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Showing posts with label halloween. Show all posts
Showing posts with label halloween. Show all posts

pattern // halloween candy bats

Candy Bat Embroidery Pattern


If you're batty for Halloween candy, or any candy for that matter, this is an embroidery pattern for you!

As I was doodling and drawing some Halloween candy recently, I realized that it kinda resembled a bat. You know, if you squint and imagine a roly poly super cute bat. Of course, that's pretty much how I picture everything, so it worked out.

This colony of candy bats is flying in front of the moon and they'd love you to stitch them up in a variety of colors. Or just in black and orange like those peanut butter candies that look pretty all wrapped up, but which very few people actually want to eat.

Happy stitching!

printable // octagon spiderweb stitching card

Printable Octagon Spiderweb Stitching Card


We like to decorate our house for Halloween with spider webs. We work on the decorations all year round by carefully avoiding cleaning them out of corners. We find this to be the most authentic decor.

But if you're more into regular cleaning than I am, maybe you'd like to stitch a spiderweb? Or better yet, maybe your kids would like to give it a try! This printable stitching card creates a simple web for a sweet spider to hang out.

And since I've been playing with octagons this month, I thought it was a perfect shape for our spiderweb to spread out.

Printable Octagon Spiderweb Stitching Card

You will need:

Card stock
Black embroidery floss or perle cotton
Large sharp needle

Octagon Spiderweb Stitching Card PDF

Print the PDF on card stock and cut out the web and spider. Use the needle to poke a hole at each end of the gray web lines.

Printable Octagon Spiderweb Stitching Card

Thread the needle with floss or perle cotton and tie a double knot at one end. Stitch the web lines, but leave one of the "spokes" across the entire web until the end.

Cut a 24" piece of floss or perle cotton and starting at the outside edge, stitch the last spoke. Leave an 8-10" tail hanging off the side and attach the spider here. Tie a loop in the extra string on the other side.

The spiderweb can hang as a decoration, and the spider can hang down below, or she can play in the web!

Printable Octagon Spiderweb Stitching Card

Wouldn't it be fun to stitch a few of these to have hanging around your house? I bet your kids would be very excited to be able to help by stitching them, but I know that I had fun making one as an adult. You will too!

Happy Halloween crafting!

halloween epp blog hop // happy hexagon candy basket

EPP Halloween Candy Basket


It's nearly Halloween, and I hope you've purchased plenty of candy. You know...some to hand out, but plenty for you to just enjoy. I always regret not buying enough for myself, so I'm officially giving you permission to do this.

After you have the candy, all you need is something super cute to hold it all, and that's where I come in. Diane Gilleland wrote an incredible book on English paper piecing (it's the textbook on EPP...you need it), and she has organized a little blog hop with ideas for things to make for Halloween...all using EPP!

EPP Halloween Candy Basket

This candy basket has two panels of hexagon candies, and is put together using the 1-Hour Basket tutorial. It's just $1.00 and highly customizable. You'll be glad to have it in your pattern library.

To save time, you could make just one EPP panel and do the second side solid (you will need 1/3 yard of linen instead of 1/4). But I promise that the hand sewing portion of this goes faster than you think. Plus, you'll get a chance to watch a couple of your favorite Halloween movies while you work!

Now, let's get started!

Here's what you need:

Quilting cotton for candy pieces (enough to make 4 hexagons and 8 half hexagons)
Quilting cotton for accent hexagons, lining, and handles (1/2 yard)
Linen (1/4 yard)
Fusible fleece batting
Basic sewing notions

Hexagon and Half Hexagon Templates

Note: You can use standard 1-inch hexagon templates for this, and just cut a few in half.

EPP Halloween Candy Basket

First, baste the hexagons and half hexagons. You will need 12 whole hexagons from the accent/lining fabric. For each piece of candy, baste one whole hexagon and two half hexagons. You can make each candy piece in a different color, or make them all the same. But you'll need four in total.

Normally I baste 1-inch hexagons by tacking the fabric on the back, which is what you see pictured. I've found that half hexagons come out nicer if I stitch through the paper (because of the acute angles). After I made my basket, I realized it would have been helpful if I had stitched through the paper on all of these pieces. You'll see why soon.

Join the candy pieces to look like little pieces of candy, and stitch the accent hexagons into groupings of two.

EPP Halloween Candy Basket

Join the candies and the accent hexies into two rows. Each row should be a stack with accent hexies, a candy, accent hexies, a candy, and finally one last set of accent candies.

EPP Halloween Candy Basket

Remove the templates from the center of the candies, then embroider the faces. The faces are french knots and a scallop stitch. Of course, you can skip the faces, but you wouldn't want to do that, would you?

EPP Halloween Candy Basket

Now, remove the paper templates from all of the pieces. If you stitched through the paper, you'll need to remove the basting stitches. If you only took tack stitches, you'll still probably need to remove the basting stitches...at least around the edges. (It's easier to remove basting that goes through the paper!)

Open up the seam allowance all around the EPP panel and give it a gentle pressing with an iron. Don't remove the creases entirely, because they'll be your friend coming up.

EPP Halloween Candy Basket

Cut two pieces of linen: 4 x 4-1/4 inches.

Pin a linen piece to the right side of the bottom of each EPP panel. I like to leave the points of the hexagons on until after it's all sewn, but imagine if you had cut off the bottom so it has a straight edge. That's where you line up the bottom of the linen.

