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Tuesday, September 30, 2014

pillow talk


That's right, I got my sew on!

A couple weeks ago, I took a basics in sewing class from JoAnn Fabrics - and I highly recommend it! I had tried to follow some YouTube sewing tutorials, from threading my machine to just basic seams, and I knew I wasn't doing it right. So, for $35, JoAnn hooked me up with a fantastic instructor, a very thorough starter kit, and we spent 2.5 hours learning about our machines, basic stitches, and different fabrics and types of threads/tension/whatnot they needed. I left excited and more confident, even if my spiral stitch looked liked I'd sneezed a few times ...

So, this Sunday I started my first project: a pillow cover from the sailboat fabric we used to re-upholster the library ottoman. I had a vague idea of what this would call for, but decided to consult the wisdom of the internet.

This post had a nice diagram and instructions for a one-piece cover with insertion flap. Or, you can break it down by this: measure the length and width of the pillow from seam to seam. Then, double the width of the pillow, and then add an inch to each edge of the overall piece (for your hems). I found several tutorials where the front, back, and flap were all separate pieces, but the one-piece concept below sounded right up my alley.


So, I did that. My previous cut of the sailboat fabric had not been, uh, very straight, so I was a little nervous about measuring and cutting off. Once I had the piece sliced and positioned the pillow to figure out where I wanted the insertion flap to go, I then trimmed up the uneven edges.


And somewhere along the lines, I mixed up techniques from looking at multiple tutorials. See, the super simple technique would be to sew only sew three (or four) lines. You hem one short edge (or both), fold the fabric over (like the bottom part of the diagram above) and then sew the seams. Done! Apparently I wanted to be very thorough with my seams and hemmed both short edges and a long edge before I realized what I'd done.


Oops. But I need the practice, right? No problem, one edge is just reinforced. Once I finished each seam, I turned the fabric right side out and shoved the pillow in. I realized I'd been too generous in my measurements and the cover was a little too big, so I just turned it inside out and did a deeper stick on two opposite edges (where there was the most give). 

Ta-da!


After I was done, I decided the next pillow's insertion flap will be moved off center. I'll also take the easier route. ;-) But it was such a simple, satisfying project that I think I've got the bug! My next project are new covers for the two euro pillows in the guest room (after photos of our paint job coming soon!).

Sunday, September 28, 2014

a hole in the kitchen

I know it's been ages since we've posted, but we've got good reasons:
  • We've been doing stuff (so there's a lineup of posts coming)
  • My computer's motherboard failed and it's in the ICU (I'm using a loaner)
  • We've both been slammed at work
  • And sometimes doing nothing is awesome

So, with that being said, here's a sample of what's been going on:
  • Guest room: Painted; decorating in progress
  • Hallway: Trim and walls painted;decorating in progress
  • Kitchen: Big hole!

Inspecting the beast's innards
Today we're going to talk about holes. Namely, the big hole in our kitchen. Our destructive tendencies continue here after taking down the upper peninsula cabinets (and just kind of leaving it like that). So, one Sunday, Mike got the urge to rip out the big, ugly, useless trash compactor while I began painting trim upstairss
I told him I'd ignore the scary banging and scraping sounds unless he yelled for help (or there's a loud crash followed by sudden silence).

It did sound pretty dire sometimes and it seemed the monster was putting up quite the fight. Then Mike called me down to show off the mess.

Saturday, September 6, 2014

extreme weed

I kind of forgot to post this earlier.



Extreme weed. No, it’s not a new product coming out of Colorado. It’s just how last Saturday got a little sidetracked.

See, after we ripped out the hedge of doom and planted some rose bushes, we haven’t really done much with our front landscaping. I pretended the weeds were landscaping (green is green, right?), but it was looking pretty bad, so I sucked it up and decided to weed before continuing in-house projects.

As I started filling a Target bag full of the useless stuff, Mike came out and started poking around the rock-filled dirt. My spider sense started tingling. Something bad was about to happen. Our neighbors were using our driveway to unload bags of river rock to fill in some washout for their landscaping, and I don’t know if this was the ultimate factor or what … but Mike got that bee in his bum and started to dig out the crescent area.