Showing posts with label Calypso Frogs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Calypso Frogs. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 23, 2014

Tutorial: Calypso Tote

Happy summer! We're thrilled to celebrate these bright, summery July days with a citrus-inspired tote tutorial from Bethany of Sweet Bee Buzzings using Ro Gregg's Calypso Frogs line. We hope you'll enjoy her tutorial and then head over to her blog to find out how you can enter to win some Calypso fabrics for yourself!

Hi folks! I'm so pleased to be here to share an easy tutorial with you to give a different look to the basic tote bag. My name is Bethany, and I blog over at Sweet Bee Buzzings. I loooove to sew, but bags are my main squeeze--they're generally quick, usually easy, can be customized infinitely, and, most importantly, don't have to fit.

The bag we'll be making is a basic tote where the lining comes over to the exterior to provide some nice contrast and a bit of a faux cuff look. You're probably thinking "Oh, I could make this by cutting some contrasting strips for the outside" and you'd be right, but that's more cutting, more seams, and more bulk (ick! Bulk!). So let's get started, shall we?


Before we get stitching, here are a few quick notes so I don't have to keep repeating myself. First, we're using a 1/4 inch seam allowance throughout. Second, backstitch at the beginning and end of every seam. Third, don't skip the pressing. Pressing is how you get nice professional results with anything, so don't ignore this step. Press every seam you sew.

For this project I used two prints from the Calypso Frogs line by Ro Gregg. You'll need a half yard for the exterior, and about a yard for the lining and straps (you'll have a little left over of both). I also used 2/3 yard of fusible fleece. My fleece of preference is Thermolam Plus Fusible. It gives really nice structure to a bag, while staying soft and playing nicely with that quilted look.

From your exterior fabric, cut two pieces that each measure 17 inches wide by 15 inches high (take care if you're using directional fabrics). From your lining fabric, cut two pieces that each measure 17 inches wide by 21 inches high, and 2 pieces that each measure 5 inches by 32 inches (for your straps). From your fleece, cut two strips that each measure 2 1/2 inches by 32 inches (straps), two pieces that measure 17 inches by 2 3/4 inches, and two pieces that measure 17 inches by 15 inches.


Fusibles need to sit for a little while to let the adhesive set (unless you're going to be quilting them) so I like to do that part first. Take your exterior pieces and the matching fleece pieces and follow the instructions to apply the fleece to the wrong side of your fabric. After it's had time to set you can trim any fleece overhang. Take the smaller fleece strips (NOT the pieces for your straps) and apply those to the wrong sides of the top of your lining pieces, BUT place them 1/4 inch from the top edge of the fabric and fuse.



Let's do the straps. Grab your strap strips and your fleece strap strips. Fold and press your fabric, right sides together, in half longways (think bias tape).


Unfold, and then use that center crease as your guide. Fold in the raw edges to meet at that center crease and press again.


Take your fleece and lay it down the center of the strip (using your most recent creases as a placement guide). I like to then fold over the edges and press it to hold it in place, then flip the whole thing over and press from the side without the raw edges showing more firmly and convincingly.


Then fold the whole thing in half and press again so it looks like giant bias tape with some fleece stuck inside.


Stitch each of the long edges, as close to the edge as you feel comfortable. I go about 1/8 inch in from the edges.


You could certainly leave it be at this, but I like a more quilted look, so I added a few extra rows of stitching. It's your bag, so do what you like. Put those aside.


Grab your exterior pieces that should be nice and fleeced now. You could leave them this way as we used a fusible. But I like quilted bags, so I'm going that route. Decide how you'd like to quilt these pieces. I decided to go with some very simple vertical lines, one inch apart. I use a hera marker to mark my lines, which is one of my favorite sewing notions for projects like this.


