Fiber-nating

I’ve been missing the mountains, but it’s been snowing the last two Sundays and gearing up to go out in the snow just hits different at the end of January vs. at the beginning of November.

So we stayed home and I started quilting my chore coat:

My long black quilted coat used a thin cotton batting and I absolutely paved that thing with quilting–so for this completely different quilted coat, I used a really hi-loft polyester batting and am just outlining the sawtooth stars. And boy is it puffy!

I am going to be so warm. Warm and bulky. Quilt bros will understand.

Should I Just Sew This Already?

Nearly a year ago (to the very day!) I posted about maybe sewing a carry-on bag and traveling. That, of course, was before Toby got sick and now that he needs insulin twice a day, we’ve kind of shelved the idea of travel for the time being. But did I buy fabric for the damn bag a year ago, plus all the hardware and notions? Of course. Has everything been sitting in a pile on the end of my ironing board for a year now? You know it!
I ended up going with a stripe to copy the Kate Spade Saturday look to the max, in waterproof Ottertex ordered from Fabric Wholesale Direct:

And of course I planned on doing the contrast lining (but in orange ripstop) and yes, the lining fabric has been sitting on the ironing board for a year, too:

Okay, I’ve answered my question; I’d better just sew this thing up after I finish the latest quilt coat. Maybe we won’t be traveling but it would be nice to have the end of the ironing board back.

Tuesday Project Roundup: An Excuse To Use A Label

I thought I’d take a break from quilts and sew up a jacket I’ve had in mind since the fall–The Assembly Line Cap Sleeve Vest. I could see it as a good Zoom layer that kept me warm but also let whatever print I was wearing underneath get highlighted. And it is!

 

I sewed this up entirely in stash fabrics–a Kaufman light twill that I bought in the great Pants Fever of 2017 and a Fabric Godmother viscose lawn that I had shipped from England and then didn’t love. But do I love it as a lining? Yes! And do I love THESE NEW CUSTOM LABELS? You know it:

Oh yeah I finally made these happen. I’ve been wanting custom labels for a couple of years now, inspired by Martha Moore of Buried Diamond, but I thought I needed a designer. Turns out I just needed to pay for a trial of Canva and find a template to alter (and a cool font). Then I sent the file to Dutch Label Shop and boom! Custom labels of my dreams.

They’re about $2 each, so they’re not cheap, but they add more than $2 worth of flair. Get ready to see a lot more of these on every jacket-like project I make.

Wednesday Project Progress: Quilts For 2023

I’ve decided it’s the year of the capybara and also the year of quilts. I have two different quilty projects going on and we’re only four days into the new year.

I started what will be an all-year project: a new bed quilt in a “trip around the world” pattern. We have a king-size bed and these are two-inch finished squares, so…I hope I don’t get bored with it any time soon. (So far, it’s really fun to play with colors; I’m also using this tutorial that speeds things up a bit.)

I’ve also started a quilted chore coat. Did I already make a deeply involved quilted coat? Yes, but that one is long and has a black background and no collar. This one will be short with a white background and a collar. Completely different!

I’m making sawtooth star blocks using this tutorial and I can see them getting better. Amazing what happens with a little practice.

 

Christmas Project Roundup: Gray Thread Edition

First we have the traditional cat shirt for Doc, in the traditional McCalls 6044 (I’ve lost count of how many times I’ve made this pattern). The fabric is an out-of-print Alexander Henry quilting cotton, found online here.

We also have the traditional pattern-matched pockets, since that’s a feature he likes to show off to his coworkers:

 

Next up we have a classic grandpa “sweater” vest for my dad, to help him stay warm while he refuses to spend more money on heat (like a classic grandpa). The fabric is a Polartec ThermalPro sweater knit with the classic fleece back from Mill Yardage. I used the Green Pepper Plush Polar Jacket & Vest pattern with the same mods as my chartreuse zip. But just like my chartreuse jacket, I ran into issues with the zippers puckering, as you can see:

I guess I need to stabilize these fleece zippers but first I’ll have to figure out how to get anything fused to fleece. I finished everything with foldover elastic and it’s pretty clean inside, apart from the puckers:

These were fun and pretty quick to make, though, and I do like sewing for my loved ones–especially the loved ones that are reeeeallly hard to shop for.

Tuesday Project Roundup: Gift Exchange Sewing

I got Doc’s nephew in his family’s gift exchange this year. The nephew plays Dungeons and Dragons (and I’m 100% sure he doesn’t read this) so I sewed him a dice bag with themed fabric:

The outer fabric is a fat quarter from Spoonflower, in a print that has PG swearing/puns/cats–these are all very popular in the family:
I paid $5 for a basic tutorial on Etsy because I didn’t want to figure it out on my own…and then ended up doing the openings for the cord differently and figuring it out on my own anyway (but it’s a good tutorial all the same).

When I was pondering making this, I asked my own friends who play D&D if such a thing would be useful/welcome and they said yes, especially with some more dice inside. So I got him this set–more puns and general wackiness.

Will he like it? Probably! Was it a fun little make? Yeah! Did I deep dive into the world of game dice and see so many different kinds? You know it.

Tuesday Project Roundup: Warmest Pants

When you want to try insulated pants, do you BUY them from Backcountry for $200?

Or do you MAKE them?  

You know the answer if you’re reading this. I had bought Polartec Windpro Stretch and ripstop last year from The Rain Shed to try the Controlled Exposure pants again in a stretchier fabric. But when I saw the quilted Backcountry pants, I pivoted and used my tried and true Brassie joggers pattern and scraps of Thinsulate leftover from my parka.

I quilted the  ripstop to the Thinsulate for the fronts and used the stretch Polartec for the backs. I also used scraps from my magic fleece (Polartec Alpha Direct) to line them–the fronts totally and the backs from gaiter height to parka height:

I went up a size from normal and they fit over my hips no problem–and they are DELIGHTFULLY WARM. I should only need a base layer in the coldest hikes–this test run was about 35 degrees in the sun and 25 in the shade and they were perfect.


The face you make when you spend $0 and get exactly what you want!

Tuesday Project Roundup: Big Square Vest

I got my vest done and it’s a layer I needed AND it’s reversible. So I’m trying to focus on those two facts and less on the fact that I look like I’m wearing a big quilted cube when I have it on.

In hindsight, I think adding length would have shifted this from “square” to “rectangle” a little more, but the cropped retro length is growing on me. I also could have gone down a size but I wanted room to layer/room for my back to get even more swole in a few years.

Construction-wise, the Green Pepper instructions were great, as usual. I added the step of quilting my outer to my insulation but other than that followed everything to the letter.  Materials were leftover Thinsulate from my winter parka project and DWR supplex and Polartec Thermal Pro shearling from The Rain Shed, plus my trusty KAM Snaps (that are reversible too!).