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Showing posts with label fabric. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fabric. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 4, 2015

Geekly Chic Around the World

I recently had an hour of free time and spent it trolling through Instagram hashtags looking for projects made with my Riley Blake Designs Geekly Chic prints. Here are some fun things I found!

Records Pillow and All-Stars Pillow made by Olivia of Hermit Crab Stitchery in Toronto.

Brookfield Bag made by Crystal using a pattern by Sara of Sew Sweetness.

Camera Quilt made by Connie from Sew Dayton in Dayton, Ohio.

Ellie Travel Case made by Nancy using a pattern by Heidi Staples.

Make It Snappy dress made by Ashley.

Mix Tapes dress made by Annika of Three Little Peas.

Records Corset Top made by Tamara.

Records Diaper Cover made by Emily of June Buggs Hatchlings.

Records & Tapes Dress made by Jane of Janey Babe Handmade.

Monday, November 2, 2015

It's Calendar Time!

Yes, my friends, if you haven't started already, it is time to start thinking about holiday gifts and the new year! And that means tea towel calendars are all the rage on Spoonflower. The tea towel calendar design contest is my favorite of the year, mostly because I get to return to my graphic design roots. Here is my entry this year, inspired by board games. Start at January, advance through each month, and the first one to make it through December wins! You can vote for all your favorite designs here.

Friday, October 30, 2015

Plan, Print, Procrastinate

It took me six months of planning and procrastinating, but I finally finished my Instagram cheater quilt SpoonChallenge project! The challenge, created by Becka Rahn, was to design a cheater quilt using photos from my Instagram feed that could be printed onto a yard of fabric.

I decided to use photos from our family trips to Hawaii, and arrange them into an ombre-colored, pixelated banana leaf design. For the backing, I used my Umi Numbers Hawaiian Cheater Quilt fabric. Both were printed on Kona Cotton from Spoonflower, and then for the binding, I found a matching green solid Kona at the fabric store.

This was my first attempt at quilting! While stitching around the edges of each photo was a bit tedious (lots of stopping and starting and turning and backstitching), I loved doing the concentric stitches around the photos to the edge (about every 3/4"). I am really happy with the way the straight lines contrast with the organic lines of the quilt backing. I sort of cheated on the binding, top-stitching with the machine instead of slip stitching by hand (I have no patience), but I think it turned out great!

Friday, July 24, 2015

Soda Nation - 59 Bottlecaps of the U.S. National Parks

This week's Spoonflower contest theme is 'National Parks'. I have always wanted to do a print using bottlecaps, so I took this opportunity to make up a whole bunch of 'fantasy' soda pop brands and flavors--59 to be exact! One for each of the national parks in the U.S. Here is how the design looks on a fat quarter of cotton fabric (21" x 18").

And here are closeups of the caps. I had a great time researching each park to come up with appropriate soda names and flavors, and enjoyed going back to my graphic design roots! If you like the design, your vote would make me 'bubbly'!

Friday, November 14, 2014

Found Thrift Store Patterns

Feeling guilty because I decided to play hooky yesterday at the thrift store instead of getting work done, I decided to do a little research and take pictures of patterns I found around the store. Made me feel like I was getting something done!

Thursday, October 30, 2014

The 2015 Tea Towel Calendar Contest Is Here!

Last weekend I was sifting through some old envelopes to find one I could reuse and I came upon a small, white Tyvek one with a piece of paper inside. That piece of paper was a receipt from my very first Spoonflower order, dated November 11, 2010.

Included in the order was a swatch of the first tea towel calendar I ever designed, which was also my first entry into a Spoonflower Fabric-of-the-Week contest (and it ultimately placed second, which became fuel for the fire…). Finding this little bit of nostalgia was quite timely, since this week kicks off the voting for the 2015 Tea Towel Calendar design contest! And here is my entry this year:

This time around I decided to dig into my collection of vintage ephemera: playing cards, labels, seals, stars, milk caps, stamps, envelopes, seed packets, flash cards, dictionary clippings, playing pieces, price tags, receipts, and more! I combined them with some retro Dymo labels and homemade washi tape to create 12 monthly collages. They hang across a chalkboard with hand-drawn chalk illustrations, each tag attached by a clothespin to vintage string from an old toy wooden bead set. Put it all together and you have one scrappy new year!