Then stitch. I did not use a backing fabric on this as you'd usually do with a quilt. I do this quite often with bags and have never had any trouble, so if some of you are wondering about not backing the fleece and if it's sheer lunacy I assure you it's not necessary and a pox will not fall upon your house :)

Once you do that, let's place the straps. Make sure you're placing them at the top edge if you're using directional fabrics.


As you can see in the photo, I place the edge of my strap four inches in from the side (those clips work great for bulk, but pins are dandy too). I am quite obsessive about my straps being sewn in sturdily so I stitch these down (I actually triple-stitch) inside the seam allowance (between 1/8 and 1/4 inch from the edge). Do this for each strap, making sure they're not twisted.


Now we'll assemble this into a bag. Pin the bottom edges together and stitch straight across. Press open. Then sew up each side and press those open as far as you can. Now we're going to make a nice boxy bottom. If you try to stand your bag up you'll see that the bottom corners want to flop out a bit like a triangle. We're going to flatten those triangles to make our boxy bottom.


If you peek inside the bag you can line up the side seam with the bottom seam by laying them on top of each other. To help keep things flat I like to snip off the tip of the triangle so I can see where the seams line up.


Once you get those seams lined up (and you'll want to take care to do this so things look tidy on the outside), place a ruler across the triangle where it measures four inches. If you've got things lined up right you'll see that the two inch line is smack on the seam--


If things aren't even squiggle things a little until they are. Then pin/clip in place, and draw a line. Stitch across, and then cut off the excess. Repeat for the other corner.


This is what it will look like on the outside:


Now assemble the lining in the same way, making sure the fleece is at the top edge, and that you're leaving a 6 - 8 inch gap in the middle of the bottom seam.


Now we'll organize this mess into an official bag. Place the exterior into the lining with the right sides facing. Pin/clip around the top, and match those side seams


Stitch around the top edge. Before we turn the bag, I want you to pull the layers apart so they look like this:


Press that seam you just sewed towards the top of the bag. That wee gap we left when applying the interfacing to the exterior? That's way cutting down on bulk there. Now, reach into the gap in the lining and pull everything to the right side.


Pull the pieces apart like you did just before we pressed in the last step, and press that seam again.


Now tuck the lining down into the exterior. You can feel where the fleece edge is through the fabric, so use that as your guide for where the top edge will be.


You have a few options here. You could leave this looking like the above (minus the pins of course) where it will have a cuffed look. If you choose this option, I would make sure everything was nice and neat and then stitch in that ditch there to keep the layers from getting wiggly. Or, you could do one line of top-stitching around the top edge. I wanted to keep my quilted look going throughout, so I used horizontal lines in this section, kind of dense but not being too obsessive about perfect straight lines.


Once you finish that, our final step is to sew the gap in the lining closed. Making sure the raw edges are tucked inside, bring together the gap edges, pin, and stitch closed either by machine or hand.


Tuck that inside, give it a final press, and you're finished!


Thanks so much for having me here, Fabri-Quilt. I loved working with these fabrics, and I love my new bag!

Happy sewing!

Thanks, Bethany! Love the tote and your technique!

Head over to Bethany's blog to find out how you can enter to win a fat quarter bundle of the Calypso prints to sew with yourself! 

Thursday, September 26, 2013

What's in a color?

We thought we'd have some fun with color today. What is your favorite, and why?
This article from freshome Design & Architecture explores room colors and how they affect your mood. Sure, paint is great, but fabric is more fun, so we've pulled some of our favorites in each hue to coordinate with the article's explanations!

Kitchen:
Yellow - increases metabolism, brightens rooms, gives you energy


Dining Room:
Red - encourages appetite


Living Room: 
Lavender - calms the nerves, allows relaxation


Bedroom: 
Green - tranquility and health


Girl's Bedroom:
Pink - calming, warm


Office:
Blue - most productive color

Do any of the rooms (or quilts) in your house match up with these recommendations?

Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Feels like summer: Calypso!

