Sunday, January 27, 2013

"Sisters" Frame

The frame hanging in Sarah's dorm room
 
 
For my sister, Sarah's, 21st birthday (back in December), I wanted to do something special for her. I made her this frame with a collage of pictures of just the two of us. I worked the majority of the summer on this project because hunting down all the pictures took quite a while. I ended up with somewhere between 50 and 60 pictures that I found sifting through the boxes of pictures we have in our house. I scanned them all into the computer and had them printed at Walgreens. I, then, cropped most of them down and set them up on a poster board before using double stick tape to tape them down before putting it in the frame.





In the lower corner, I put the word "sisters."  I printed it on a piece of velum and used black ribbon to make a boarder. This cleaned up the look of the edge of the pictures and frame the word nicely.

Sarah really loves it and hung it up in her dorm room at school. I made it so that she could do that and also take it with her to hang in her future apartments and houses!


Here is an up close of the frame with all the pictures.

Friday, January 25, 2013

Balsa Wood Boxes

This summer was the summer of "A's" as far as my craft projects went. I painted and stenciled three balsa wood boxes, all as gifts for people with names starting with "A." All the painting was done with acrylic or tempra paints.



For a 10-year-old girl, I made a box for her to keep all her friendship bracelet making materials in. She had been asking me to teach her how to make friendship bracelets and so I put together a box with all she would need to learn and create all in one place. The "A" is a WordArt font I printed out, laid on top of the box and traced with a pencil, pressing moderately so the imprint of the letter would appear on the box. The sides were stenciled with a pencil outline and then painted.


 I cut up a flat piece of wood and fit it in the bottom of the box as dividers to separate the floss, ruler and scissors. I copied and laminated instructions for how to tie the knots and for a few simple patterns, putting them on a binder ring to keep them organized and together. The box can be used as a work space, with the bracelet clipped in the side of the closed box.


Another box I painted was the same shape and size of the one pictured above. I am working on getting a picture of it.  This one I did for my friend that was going off to University of Pittsburgh in the fall. I painted stenciled and painted the box in school colors, navy and gold, with a retro-looking pattern. For the letter on this box, I used a chip board "A," painted the top gold and the sides navy. It made a nice contrast and made the letter "pop." I lined the inside of the box with white, self-stick felt.

The third box, which was really the first one I did, I made for my friend that graduated 8th grade and made her confirmation. I am also working on getting a picture of this project. This box is a little larger, rectengular box. I painted it with black and white acrylic paint in a quatrefoil pattern. I knew her room had a black, white and teal theme to it, so I did the box in black and white and painted the chip board "A" in teal. In this box, I also lined the inside with felt to give it a jewelry box feel.

Super Hero T-Shirt Quilt



For my brother, John's, 18th birthday, I asked him what he wanted because he can be the hardest to shop for! He asked me if I would make him a quilt out of all his hold super hero t-shrits that he refused to get rid of.

For this quilt, I used the front and back of 10 shirts and the same steps as my high school t-shirt quilt. Once again, I used a twin sized bed sheet for the backing. In total, this quilt took me less than a week (about 5 days) to make.

T-Shirt Quilt





This summer, I finally took to cutting up some of my t-shirts from high school and making a blanket out of them. I love t-shirts and instead of throwing them away, this is a much better way of parting with them. Like many of my other crafts, I found a great tutorial for this quilt on Pinterest. The woman that wrote THIS tutorial made it really clear and easy!

This was my first real sewing endeavor and I am really happy with how it came out. I used 22 of my "favorite" t-shirts from high school, featherweight, fusable interfacing, a twin sheet for the backing and low-loft, twin sized batting for the filling.

When completed, my quilt measured about 70.5 by 56.5 inches. This is smaller than a standard twin size quilt or blanket, but it is still a good size and it is really warm!

A big tip when it comes to the sewing is to use the walking foot on your sewing machine. It moves the fabric from the top and bottom so it doesn't stretch out as you sew!


Here are the steps I took to make my blanket:

1. Pick out 20 (or in my case 22) t-shrits that you want to make into your blanket.

2. Wash and dry them without fabric softener.

3. Iron the shirts, using a dishtowel over the design so they don't melt.


4. Mark and cut your t-shirts into 15x15 inch squares, centering the design on the shirt as best as possible. Many t-shirts have designs that are placed higher up on the shirt. I placed the top of my ruler at the collar of the shirt and centered the design width wise as best as possible.

5. Cut your featherweight, fusable interfacing to 15x15 inch squares also.

6. Using a steam iron, iron the interfacing to the back of each of the t-shirts. This will help to keep them stable in your quilt.

7. On the interfacing, mark 1/4 inch line on the top and side edges and 1/2 inch line along the bottom edge. Cut along these lines.

8. Mark another 1/4 inch line on all four edges of the square. This will be your 1/4 inch seam allowance.

9. Lay out the squares as you want them arranged and label them. I used sticky notes and labeled them with columns A-D and numbers 1-5.
10. Sew the squares into strips (I did columns first).

11. Press the seams flat.

12. Sew columns A and B together and columns C and D together.

13. Press seams flat.

14. Sew the two big blocks up the middle, connecting columns B and C together. This makes your quilt top.

15. Iron your backing. I used a twin sized sheet for my backing so I would not have to piece fabric together. I laid the backing on the floor, placed the quilt top ontop of it and traced around it, leaving two inches on each side. This will be folded over and used as the binding for the sides.

16. Lay backing out on the floor, right side down. Place the batting ontop of it (which I also cut down to fit the size of my quilt top) and then place the quilt top ontop of the batting.

17. Pin all three layers together.

18. I then did a cross-stitch on the places where four squares came together. You can quilt as desired instead.

19. Fold the excess backing in half (about an inch) and then over the edge of the quilt to make your binding. Pin all the way around.

20. Sew binding all the way around, leaving about 1/4 inch seam allowance. I put my stitches about 1/4 inch from the middle of the quilt (3/4 inch from the outer edge of the quilt).



I love my t-shirt quilt. It is really warm and puts a good use to all the shirts I got in high school. I had an abudance of t-shirts so I picked the ones that had the most meaning or memories behind them. I picked shirts from each year of volleyball, I played for four years. I picked shirts that were special honors I recieved, like Matter of Pride and being a Senior Mentor. I also picked shirts from clubs I was a part of, like National Honors Society, Target Success, Science Olympiad and choir.

A few of the shirts had narrow designs on them, so I used two to make one square. I cut each t-shirt and interfacing to 7 1/2 by 15 inch rectangles origionally. Then, instead of cutting the half inch off the bottom for the first markings, I did 1/4 inch off the top and the bottom.


Enjoy!