Below are closeups of each month. I'd really appreciate your vote in this year's competition, and all of the entries can be viewed here. You can vote for as many designs as you like, and you don't even have to be registered on the Spoonflower site to do so! Thank you so much!

Monday, October 6, 2014

Artists Around the World Blog Hop

Wow—this is the longest post I’ve ever written, but I think you will find it enjoyable, as it is, for the most part, not about me, but three people whose work inspires me. I am lucky to have them as peers, friends, sounding boards, leaders, and followers, even though we have never met in person...yet! They have introduced me to new things, brought me back down to earth when necessary, and even taken me to places I’ve never been. I hope you enjoy reading about them!

OK, let’s get started…
Recently I was asked by Nicky Ovitt to participate in the Artists Around the World Blog Hop. My jaw dropped. Me?! Needless to say, I am quite flattered, and humbled to know that an artist I admire actually follows my work!

Let me tell you a little about Nicky. I first noticed her work over a year ago when I decided to take a look at the finalists’ designs in the surface pattern design competition called The Printed Bolt. I quickly started following all of her social media feeds and bookmarked her website for inspiration. Since then, we have struck up a conversation via email, bouncing ideas off of each other about fabric and licensing.

Nicky’s hand-drawn illustrations and typography are both honest and charming. Her new fabric collection, Homestead, ClothworksFabrics, is fantastically homegrown, modern-yet-primitive, and evokes a bit of the pioneering spirit. Perfect for fabric that is entirely American-made! And her style is so versatile that it has been used on everything from clothing and product packaging to greeting cards and paper goods, for clients like ChronicleBooks, Smith & Hawken, and Speedo

Check out more of Nicky’s work in her Spoonflower, Etsy, and Society6 shops. She also has a fun Instagram feed, featuring works in progress, vintage goodies, and snippets from her life in Northern California. In addition, Nicky and her home are featured in the November 2014 issue of the U.S. version of Mollie Makes, on newsstands now!

Now, here’s a little bit about me…
As part of the Blog Hop, I am supposed to answer a few questions about myself, so here goes.

1. What are you writing/working on?
This past week I finished updating the News and Gallery sections of my website, which hadn’t been current since March 2013! I have already made a New Year’s resolution (three months early!) to update it regularly from now on! Now that I have been able to cross that off the list, I am going to focus on designing a 2015 tea towel calendar for the annual Spoonflower contest (my favorite one of the year!). In the background I am doing research and compiling ideas for two collections I’ve had brewing in the back of my brain all summer.

2. How does your work differ from others in your genre?
I would say a major difference is that I don’t have one particular style. I am inspired by so many different things that I design in whatever style seems appropriate to the subject matter, and/or what the design will be printed on. I think that comes from my background in graphic design, always following the mantra <i>Form Follows Function</i>. I also tend to go with very bold color choices. This could be attributed, in part, to the fact that it’s cloudy and rainy in Seattle nine months of the year.

3. Why do you create?
I don’t know if I can answer that. I have always created, for as long as I can remember. Even when I was writing the ABCs with black permanent marker on the side of the house when I was five years old… All day long all I think about is what I’m going to design when I have a few minutes of free time.

4. What is your creative process?
Right now, with a five year old son, my creative process is pretty broken up into segments that fit into his preschool schedule, weekend outings with dad, and occasional late nights when I just can’t stop the creative juices from flowing. I start with lots of research, using books and the Internet. Then sometimes I do some sketches (especially if the idea includes hand-drawn elements), but many times everything is in my head and then the computer becomes like a sketchbook. While half the time I would love to be computer-free and go back to working with older techniques, I do love how quickly I can change and move things around on the computer screen. Many times what I end up with is different from what I originally had in mind.

Now here are two people I’d like to introduce you to.
(…if you don’t know them already!)

bubbledog
I first “met” bubbledog almost 15 years ago, when we were both obsessively bidding on vintage stickers on eBay. I purchased one of my very favorite sheets of 1981 Hallmark metallic rainbow stickers from his shop, and we have been emailing and talking on the phone since. While he is a few years younger than me, we both grew up in the ‘70s and ‘80s and have a profound love for the pop culture of both decades. I continue to be in awe of his ability to find the coolest retro things, both from garage and rummage sales, and eBay and Etsy, which he usually documents on his blog.