Sew along the edge with a 1/4 inch seam and press the allowance toward the linen. Repeat for each panel.

EPP Halloween Candy Basket

Cut four pieces of linen: 10-1/2 x 6-7/8 inches.

Pin and sew a piece of linen along each side of the EPP panel, aligning the pieces with the bottom linen piece. Repeat for each side.

When you sew the edges, use the crease of the hexagons as your guide for seam allowance. If your seam allowance is too small and your seam falls outside of the crease, the seams of the joined hexagons won't go all the way to the new seam. If this is super confusing, let me know.

Trim the top hexagons to be even with the linen.

Now you're ready continue the tutorial for the 1-hour basket. Basically, you've just created the two exterior pieces.

EPP Halloween Candy Basket
EPP Halloween Candy Basket

When you're finished, it should look something like this!

What I love about the 1-hour basket is that it's pretty adaptable when it comes to size. Piecing this together I had some moments where the linen shifted or my seams were off just a bit. But as long as the exterior, interior, and batting all match up (trim as needed!), it works. I need forgiving sewing projects in my life!

EPP Halloween Candy Basket

All that's left now is to fill your basket with your favorite candy! Er, I mean, the candy you'll pass out on Halloween! Okay, so I guess that could be the same thing. You know, just in case you forget to turn on the front light and no one knocks on your door.

And while the design for this was inspired by those black and orange wrapped peanut butter candies, please promise me that you won't hand those out. Nobody likes those.

EPP Halloween Candy Basket

For more fun Halloween EPP tricks and treats, check out the other stops in Diane's blog hop! I'm only the third stop, and there will be more added as the week continues. Happy Halloween stitching!




project // no-sew werewolf hoop art

No-Sew Werewolf Hoop Art


Halloween is going to be here before we know it, but that doesn't mean that we've run out of time for spooky crafting. In fact, my own lack of time is what made this into a no-sew project, and I pretty much love it. My werewolf embroidery pattern has been enlarged and transformed into a piece of hoop art that can be put together in no time.

No-Sew Werewolf Hoop Art

After I finished my furry friend, I realized that it reminded me of the amazing Star Wars hoop art by Love and a Sandwich. And while I wasn't trying to imitate her work, I was no doubt influenced. If you haven't see her pieces, go check them out!

Now, let's make some felt artwork!

No-Sew Werewolf Hoop Art

Here's what you need:

8-inch embroidery hoop
background fabric (you can use one piece, or strips as I did)
brown and tan felt
blank and white felt scraps
12mm safety eyes (optional)
fabric glue
scissors
crop-o-dile (optional, but helpful for the safety eyes)

Werewolf Hoop Art Pattern PDF

No-Sew Werewolf Hoop Art
No-Sew Werewolf Hoop Art

You can use one piece of fabric as your background, or, for more texture, tear a few pieces of fabric into strips that are 3-5 inches wide. Tearing adds the frayed edges that remind me of werewolf clothes!

Lay them across the bottom of your embroidery hoop, then tighten the top piece over them. You may need to pull the edges a bit to get them laying flat.

No-Sew Werewolf Hoop Art
No-Sew Werewolf Hoop Art

Cut out the head from brown felt. Position it on the hoop so the bottom is extending past the hoop by about 1/2". Spread fabric glue on the back of the head, but not on the section that extends over the edge. You don't really need a lot, just be sure to get around the edges, and a little through the center.

No-Sew Werewolf Hoop Art

Flip the hoop over and press it from the back. Make sure it sticks and is flat without messing up the fabric tension. This is especially important if you have the layered strips for the background.

No-Sew Werewolf Hoop Art

Cut out the ear and face pieces from tan felt, the teeth from white felt, and the nose from black felt. If you're not using safety eyes, you can cut the eyes from black felt too. Glue them all in place.

No-Sew Werewolf Hoop Art
No-Sew Werewolf Hoop Art

After the glue has had time to dry, remove the fabric from the hoop. If you're using safety eyes, make a small hole at the center of each eye shown on the template. You'll need to go through all of the layers, which is where a Crop-o-dile Big Bite helps immensely. Sharp scissors or an awl should also work for you.

Insert the eyes through the holes and add the locking ring to the back.

No-Sew Werewolf Hoop Art

Place the fabric back in the hoop again, and this time, push the top hoop over the felt to hold it in place. Now you can finish off the back of your hoop however you'd like. The simplest option is to just trim the fabric down and leave it showing with a bit of fray. Or, read about more ideas for preparing your hoop for hanging.

No-Sew Werewolf Hoop Art

If you'd like, tear a strip of fabric and add a hanger, and perhaps a little bow too. I like how it softens it and adds extra detail.

No-Sew Werewolf Hoop Art

But really, the beady eyes are my favorite part about this. They shine and add some dimension, and it makes me think about how much fun it would be to use these in other hoop art. Hmmm...I might have to work on that.

Happy Halloween Crafting!

flashback // ghosts of halloween projects past

Ghostie Garland

I thought I'd take a quick look back at a few Halloween projects that I've shared here. Maybe you've seen them before, or maybe not! They're not-so-scary to get done before Halloween...I promise!

Click the name of the project to see the full post. Oh, and the "Pin It" button will allow you to pin the original post so that you can find the full tutorials when you're ready to start crafting!

Spooky Spider Friends // Wild Olive

Spooky Cat Coasters

Pumpkin Book Band

Flying Ghost Toy

Half-Hexi Spider Web

pumpkin notepad

Halloween Patterns From Dad