Tag Archives: decoration

Pennant Banners: A Tutorial

My best friend recently had her second baby, a little girl.  She already has a sweet little boy and her plan was for the children to share a bedroom/nursery.  Which means she needed to add to the existing décor to incorporate the new little girl.  One of the things she wanted was pennant banners with the children’s names.  So she commissioned me to make them.  (Did you know I take commissions?  I do!  If you want me to make something for you all you have to do is send me a note using the handy form on the “Contact Me”  page located up there above my header.)

I love the look of little fabric pennants strung up and they were so easy to make.  I thought I would do a little tutorial in case you wanted to make some of your own.  These are great in children’s bedrooms with their names or you can use them for special celebrations or even to represent your favorite sports team.  They are so cute and can be used anywhere and because they are fabric they can be washed and stored and won’t tear and look all beat up.

Okay, let’s go!

Materials Needed
1 charm pack of your choice
OR
5 inch squares of fabrics of your choice
5 inch square of scrap cardboard or cardstock
Double-fold bias tape (store-bought or homemade)
Heavy weight interfacing
Pinking shears
Thread
Sewing Machine

Prep Work – Embellish your squares

Because I was using these to display names, I went ahead and added the letters to my squares before I put anything else together.  If you are leaving your pennants plain you will want to skip this step.

I used my handy embroidery machine to appliqué a little white oval and to stitch the letters onto my squares.  You can add your letters/decoration however you choose.  I’m not going to include appliqué instructions in my tutorial…you can find dozens with a simple Google search.  But I will show you how I set everything up.

For the record, my appliqués were about 1” x 2”.

  1. Find the center on your piece of fabric.
  2. Measure down about 2 inches from the center and mark with an X.  This should be the center of your design.
  3. Add your letter!

Make the Pennants

  1. Select which squares from your charm pack you would like to use.  You will need two for each pennant: one for the front and one for the back.
  2. Following the manufacturer’s instructions, attach the heavy weight interfacing to your fabric squares.
  3. Make a triangle template.  (I just used the cardboard backing from my charm pack.)  Find the center on the bottom side and draw straight lines from that center point to each of the top corners.  Cut off the sides forming your triangle.
  4. Place your new template on top of each “front” square and trace.  You should only really need to trace the sides of the triangle.
  5. Don’t cut yet!!
  6. Stack your front and back squares wrong sides together.  You can pin if you want to, but I didn’t think it was necessary.
  7. Top stitch along the lines you drew earlier.  I used a triple stitch in a contrasting thread to make it stand out a bit more.
  8. When you get to the tip of your triangle, leave the needle down and lift the presser foot to rotate your square.
  9. Now, take your pinking shears and trim about a 1/4 inch away from your stitching line.
  10. Yay! Pennants are done!

Make the Banner

  1. Line up or measure out your pennants to determine how much double-fold bias tape you will need.  I left about 8 inches of free space on either side to allow room for hanging.
  2. Pin your triangles with the top edge sandwiched in the fold of the bias tape.  Go ahead and pin all the triangles you will be using on that strip of bias tape.
  3. Finish your bias tape ends.  Sorry, I don’t have a picture of this, but here is a good tutorial on how to do this.  Just use the part about finishing the ends.
  4. Stich close to the open edge all the way across the bias tape.
  5. Now your banner is finished!
  6. One last thing I did was add a tiny bias tape bow to the girl banner, just to add some interest.  I simply finished a scrap of tape as before and stitched the open edge closed.  Then I tied it into a sweet little bow.

 

And there you go…cute fabric pennants to string up in your child’s room, your living room or your next tailgate.

 

I just made a new Flickr pool and I would love to see your creations!  Upload away!

AND…I just hit 100 “Likes” on Facebook.  I think it is giveaway time again!  Stay tuned for details about that later this week.  If you won, what would you like me to make for you?

Christmas Craftiness

Now that the dust has settled from Christmas weekend I have a minute to breath and to blog.  I wanted to get this post out before Christmas, but I was working on gifts down to my Dec. 23 deadline and I didn’t want to disappear while we were enjoying family time.

First, I wanted to share a project from last year: our stockings.  Last fall I was pregnant with our second baby and I felt it was time to make our family stockings.  I grew up with a a crafty mom and we had super cute felt stockings personalized with our names.  I loved those stockings, but  I wanted a different feel for our family stockings.  I looked and looked, but I wasn’t thrilled with many of the DIY stocking patterns/tutorials out there.  Until I stumbled upon the Moda Bakeshop.  I love this site.  It has tons of free tutorials/patterns utilizing the Moda fabric pre-cuts (jelly rolls, charm squares, layer cakes, etc.) and I found the perfect pattern. The His and Her Scrappy Christmas Stockings.  I loved the shape and the scrappy look of the stockings.  And I thought the plain band would be perfect for embroidering our names.