In 2005 we spent countless hours on and off the phone (he is on the East Coast and I’m on the West) writing, editing, designing, composing, and publishing the Vintage Scratch & Sniff Stickers Collector’s Guide. It was a total labor of love, and we hope to perhaps update the book someday.

All this time, while also working a full-time job in a totally different field, bubbledog has been crafting in the background, maintaining a successful Etsy shop and booths at weekend craft shows all over the East Coast (his stall is so dreamy!). I credit him with introducing me to Spoonflower, which changed my life. He continues to inspire me with his wonderful knack for color, and his ‘80s-inspired-but-on-trend choices of subject matter for his work. He has an innocent illustration style and has created a cast of animal and fruit characters, which decorate everything from stationery, buttons, and belts to pins, magnets, and pillows. Recently he expanded his product line to include sculpted versions of these adorable characters. I hope to someday collaborate on a fabric project with him, perhaps an alphabet design, mixing some typography with his adorable imagery.

Check out these fabulous Star Wars figures bubbledog crafted from clay, and the mockup of the Luke Skywalker figure packaging!

Ceri Staziker
I’m cheating a little bit on this one, because Ceri doesn’t have a blog, but I have really wanted to feature her work for some time now. I figured this was the perfect opportunity.

Ceri’s work first caught my eye about a year ago when voting opened and designs were revealed for the annual Spoonflower Tea Towel Calendar contest. When I saw her entry, my heart sank, because I knew I no longer had any chance of winning. In the end, Ceri didn’t even place (and neither did I), and I felt compelled to write her a quick message to tell her I had thought her calendar was a shoe-in and couldn’t believe it hadn’t placed in the Top 10. Since then I have been so glad to keep in touch with her, via email and through social media.

Ceri did, however, win the One-Yard Costume Pattern Design contest a few weeks prior, with her “Fantastic Feathers” pattern; and this year she was a finalist in the Robert Kaufman Fabrics-sponsored Fabric8 contest on Spoonflower, with the theme “Cosmic Voyage”. The “Far Away Folk” collection she submitted for the competition was out of this world (pun intended), and she has since expanded it to include 12 beautiful, coordinating, folk art-inspired prints. While she has told me multiple times that she considers herself to be a graphic designer and not really an illustrator, I beg to differ. Her work is crafted with an incredible amount of meticulously-rendered detail, and in such lovely color palettes.

Oddly enough, even though Ceri lives in Wales, several years ago she spent some time in my neck of the woods while doing an internship for Microsoft. It’s fun to see her comment on Instagram photos I post picturing local Seattle-area landmarks! I love following her Instagram feed, which includes not only images of her work, but daily views from her morning walk through the Welsh countryside, photos that could be mistaken for oil paintings.

Ceri has agreed to answer the same four questions, so you can find out a little more about her.

1. What are you writing/working on?
I’m a graphic designer by day, fledgling fabric designer by night — which makes for a very busy and varied working week! I’m just getting back into the Spoonflower weekly challenges after a long break over the summer. I’m new to surface design and I find that entering these contests gives me plenty of opportunity to test out ideas and learn new skills, all to a brief which is usually way outside my comfort zone. It’s amazing how much work I have generated and how far I have progressed over the past year, just from participating in these regular challenges. I also have a few sewing projects in the planning stages (always in the planning stages — I’m a terrible fabric hoarder and hate to cut into my precious stash). Even though I have been sewing since I was a little girl, I have never been a quilter. That is something I would like to rectify.

2. How does your work differ from others in your genre?
Well, that is such a difficult question to answer. I feel like I am still searching for my own unique style (I think it’s buried under many years of corporate graphics, struggling to get out) — although I do feel like something resembling ‘me’ is beginning to emerge. Friends do tell me that they can spot my work amongst others, and that is very heartening. I hope that one day I will be known for a style that is uniquely and recognizably mine.

3. Why do you create?
I create for the same reason my husband has jumped on his bike, or gone for a run every day that I have known him. It’s simply something that I love to do. The process of engaging my brain and hands to make something beautiful is immensely satisfying. It can be an enjoyable, frustrating and even exhausting process, in equal measures, but I’m compelled to do it every day. And then get up the next day and do it again!

