living with something that wasn’t perfect, and the little screw at the top would have driven me nuts. I found these in an aisle with a bunch of basketweaving stuff.
baby's eye view

The only part of this project that was at all tricky was tying the mobile pieces together while keeping it balanced. I started by tying a long piece of fishing line to each corner of the bottom piece, and then letting the bottom bit rest on a table while I tied the top piece on as close to level as I could. It took a couple of tries, but I got there. Then I took all the fishing lines together, and letting the top piece rest on the table this time, I tied them altogether to create a loop, centering the bundle inside the square so it would hang right. Don’t be discouraged if it takes a few tries. Fishing line is cheap.

Seed Beaded Bangle

Seed Beaded Bangle

Gosh I love seed beads. I don’t know what it is, they just make me happy. I love them. But I don’t love most of what I see made from them. I have the same problem with crochet. I prefer the practice of crocheting over the practice of knitting, but I rarely love something crocheted. It’s quite a conundrum.

I bought these seed beads years ago, and they’ve been sitting in my project bag waiting and waiting for me to come up with something to do with them. I bought this book a few years back and I was really inspired by the advanced projects shown (with pictures only, unfortunately) so I decided to just start weaving and see what happened.

Bangle in progress
This was all done in peyote stitch, which is really easy once you get past the first two rows. And even the first two rows aren’t bad, they just require a little thought. I really loved how this peyote stitch felt. It was like chainmail or snake skin. I got really inspired by it and I have big plans for a series of artwork made from seed beads, I just need to wait until I can save up the money. Beads are crazy expensive when you start talking large scale.

Once I got to this point I thought I’d just weave the sides together to make a tube and sew them together to make a bangle. It worked, sort of. But I’m not super thrilled with the results. Next time I’ll just start out using the tubular peyote stitch and I’ll get a much better outcome, I just didn’t know where I was going to end up this time when I started stitching. This stitch made something that was pretty stiff. It didn’t really want to go from pipe shape to bangle shape, so it kind of buckled in places, and I had to basically fold it in half to control that. So, it’s a little squashed looking.

Still an interesting experiment. Once I can get back to the bead store I think this experiment will send me off in a couple of different interesting directions, but mainly I’m pleased with myself because it was such a deviation from my normal style. I am a planned crafter. I plot designs, I draw diagrams, I measure, I do the math. The only time I can just let go and create is when I scrapbook, because everything else takes so much time. I just can’t stomach the thought of ripping back hours of knitting or sewing or embroidery as I experiment my way towards a finished project. It makes my stomach hurt just thinking about it. Yet, this time, I did it. And while I’m never going to give up my diagrams, I can see the benefit in just letting go and experimenting every once in a while. Just maybe once in a long while.

Plate Wall

Plate Wall From the ground floor

I’ve finally managed to tackle another big job I’ve been putting off and get all these plates I’ve been collecting over the past year hung up along the staircase. Living with those brown paper circles was making me batty!

Plate Wall Full View

This was a big job because it really required a solid uninterrupted couple of hours work for each phase of the project. Which is why I got stalled at the paper template phase for over a month. It’s simple, but it does take some time. Especially if you do it on a staircase like I did. Staircases and ladders get complicated.

Plate Wall Bottom of Stairs

The plates are a collection I’ve put together by culling ebay and vintage shops looking for glass plates made in the 50’s and 60’s. It all started with those peach saucers. Bear’s mom Sally had a bowl she inherited from her mom in that same finish – peach lusterware. I’m a sucker for anything that’s iridescent or opalescent, and that lusterware has such a gorgeous rainbow shine on top of the peach. I started looking into that and discovered a whole world of fantastic glass dishes. The most famous is milk glass, and then after Martha Stewart a lot of people have heard of Jadeite, that green glass that is so highly coveted. Lusterware is definitely collectible, but it isn’t quite as in demand yet. Hopefully I can collect a full set some day. Although I was super jealous when I saw that Eddie Ross has not only a full dish set, but a punch bowl and cups!

