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book review // sew sweet creatures

book review // sew sweet creatures

Prepare yourself for some of the cutest and cuddliest creations you could ever sew up.

Sew Sweet Creatures is a new book from Lark Crafts that is filled with stuffed animal projects. What sets this title apart is that each animal is a character with its own story and accessories that you can also make. And let me tell you, these are the most adorable friends you'll ever make.

I'll be up-front and say that I'm totally biased because some of the critters in Sew Sweet Creatures were designed by yours truly. But the animals I sewed aren't my favorites. Seriously, there are so many sweet projects in here!

book review // sew sweet creatures
book review // sew sweet creatures
book review // sew sweet creatures

There are five designers who contributed to this book, and each has her own style. And yet, they all work well together.

The tiny polar bear above is the most different from the others. But do you see that igloo in the background? Whether I make the bear or not, I think I need a fleece igloo. I might make the felt panda bear into a little felt polar bear that can live inside!

And that's another great thing about Sew Sweet Creatures: you can mix and match many of the accessories with other animals!

book review // sew sweet creatures

For example, so many of the little creatures could snuggle up with this mattress, pillow and blankie! I love everything about this set. Just look at those rosy cheeks!

book review // sew sweet creatures

There's also a little story about each animal in the book. Chip the Lumberjack Beaver is one of the friends I made, and it was a fun story to write. I couldn't help but throw a little Monty Python reference in there. Oh, and his hat? It felt like such an odd thing to design...a tiny hat with ear flaps, and it's set on a bit of an odd rotation. But it was my favorite accessory that I made.

book review // sew sweet creatures

Speaking of favorites, this is the project that I simply must make. A crafty felt bunny? With a Liberty dress? Could there be anything better? I'm smitten.

book review // sew sweet creatures

Each project has thorough instructions for the animal and all the accessories. The patterns are not all full size, but I'm willing to bet that if you didn't want to enlarge them, you could still make these guys just a little smaller. (For all of my fleece animals, I'd recommend switching to felt if you do this).

Any time a step in the making process requires some extra visual assistance, there are illustrations to help, and plenty of tips too. You'll be making your own menagerie in no time!

book review // sew sweet creatures

Aren't they a cute bundle? Sew Sweet Creatures is available now from Amazon, Barnes & Noble, or your local bookseller.

Now I want to know...which animal from this book is the one you'd start making first?

pattern // home sweet home

Home Sweet Home


Do you have a home sweet home? We all do, in one way or another. And so why not name it? Display this little hoop to label your home sweet home. And if that happens to be someplace that moves (even daily!), just stitch it on a zip pouch or something else you can carry with you.

What I like about this is the combination of embroidery on both the backing fabric and on a hexagon. Plus, all together, it reads Home Sweet Home Sweet Home. Now that's a statement!

To make your own, you'll need to grab the little Hexagon Tinies house pattern. And while you're there you can see how I make my embroidered hexagons. Then you can combine it with the pattern here.


Home Sweet Home

Embroider the Home Sweet Home pattern on your backing fabric, then center the embroidered house hexagon in the middle. Stitch it in place with three strands of matching floss and running stitch.

I went with all one color for this, but you could use several, especially for the flowers. Just be sure to choose backing fabric that will allow the stitching to show well. Busy designs aren't so good for this hoop.

Home Sweet Home Sweet Home


Hang this little hoop in your own home sweet home, or use it as a perfect house-warming gift! (You may even want to make a few of them in advance if you have a bunch of friends who are starting to think about moving.)

Happy stitching!

Adorable scallop hoop: Stars & Sunshine

9 fall patterns and projects you can't miss

Favorite Fall Cup Holder

Last year I shared a little round-up of Halloween posts I've created over the years. Many of them can be done in no time at all, so be sure to check that out. But there are more than just what I shared there, so how about another link list for you?

These patterns and projects will keep you busy now through the end of November, so get ready to DIY your autumn! Because this is the most wonderful time of the year!

because it's all about the people you share life with

A Stitching Day

I had a post planned for today, and never got around to actually posting it. Because I spent the morning with friends and the afternoon with my little sister. And even though I feel bad about less frequent blog posts, I know that spending time with friends and family are more important.

Especially when your 10-year-old sister says she wants to sew some things to sell. Then you encourage and help her.

My next blog post will come when it comes. (Hopefully tomorrow!)

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!




stitching and sketching behind the scenes

little sketches

The other day I was talking with my good friend about how it seems like we used to be able to do a lot more than we can now. There were times when I was posting here every day, plus releasing several new pattern sets a month. Plus more. I look back on that time and laugh. Or cry. Sometimes both.