4. What is your creative process?
Despite many years on a very ordered brief-to-deadline schedule, my clandestine life as a fabric designer is pretty chaotic. Maybe it’s because I have so much unexpected freedom of expression in this part of my creative life — without the constraints of my clients’ wishes? I can spend days or even weeks agonizing over a potential design before I actually start working on it! To be honest, I find this part of the process quite painful and not always enjoyable. Eventually, when I see things coming together in my head, I relax and I start to sketch — always pencil on paper. I work out all of the design elements and a rough repeat, and when I’m happy that I’ve got it all thought out, I start to digitize my sketches. This is the fun part where I get to see my ideas take shape, colour, and become ‘real’. This is also the stage that sees me working long into the night because I just don’t want to stop. The one thing I have learned to do is that when I am satisfied I have finished a design, I need to step away from it for a day or two. When I come back to it with fresh eyes, there are ALWAYS tweaks I want to make. And they are usually for the better. So I try to build in this extra ‘tweaking time’ at the end of every project.

~ ~ ~ ~ ~

Thanks so much to bubbledog and Ceri for participating, and again to Nicky for inviting me to join in!

Thursday, August 28, 2014

How to Make a Coin Purse:
A Tutorial

In my last post (has it been almost a month?!), I showed a couple coin purses I had found in my studio--remnants of my original penny candy plans. I mentioned offering a free tutorial for making the purses, and here it is! Please be advised that this is the first tutorial I've blogged, so by trying it out, you are essentially being a test pilot. Please let me know if you have any questions, or find any steps that don't work or seem confusing. Thanks for trying it out!


Finished purse. I used my Fremont (Night) pattern printed on Kona Cotton for the exterior, and my Three Coins pattern printed on Kona Cotton for the interior. Both are from my new Olympic Manor collection, available in my Spoonflower shop.

Coin Purse Tutorial
Finished Size (as shown with 6” x 3” frame; not including frame clasp): Approximately 6" wide x 6.5" tall x 2" deep (15cm wide x 16.5cm tall x 5cm deep)

Time to Complete: 45-60 minutes, plus 8 hours drying time for glue

Supplies

  • (1) fat quarter cotton fabric for exterior
  • (1) fat quarter cotton fabric for lining
  • 1/4 yard fusible interfacing
  • 1/4 yard fusible fleece
  • Coin purse frame (frame shown is 6” wide x 3” tall, not including clasp)
  • Printer paper and/or tracing paper, for printing and copying/modifying the pattern
  • Pencil or fabric marking pen
  • Coordinating cotton thread
  • Straight pins for temporary securing
  • Heavy duty glue (I use E-6000)

  • INSTRUCTIONS
    Make Your Pattern

    1. Download and print the pattern. Lay your purse frame on top of the pattern, centering it horizontally at the top seam allowance. Using a pencil, trace around the outside of your purse frame. If you are using a 6” x 3” purse frame like the one shown, download and print the pattern, and skip to Step 2.


    Center your frame horizontally on the pattern, while aligning it with the top seam allowance.


    Trace around the outer edge.

    2. IF YOU ARE USING A FRAME THAT IS A DIFFERENT SIZE: Using tracing paper, trace the downloaded pattern and repeat Step 1, making adjustments to the width and height according to the size of your frame. The bottom curves and darts can stay the same; simply adjust them up or down to fit into the correct proportions. (The frame in the "alternate" pictures below is 4" x 2".)


    If you have a frame that is larger or smaller than 6” x 3", align your frame in the upper left corner and trace around the outside of the frame. The frame pictured above is 4" x 2".


    Begin tracing the original pattern on the left side, extending the left edge down as far as you think you might want the final purse to extend (remember to consider a 1/4” seam allowance).


    Move your tracing paper down so the left edge is aligned with the left edge of the original pattern, but so your new traced drawing aligns with the bottom left curve of the original. Trace the curve and dart.


    Move your tracing paper up to the top right corner of the original pattern and trace so the top edge aligns 1/4” above the outline of your frame. Trace over the right corner so it wraps around your frame outline the same way it does on the left side.