Plate Wall Top of Stairs

I arranged the plates in kind of a wedge shape so that it would look interesting, but also because it looked the best on that particular wall. The ceiling at the base of the stairs is over 20 feet high, so if I didn’t make the design wider down there it just looked minuscule.

Plate Wall Closeup
This is another kind of glass I learned about called Carnival glass. It’s crazy expensive, but I lucked into this little gem on ebay. It’s got that beautiful iridescent rainbow shine I’m so obsessed with.

Regular plate hangers wouldn’t work on some of the smaller or oddly shaped pieces, but Martha came through for me with her plate hanger tutorial. It worked like a dream.

Plate Wall Closeup
These two are the only modern plates I hung. These were at Anthropologie on clearance for dirt cheap and I couldn’t resist. The colors were perfect, they actually had our initials, and I liked the idea of adding a weird little monogram to the collection.

Over the years I’ve really struggled to identify my personal style. I love high glam, austere, modern design, and I really love the homemade traditional look. It’s my constant challenge to find ways to marry those two passions. I think the traditional decor of decorating with plates still fits with my modern decor thanks to the nontraditional arrangement and the high gloss of the glass. Even though these plates are (mostly) all vintage, the glass and finish just makes them look so modern.

Atti’s Alphabet Quilt

I’ve been meaning to write up a pattern for this quilt for Atti’s entire life, but it’s OK that I put it off because now I have it to share for a day like today – between project finishes, working on stuff I can’t share, laid up with a bum knee.

I’m sure you’ll recognize this quilt, it’s in nearly every picture I take of Atti.
Alphabet Quilt
Finished size is 36″ wide x 46″ high.

Here’s what you’ll need:
1 1/2 yds of light colored fabric for the large squares (if you scrimp and don’t have to worry about the orientation of the fabric, you could probably get by with 1 yard)
1 yd of fabric for the sashing and border
2 yds for backing and binding (more if you do your binding on the bias)
Assorted fat quarters to use for the letters
Fusible Web
Thread in coordinating colors

Cut 12 pieces of light colored fabric 7″ x 10 1/2″. If your fabric has a definite top and bottom to the pattern, then you’ll want to cut 6 pieces 7 x 10 1/2, and 6 pieces 10 1/2 x 7, so that you can turn them how you’ll need to without things looking funny.
Alphabet Quilt Step 1
Machine applique your letters onto your blocks. I start by printing my letters off on the computer. I chose a basic sans serif font, something like Ariel would work well, and increased the font size until the letters were about 4 1/2″ tall. Two of your blocks (ABC, and XYZ) will have to fit three letters instead of two, so I made those letters 3 1/2″ tall. Iron a piece of fusible web onto the fabric for the applique, and then cut out using your printout as a pattern. Iron the letters onto your block, and applique in place using a zigzag stitch set to a short stitch length. You’ll need to use a stabilizer so things don’t pucker up on you. You can shell out the cash for a fancy one, but I just always use a coffee filter here. You can see this with pictures on this tutorial.
Alphabet Quilt Embroidery

Remember as you arrange your letters to alternate the direction of the blocks. ABC is horizontal, DE is vertical, FG is horizontal, HI is vertical, JK is horizontal, you get the idea.

Cut 24 pieces of sashing 2 1/4″ x 10 1/2″. Sew one sashing strip to the long sides of each alphabet block.
Alphabet Quilt Step 2

Then sew your alphabet blocks together.
Alphabet Quilt Step 3

Once all your blocks are together, add a 3″ border around the entire quilt top.

I kept the quilting really simple on this, mainly because it was my first try at machine quilting. I did a simple zig zag pattern on the sashing, and then inside each block I quilted around each letter.
Alphabet Quilt quilting

This quilt, along with the matching bumper I made, got me so hooked on machine applique. After this I started making those burp rags, and I’m toying around with doing it on the 12 Days of Christmas tree skirt I have on the agenda. It’s one of those things that seems so much harder than it actually is. You just have to play around with your stitch settings, and then practice going around curves. By the time you’re done with this quilt, you’ll be a pro.

