Thursday, January 31, 2013

Winter Blue Felt House (miniature)

I'm thinking about making various small houses/shops in this style to use as Christmas ornaments next year.  This house is just made out of basic eco-felt and then hand-stitched and stuffed with a little polyester fiber-fill.


Saturday, January 26, 2013

Marie Antoinette Plush Doll

This doll is based off of an embroidery pattern in the book Wee Wonderfuls: 24 Dolls to Sew and Love.  (FYI- Amazon has that book at a BARGAIN price right now- hardcover edition brand new for $11!  Follow the link to scoop up your copy like I did before they run out of the bargain priced lot- then it goes back up to around $19.)

I want to sew a cape in cream crushed velvet for this doll, but I'm not sure when that will happen (hopefully some day?).  I also like her as she is.  She stands about 14" tall and is just lovely.  I had a lot of fun (and, let's face it, a decent amount of difficulty) making her.


 ◕ ‿ ◕ 

Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Cupcake and Owl Felties

I did these two the other night so that I had something to occupy my hands while we watched a little TV.  They didn't take long at all.  Both are made of felt- part wool felt and part craft felt.  The patterns for these little guys can be found in the book From Felt to Fabulous. This is a thin book, and though it doesn't seem like much there are dozens of cute creature and item patterns in the back.  I love how simple everything in it is.

Cupcake Ornament



Woodland Owl

I also made a little felt flower yesterday, which I was planning on putting on my Marie Antoinette doll (which ended up being a giant 13 1/2" tall!).  But after thinking about it, I decided I want several small flowers in Marie's hair vs. one large one.  Marie will hopefully be finished in a week and I'll post pics of her then!  So far I'm loving her.

Felt flower with pearl beads

Friday, January 11, 2013

Mr. Joe, the Sea Monster Stuffed Animal, and Waldorf Dolls

My latest sewing project was "Mr. Joe" and it was for my husband, who happens to be named "Joe." He might not be a fan of me divulging this, but he saw all the stuff I was sewing for other people and decided he needed something, too. I wanted it to be something simple, so I went with a cute little monster pattern from the book Softies Only a Mother Could Love.  It did end up taking much longer than I had originally planned, but that is because I decided to make it a TV project (TV project = all hand sewing, and no machine).  He's made out of anti-pill fleece and has felt eyes, so hand-sewing was an option for this guy.

I think he looks a bit like some type of sea creature, and I imagine he probably eats plankton.  He is a bit like Patrick from Sponge Bob Square Pants- he's really cute but not too smart.  If I had it my way, he would have been pink.  But as he was for the spousal unit, a nice tan color was in order (my fabric stash is still very tiny and depressing, so I didn't have much to choose from).

Here is Mr. Joe, all finished!
I love the blanket stitch around the eyes.
I added eyebrows because I thought they really added an adorable expression.


And I just couldn't resist adding his "name" to the bootie"

Butt tattoo!

And now, the Waldorf Dolls part of this post.  I am feeling like I want to try to make one. They don't look easy, and are definitely beyond my skill level.  But I'm becoming slightly obsessed with them.  Just look how at beautiful some of these dolls are!





I think it would be awesome to be able to create something like that.  Making them takes a lot of time and the materials are not necessarily cheap (100% wool stuffing, and the "good ones" seem to be made of all organic materials).  But I think the process would be very rewarding.  If you've ever made a Waldorf style doll, please do tell me about your experience!

Monday, January 7, 2013

Peanut Flour Pancakes

I was craving pancakes today.  I don't do white flour or sugar for the most part, so I made the pancakes up with peanut flour and a tad of stevia.  I did drizzle just a tad of real maple syrup on them.  Delish!

Peanut Flour Pancake Batter (makes two pancakes, or more small pancakes!)

1/4 c. peanut flour
1 large egg
1/2 tsp baking powder
2 Tb heavy cream (or other milk-like product of your choice)
dash of salt (optional)
dash of vanilla extract (optional)
dash of cinnamon (optional)
a small sprinkle of stevia or other sweetner of your choice (optional)

I unfortunately didn't take a photo of these before they were devoured, but they looked like regular pancakes, just darker (probably what whole wheat pancakes would look like).  You won't be fooled into thinking they are buttermilk pancakes, but they are still quite tasty.  The oddest part for me was the real maple syrup.  The regular ol' syrup most of America uses (and I used to use) is basically high fructose corn syrup, so getting used to the flavor of actual, factual maple syrup might take a bit of time.  The pancakes by themselves come in at about 7 grams of carbs and 3 grams of fiber for two pancakes- it's great if you are watching carbs.

Friday, January 4, 2013

Fleur (Matryoshka)- My Favorite Doll

Today I made Fleur, and she is oh-so-lovely.  I made her for my sister.  I'd be lying if I said I wasn't tempted to keep her.  But I set out to make something adorable for my sister, so I am going to stick to that plan.  Hopefully Fleur will brighten her day, just like she (Fleur) has brightened mine!

Fleur

Isn't her face sweet?!

I love this little detail.


I really am in love with this doll.  I'll probably make myself one, too. Fleur is from the book We Make Dolls

I also made a doll last night.  I love the embroidery that I did on this one, but I don't particularly love how the face ended up.  No matter, live and learn!

The "other" doll.


I also practiced "free motion stitching" which was interesting, but difficult.  I think it will take me a bit to get the hang of that.  I was able to make some really cute loops, but I'd be pretty wary to try it on a real project at this point.


Thursday, January 3, 2013

Harvest Pumpkin Soup

The other day I murdered a giant pumpkin and made some soup.  All I will say about it is that roasting a giant pumpkin and pureeing it can take an entire day (if you are easily distracted, which I am) and it is a lot of work.  And if I’m being really honest here, I should also tell you that my house was filled with a copious amount of smoke as that huge pumpkin roasted.   Like, call the fire department smoke.  But the resulting Harvest Pumpkin Soup was delicious (wasn’t sure if a regular pumpkin could make good soup- turns out it can).  The recipe for this soup is here (they don’t use a giant, regular pumpkin- they are obviously much wiser than I am). A giant pumpkin will make a ridiculous amount of pumpkin puree, fyi.  I have bag fulls of it frozen in the freezer.

I’m a bit embarrassed to admit that I have the time (and let’s face it- the desire) to make faces on pumpkins before I slaughter them. But it is what it is.



Wednesday, January 2, 2013

Wine and the Bunny Girl

Mixing red wine, sewing, and crafting books can be dangerous. For instance, you could end up sitting at the sewing machine at 1:30 in the morning making a crazy little pink doll. I'm not admitting that this happened to me. But if it DID happen this is probably what I would wake up to find:


I'm still not sure how I managed to sew all those little pearls and silver beads on...what with the wine sleepiness and all.  I do think it's quite appropriate that the words "sing," "play," and "dance" ended up on various parts of her (ears, lower tummy).

I did make some changes to the pattern (basically gave her a flat butt so she could sit up by herself), but it was more or less taken from the "Polly" pattern in the book Softies Only a Mother Could Love.

Tuesday, January 1, 2013

Charles, completed.

Charles is done!  He turned out a bit lopsided and, well, funny looking.  I blame that on my inability to properly use a sewing machine.  I'm learning, but ever so slowly.  I do really like the way the hand-dyed gray wool felt turned out for his jacket.