    Move your tracing down to the bottom right corner of the original pattern and trace the bottom right corner and dart. You now have a new complete pattern for your own frame.

    3. Place the top right corner of your purse frame onto the top right outside corner of your pattern turning the frame counterclockwise slightly so that the right side of the frame aligns with the right side of the pattern. Make a mark on your pattern 1/4" from the bottom of the hinge. Repeat on the left side.



    After aligning your frame in the corner, make a mark 1/4” below where the bottom of the hinge, on both sides of the pattern.

    4. Cut out the pattern.

    Prepare Fabric

    5. Cut fabric pieces:

    • (2) pieces for exterior
    • (2) pieces for interior lining
    • (2) pieces fusible interfacing
    • (2) pieces fusible fleece

    6. Trace darts and hinge marks onto the NON-FUSIBLE sides of interfacing and fleece.

    7. Match the WRONG side of one piece of exterior fabric with FUSIBLE side of one piece of interfacing. Following the interfacing manufacturer’s instructions, press to fuse. Repeat with remaining piece of exterior fabric and remaining piece of interfacing.

    8. Match the WRONG side of one piece of the interior lining with the FUSIBLE side of one piece of the fusible fleece. Following the fleece manufacturer's instructions, press to fuse. Repeat with remaining piece of lining and remaining piece of fleece.

    9. With exterior pieces WRONG (interfacing) side up, pinch dart lines to match them up. Pin if necessary. Beginning at the widest part, sew along the dart line, backstitching on both ends. Repeat with the other dart, and then with the darts on all remaining pieces.

    After pinching the darts to match them up, sew along the dart line.

    10. Clip the excess fabric from inside the darts, leaving 1/8" of fabric.

    Sew the Exterior

    11. With RIGHT sides touching, match the exterior pieces together so hinge marks meet. Pin if necessary. Also try to make sure darts align for neatly-finished corners.

    Match exterior pieces with RIGHT sides together.

    12. Starting from the hinge mark on one side, sew around the bottom edge, stopping at the hinge mark on the other side. Clip any excess fabric, especially at the corners.

    Begin sewing around the bottom edge of the exterior pieces using the outer hinge mark. Sew all around the bottom until you reach the hinge mark on the other side.

    13. Turn the exterior bag RIGHT SIDE OUT.

    Sew the Interior Lining

    14. With RIGHT sides together, match the lining pieces together so hinge marks meet. Pin if necessary. Sew lining pieces as done in Step 11 above, but leave a 3" (7.5 cm) opening at the bottom.

    15. With RIGHT SIDES OUT, place purse exterior INSIDE the lining. The RIGHT sides of the exterior and lining should now be touching each other. Push the exterior in far enough, pressing especially at the bottom corners, so the flap tops match up as much as possible. Pin each flap together to hold in place.

    Sew the Flaps

    16. Along one side of one flap, begin sewing where the stitching started on the lining. Sew all around the top of the flap, stopping where stitching starts on the other side. Repeat with other flap.

    Finish Sewing the Purse

    17. Pull the exterior out through the 3" opening at the bottom of the lining. Push all corners out from the inside as much as possible. Turn under a 1/4" seam on both sides of the opening and press.

    18. Slip-stitch the hole in the lining to finish, and push the lining into the purse.

    19. Press the whole purse, particularly the top flap edges. This will make it easier to push the flaps into the frame.

    Gluing

    20. Apply glue to the inside to the insides of the frame.

    21. Starting from the hinges, insert one flap of the purse into one side of the frame and slide it up into the corners. Use a tool like a nail file to help poke the flap into the frame, and to scrape any excess glue that might seep out from inside the frame. I find it easier to push the corners in first, then the middle, and then the areas near the hinges. Push the fabric into the frame on the exterior and the interior.

    22. Wait 8 hours for the glue to completely dry and set. To tidy up, you should be able to rub off any excess glue from the frame. Then enjoy your new coin purse!

    NOTE: You may use the downloaded pattern in the above instructions to make and sell your own coin purses (a credit would be appreciated!). However, the downloaded pattern and the instructions are copyright © 2014 penny candy / Amy Peppler Adams. They MAY NOT be reproduced in any form, print or electronic, without my permission.

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