Alphabet Quilt

Healer Embroidered Quilt

Once we got Atti’s official Cerebral Palsy diagnosis, we had to start a whole new round of evaluations and state agencies. We just went this week to a school nearby where they have a huge therapy gym with equipment that would make your mind boggle, and a new Occupational Therapist and Physical Therapist put him through his paces. These things take time to go through all the layers of red tape, but it looks like in about a month I’ll be taking Atti to a school twice a week for therapy. It will be for the best in the long run, they are better funded and equipped than the home therapists, but it does mean that we’ll lose the Physical Therapist that has been coming to help Atti every week for a year.

It’s a very complicated mix of emotions. I’m excited about the new place – they have a treadmill with a harness to teach him how to walk! – I think we’re going to get really good and aggressive treatment, and it will be really good to become a part of the community of disabled kids and their moms. But Jan has been in my home every week for a year, helping Atti get bigger and stronger every day, loving him and being loved by him. Atti loves to give her kisses and asks for kisses from her. She was in our family Christmas card for crying out loud. It’s a major loss to not have her nearby.

So I had to make her something and it had to be good.

But since I don’t really know when her treatment will end, it had to be quick. And since that job unpleasantness I mentioned means that Jared is leaving his current job (everything’s fine, more news to come), it had to be cheap.

I raided the fabric I had (calling it a stash is really an overstatement) and I grabbed a bunch of different types of fabric with different weights in colors that seemed to work for me. Jan is a vibrant redhead who looks fabulous in jewel tones, so I thought that would be a good way to go.

Healer Quilt

I really like quilting with non-quilting fabric. My first attempt at quilting involved knits and flannels and some fuzzy thing that I paper pieced together and I really loved the effect. In this one there’s some cotton, some linen, some stretchy red thing, and the main cream fabric is a crepe backed satin that I had left over from my quilt of hate. I just pieced them together in a very easy modern block pattern, pretty much making it up as I went.

That took care of the fast and cheap parts, but I still needed something to make it good.
Healer Embroidery

I did this little embroidery in the bottom corner, inspired by all the embroidery that…oh, shoot. I can’t remember who it was. It was during all the doll quilt making of last year. Maybe Vicki at Turkey Feathers? Anyway, somebody out there was making little doll quilts and embroidering inspirational messages on them, and it inspired this. Sorry whoeveryouwere!

I sketched this out quickly and stitched it up while watching LDS Conference over the weekend, and I absolutely love it. I think it’s subtle, but powerful, if that makes any sense. And once the quilt is quilted it will really become a focal point, since I literally plan on drawing a circle around the design and then radiating that outward. I want to evoke a rippling pond to kind of symbolize how significant her efforts will be in Atti’s life.

The only trick now will be basting the quilt, since I seem to have torn some cartilage in my knee while out gardening yesterday. I am a cartoon.

Anyway, while I was stitching this up during conference, talk after talk focused on Jesus Christ and how we need to turn to Him when times are hard. I sat there stitching and thinking about His role in my life, and it just all seemed perfect. So I thought I’d share this little design with all of you as a little Easter present.

Healer Embroidery pdf Download

I’m learning photoshop publicly as I go, so if anyone has any tips on how to get some nice smooth lines, I’d love the input. Right now I’m just doing it with a steady mouse hand and a paintbrush. There’s got to be an easier way.

DISASTER!!

If you take bright red wool, a white corduroy background, and highly acidic cat pee, guess what you get.

Tree skirt DISASTER!

I had *just* finished the binding on my beaded tree skirt, piled it on my desk while I toyed with the idea of buttons, and one of my soon to be killed cats decided to make themselves extremely comfortable.

I think a cat skin coat is going to be my new summer accessory.

Tree skirt DISASTER!

I soaked it in my fancy embroidery soap, ran gallons and gallons of cold water over it, and only succeeded in spreading the hot pink around.

Tree skirt DISASTER!

Looks like I’ll be starting this one over. After I stop sobbing and extricate myself from this gallon of ice cream.