Right now I'm not posting tons of blog posts or releasing new patterns very often. But I am doing plenty of the "plus more".

There has been much sketching for something super exciting and a ridiculous amount of stitching. Also for some very happy things! And I can't show you any of it. (Like, those sketches above are only there because they ended up becoming nothing.)

What are you working on these days? Fun things? I hope so. In the meantime, I've got a new free Halloween pattern up over on About.com.

Happy stitching and sketching and crafting and creating!

pattern // dia de los muertos skulls and flowers

Dia De Los Muertos Embroidery Patterns

At my house we don't do much celebrating for Day of the Dead, but I find many of the decorations to be pretty fun. So last year I designed a printable wreath project for Handmade Charlotte. The wreath features layered flowers and sugar skulls...with a bit of a Wild Olive flair.

I always thought they'd make excellent embroidery patterns too, so I adapted them slightly so they are stitchable.

Dia De Los Muertos Embroidery Patterns


They can be used as individual motifs, but I think they'd be fantastic layered. You know, a skull with a grouping of flowers, or maybe even a few skulls for a larger design! I'll leave that up to you.

I did take the liberty of choosing a few colors that would be fun for your Dia de los Muertos stitching...

Dia De Los Muertos Embroidery Patterns

Add some black and/ or white to these DMC colors and you'll be ready to stitch a celebration!


And then don't forget to check out the printable wreath. There are more skull designs there too, so you may even be inspired to create your own decorative designs on the sugar skull outline!

project // epp octagon pumpkin pin

EPP Octagon Pumpkin Pin


Ready for an easy little project you can stitch up in an hour? You'll be able to wear it on your jacket or tote to celebrate this fantastic fall season.

Since it's octagon month, I took an EPP octagon, er...two octagons, and made them into a little pumpkin. And while I went for a pin, I think these little gourds would also make great magnets.

To make the pumpkin you only two to baste two pieces, but the 3/4-inch octagon template page includes more than you'll need. Why? Because you might just want to make some more octagons this month. And you'll want to do that with adorable little octagons with faces. Right? Right.

Now, onto the pumpkin pin!

EPP Octagon Pumpkin Pin

You will need:

Orange fabric
Brown felt
Batting
Embroidery floss
Pin back
Thread

Octagon Pumpkin Pin PDF Template

EPP Octagon Pumpkin Pin

Baste two orange octagons and cut out one stem piece from brown felt. Finger press the edges of the octagons then remove the papers.

EPP Octagon Pumpkin Pin

Cut out two octagons from batting, then slide them in the back of the octagons. They should fit just right in there.

EPP Octagon Pumpkin Pin

Embroider a face on one of the octagons and stitch the pin back on the other octagon. Stitch through the fabric and the batting.

EPP Octagon Pumpkin Pin

Hold the two octagons wrong sides together, making sure that pin and face end up in the correct direction. Place the stem piece between the layers, at the top of the pumpkin. Wonderclips are extremely helpful for holding the pieces as you stitch.

Stitch the two pieces together with ladder stitch.

EPP Octagon Pumpkin Pin

When you stitch the top, continue with ladder stitch, stitching through the stem as you go.

EPP Octagon Pumpkin Pin

Now your pin is ready to wear!

EPP Octagon Pumpkin Pin
EPP Octagon Pumpkin Pin

I love that this happy little pumpkin is good for wearing through October and November. If you're looking for something more Halloween, you could definitely make the face more like a jack o' lantern. Or, you could change the color to red and make it into an apple!

Happy Pumpkin Making!

calendar // print & post octagons for october



Hello October! I just looked out my window and saw the most beautiful blue sky. There's a strong breeze...it's almost a blustery day. And a few leaves have started to fall. Yep. You're definitely here, October.

And while I'm a little sad as one month passes into another, I also sometimes need to embrace the idea of turning over a new page. It's like each month comes with a fresh start. Better yet, I know that there are new mercies every morning. So I'm breathing in a new chunk of this year.

For October, I chose octagons for our shape. Maybe that's a little obvious, but let's just go with it. Because besides the shape and month names starting with "oct", those little orange eight-sided shapes also look a lot like little pumpkins. Right? Now, go ahead and add them to your computer or other devices!


For iPhone 6+, choose the iPad version. To use the iPhone and iPad versions, click the link for the wallpaper you want. When it opens, touch and hold the image until it pops up with the option to save. After you've saved the image, go to your settings, choose wallpaper, then find the image you've just saved.

To PRINT a calendar page (with a place for notes), download the October 2015 calendar page PDF. The dates are lighter print so you can write over them if you want, or let your little ones trace over the numbers for practice!

And before you move on entirely from September, here are a few favorite projects I shared elsewhere on the interwebs!