Some quilts you look at just make you happy, simple as that. Michele Crawford's "Calypso," featured in the August-September issue of The Quilter magazine, is definitely one of those. She mixed two large focal prints from the Calypso Frogs collection by Ro Gregg with a white tonal and Marblehead Brights framing each block. 

"Calypso" by Michele Crawford;
featured in the August-September issue of The Quilter magazine
Q. Why did you choose the Calypso Frogs fabrics, and how did you decide which fabric to feature as the focal print?
Michele: I thought that the bright leaves print in the collection looked very summery, so I chose the leaves on blue and the leaves on white as the focal prints. I am a very symmetrical person and liked the leaves on blue as the border print better than the leaves on white.



Q. Favorite fabric in the collection?
Michele: I like the leaves on blue best.

Q. Talk about the fabrics you paired with the main Calypso Frogs prints.
Michele: I used six different tonals from Marblehead and Marblehead Brights that would pull out the colors in the two focal fabrics as well as a white tonal for contrast.

Q. Tell us how you designed the block.
Michele: I played around with design ideas after being inspired by some modern quilts on Pinterest which featured bright colors with white.

Q. We love the flange! Why did you decide to add it?
Michele: This is a 3/8" finished dimensional border to add a little bit of zing, color and contrast to the quilt between the blocks, white border and outer border.

Q. What is your favorite part of the quilt?
Michele: I love the overall feeling of the quilt with its bright summer colors. People have told me that it is a happy quilt and makes them smile.

Q. How was the quilt machine quilted?
Michele: I like to machine quilt the quilt in the ditch in the seams between all the blocks and borders before I send it to my machine quilter, Kay Kimball, to "set" the quilt and to keep all the blocks and borders straight. Kay did what I call the "fancy stitching" with her Gamill and Statler. I needed her machine quilting to be simple so she quilted four hearts which make a flower in the center of each block and then a "loopy" stitch in the border. 

Find the kit for this project and learn more about Michele here.
See the entire Calypso Frogs collection here.
Find The Quilter magazine here.







Tuesday, July 16, 2013

It's time to vote!

American Patchwork & Quilting's One Million Pillowcase Challenge has passed the halfway mark! 
Stop and think about that for a second--more than 500,000 pillowcases have been stitched and donated to charity through this initiative. That's impressive. 

During the month of July, AP&Q is holding a contest on Pinterest. They've picked 20 of their favorite pillowcases and pinned them. The pillowcase with the most repins at the end of the month will be declared the winner and featured in a special hop. We are proud to be a sponsor of the Pillowcase Challenge, and we'll be participating in the hop in August.

How can you be part of this? Head over to their Pinterest page and repin your favorite pillowcase. 
(And keep reading below to be part of our contest here!)

By the way, did we mention that TWO of our pillowcases made it into the top 20? That's right! We wouldn't want to sway your vote or anything, but we did want to show them off:

Calypso by Ro Gregg


Lady in Red by Ro Gregg


We'd also encourage you to make a pillowcase (or more!) to donate. It's a quick and easy project, and you can make a difference for someone in your own community. You can find a huge variety of pillowcase patterns (including for all the pillowcases you see on this blog page) here.

In the meantime, we're holding our own contest right here, just for fun. Below you'll see all of our pillowcase samples from the Pillowcase Challenge from 2012 and 2013 (photos courtesy of American Patchwork & Quilting). Which one do you like best? And why? Leave us a comment letting us know!
Log cabin pattern using Marblehead 
Uneven hourglass pattern using Fall Tapestry

Churn dash pattern using Garden Whimsy

Cottage in the forest applique pattern using Garden Whimsy

Crazy rail fence pattern using Pretty in Pink

Snowball pattern using Marblehead Pleasing Pastels

Precut strips pattern using Focus


Train pattern using Calypso Frogs

Chevron band pattern using Tribal Council

Spools pattern using Lady in Red

X block band pattern using Flutter

Bubbles applique pattern featuring Calypso

Rick rack pattern using Cambridge Flannel