Because this is just how my life works, this comes on the same day that we got bad job news for Bear. I shouldn’t blog this, but, anyway…bad news.

Shop update is LIVE!

Spring 2009 Shop Flyer

Well, it only took me two hours longer than I planned, but it’s done.

I didn’t feel like I’d gotten that much stuff finished, but I guess I forgot about all the different versions. Holy cow that took forever.

Anyway, thanks for putting up with all the shop discussion. I realize that on most blogs this happens without all the hubbub, but this was a big deal for me. Years ago, pre-etsy, pre-craft blogs, pre-paypal, before all the things that make online sales so darn easy, I started a business selling things I made. My friend helped me launch this big website and since I was independent I had to do all the hard stuff myself – no easy marketing, no payment processing that all comes with etsy – it was my own site and I had to do it all myself.

It was a miserable failure. Partly because I named it “Eclectic Sass” (I thought it was such a great description of what I was trying to do) without realizing that the url could be read Eclectic’s Ass. I was doomed from the beginning.

Then there was the fact that I priced everything crazy high because I kept hoping that things would take off and allow me to leave my mergers and acquisitions job, and since I was the sole breadwinner back then, the only way I could leave that job was if I made just as much money through my crafting. What a pipe dream.

I went to craft fairs and just watched as person after person liked what I had to offer but was not willing to buy it and my heart broke more and more every time as I realized that things were not going to take off and I was going to be chained to my desk for much longer.

It really was a remarkable learning experience, learned very much the hard way, and I’m still a little gunshy about putting my stuff up for sale. It’s such an investment of money and time, and there are very few people in the world who are willing to pay for all the labor we crafters put into our work. I’m doing it to try to face this fear and let go of it all. So thanks for putting up with me.

On our way

We’re already an hour late getting on the road, and we’re still debating whether or not to bring the pack and play. The trip is off to a great start.

In happier news, I was able to actually finish off that quilt I started three years ago in my quilting class, and since it’s not really my taste and I don’t have a little girl of my own, it’s going to my Sisterfriend Schelle for her two youngest to fight over. I’m sure that cool Aunt Tresa will find herself making another one very soon.

First Try Quilt

This was my first try at stippling, and it’s so very much easier than I ever realized. Like everything in crafting, it’s all about having the right tool for the job and once I got myself that darning foot, the rest was easy as pie (if you don’t look too close). This little girl has quite a thing for butterflies, so in each corner I freehanded a butterfly, and then did a little wavy flight path as the border quilting.

First Try Quilt

Happily, once the quilt was washed and got all those glorious rumples and bumples, it really helped to hide any squashy quilting loops, or backing that got folded over and sewn that way. Not that I would ever do that, of course, I’m just saying.

When next I see you guys I’ll be dealing with this shop update. I’m sure I’m way more excited about it than anyone, you’ll all probably be thrilled when I stop talking about it, but it’s a big deal for me. It’s hard for me to face the rejection of actually putting things up for sale. But more about that on another day. Bear literally has the car halfway out of the garage and is threatening to leave me behind. If I didn’t love this cousin so much, I’d be half tempted to let him. Four days of a house to myself! A girl can dream.

Have a wonderful weekend everyone!

Alphabet Wall

Alphabet Wall

The majority spoke, so I went ahead and hung up my alphabet wall as I planned. I struggled and struggled to get decent photos, but the area is so wide and there’s a pillar in the middle of everything, plus all those weird angles that forced me to get creative in the first place, so here’s the best I could do.

Alphabet Wall

The main focal point starts with this big canvas I painted.
Font Canvas

Then I made up some coordinating mini canvases.
Font Canvas

And then I mixed those with some loose wooden letters I painted up, and some framed images I made up of different font alphabets. The tiny letters are just stuck straight to the wall with little sticky glue dots.
Alphabet Wall

I think it looks fantastic and I can’t stop looking at it. I think I’m going to keep my eye open for some more letters, and Anonymous had a great idea of hanging something above the door to help bring it all together, so this will probably continue to grow. The paper mockups are perfect for getting the placement right, but they were so much more visually heavy than what I wanted to hang, so the finished project looks way more subtle than I thought it was going to.

I don’t draw (yet), I don’t really paint, instead I’ve become quite proficient at cheater methods. Here’s how I made the canvases.

Start by painting the entire canvas the color you’d like your letters to be. Then print letters off the computer in the sizes and fonts you’d like to combine together. Use those printouts as patterns to cut contact paper into that shape. Peel the backing off the contact paper and stick down onto the canvas. Rub really thoroughly to get a good firm stick.

Font Canvas Tutorial

Right over the top of your contact paper, paint the color you’d like your canvas background to be.

Font Canvas Tutorial

Peel off your contact paper masks, and there you go. Something that looks like a screenprinting, so easy that anyone can do it.

I don’t plan on having any of these in the shop as of now. I’m a little bit nervous about how things are going to sell since my etsy shop has been so neglected for so long. So if this is something that interests you, you’ll have to drop me a line and I’ll whip something up before the 30th.

Burp Rag Tutorial

Atti and the burp rag

This is the last project I’m going to work up for my big shop update. Maybe. I think. We’ll see. But I always want to share how I make stuff with you guys because I rarely feel the need to make the same thing twice, so I might as well send an idea out into the world to see what it can make of itself. I learned the hard way a very long time ago that I am an idea person, not a craft fair person. After one year spent making hundreds of decorated matchboxes only to sit at a table and face rejection, I realized that that is no life for me. I’m grateful for those of you that can because I find it endlessly inspiring and I love to buy the stuff, but I never want to make 100 of anything again.

My! Don’t know where that came from. Anyhoo, point is…here’s another tutorial!

So a decorated diaper as a burp rag isn’t really anything new. You can find variations of them all over etsy, including some that have been dyed to try to take away that cloth diaper look. Maybe it’s just me, but the thought of using something meant to cover a bum to wipe a face seems a little bit off. Of course, nothing works better as a burp rag than a diaper, so we are left with quite a conundrum.

Once I finished Atti’s appliqued alphabet quilt, I kind of couldn’t stop myself. So I appliqued his initials on to a diaper, and shortly after that I came across Amy’s machine sewn binding tutorial, so I had to give that a try, and I think that between the two, they do a fine job of taking away that telltale diaper look.

I started by printing off my letters in the size and font I wanted, and then I used them to cut out a piece of fabric with fusible web ironed on to the back.
Appliqued Burp Rag Tutorial

I ironed those in place and then I machine appliqued them down with matching thread.
Appliqued Burp Rag Tutorial

Now, a word about machine applique. For the longest time I thought that you needed a fancy embroidery machine to get decent results, but that is so not true. I use a nice middle of the road Singer and when I’m on my game I can get results that look just like something mass produced with industrial machines.

For almost any fabric you’re going to need a stabilizer. A firm fabric to hold your actual fabric in place and prevent it from being pulled and puckered in every direction from the force of those stitches. This might be heresy to die hard machine embroiderers, but I usually just use a coffee filter I’ve ironed flat. They work fantastic for the simple machine work I do, and they’re wicked cheap. For this particular project, the diaper is so thick and heavy that I didn’t bother with a stabilizer at all.

The only trick is to get your machine settings right, so reading the manual can be helpful here.
Appliqued Burp Rag Tutorial

I have my machine set to a zigzag stitch with a fairly wide stitch width (this changes based on how wide you want your embroidery in proportion to your applique) and a fairly short stitch length. An applique stitch is really just a whole bunch of zigzag stitches squished really really close together.

Appliqued Burp Rag Tutorial
Then I just bound it with bias tape I made out of a coordinating fabric, using Amy’s tutorial.

Appliqued Burp Rags
I’m going to be selling these in groups of three with different coordinating fabrics, but for the ones I made for Atti I made six, each with different fonts and different letters. I used his initials, but the ones I’m making right now I’m using ‘abc,’ ‘123’ and ‘Baby.’ Of course, I’m open to custom orders so drop me a line if there’s a monogram you must have.

Atti and the burp rag
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