Since these would be in our family for a long time to come I wanted Christian to have a say in the fabric chosen.  We looked and looked at lots of different fabric collections online.  The pattern called for a jelly roll so for simplicity’s sake I wanted to stick with collections that carried jelly rolls.  Christian tends to prefer more playful Christmas items and I lean towards the more traditional so a compromise was difficult to find.  We eventually settled on Makin’ New Friends by Deb Strain for Moda.  It was the perfect blend of traditional and playful.  And I actually had some foresight and made sure to buy enough fabric to make matching stockings for any subsequent children we might have.

I pretty much followed the pattern exactly…the only embellishment I made was hand-embroidering our names on the bands.  Here are the completed stockings…

     

     

(I should offer an apology for those photos…they are from last year and not great and I was too lazy to retake them by the time I sat down to actually insert pictures into the post…I promise I will be less lazy in the future!)

Okay, so now this year’s projects which are brought to you courtesy of Pinterest.  I only made a couple things in the way of new decorations this year.  The first was an Advent calendar.  My mom saw this one on Pinterest and had the idea for us all (my sister, mom and I) to make them the day after Thanksgiving.

A few details about them…mom got all the main components together and pre-cut all the pockets and brought them up for the project.  We used scrapbook paper and various stickers.  Each pocket contains a card with some sort of activity for each day December 1-24.  We worked and slaved ALL DAY.  Seriously, all day.  It was an 11 hour project.  I don’t think any of us expected it to be so long!  But, they turned out great!  Here is all three of ours…

I love how different each one is even with using very similar components.  We were all so proud. :)

And here is a close up of mine as well as some of my favorite pockets.  You can see I opted for uniform numbers on my pockets.  It is a sickness of mine.

          

I also made a couple of wreaths.

One for the front door and one made from live trimmings from our tree.  The one for the door was super easy.  I just wrapped it in this fun striped ribbon and made a bow.  I did want to personalize it, so I painted an “S” and hung it in the middle.

   

The live one was a bit of a trouble.  At first I didn’t think I needed to look up a “how-to”…I mean, I’m crafty, I should be able to figure this out, right?  Wrong.  I spent a very frustrating hour fighting with sappy limbs and trimmings and all for nothing.  It was hideous and I dismantled it immediately in a huff.  Christian wisely suggested watching a video or something to learn how (humph.) and so I reluctantly looked up some options.  I found a great video that made everything very clear, unfortunately I cannot find it again. Boo.  Anyways, it was like an “A-ha!” moment and my next live wreath attempt took maybe 20 minutes.  I trimmed it up with a simple berry garland.

The only other thing I worked on (besides gifts) is ornaments.  I made the girls’ yearly ornaments and I made some little ones for gifts for my fellow church staff folks and our community group.

I’ve been trying avoid owls since they are so trendy…but they are just so cute!  And I decided that having something trendy isn’t so bad for something that represents the year.  In 20 years or so when we unpack them we can say, “Remember when owls were so big?”

I wish I could claim that I made up these owls on my own, but alas no.  I saw them on Pinterest (of course) and I got the pattern from Juicy Bits.  I love how sweet they are!

   

The other ornaments I made I also saw on Pinterest (again) and they are actually a Martha Stewart craft.  They are simply tiny cookie cutters with scrapbook paper glued to the back and tied up with ribbons for the hangers.  They were really easy and turned out really cute.  (As a sidenote, I purchased a little 4×6 scrapbook paper matstack and it has come in so handy through the whole holiday season.  I used it to make a pennant banner for church, these ornaments, gift tags, etc. and I still have a ton of paper left!)

Here are some of my favorite ornaments…

          

          

I hope you and yours had a very Merry Christmas and I wish you a Happy New Year!

Coming in January 2012: Christmas gifts breakdowns, a pattern review or two and more sewing for the living dolls.

Thanksgiving 2011

Well, it was a great and busy Thanksgiving weekend.  Our home is the most central to all participants, so we hosted my family, Christian’s mom and my sister’s husband’s parents for a Thanksgiving feast.  My talents lie in the sewing/crafting room and not in the kitchen, so my dear husband whipped up an excellent meal and we enjoyed it with some excellent people.

Last year when we hosted Thanksgiving I was 9 months pregnant and due the following week, so I was lax about fall decor and my table setting.  It was a hodge-podge mess and I vowed things would be different this year.  I shared a couple things I created previously and now here is the rest…

For my table I wanted something simple and fall time, harvest-y.  I saw some large felt leaves on Pinterest and I was hooked!  I got some 72″ craft felt from Joann and cut out some giant leaves.  I used the custom shape tool in Photoshop to create my leaf pattern and enlarged it to the size I wanted.  Martha Stewart has a leaf shape pattern you could use too, but I wasn’t using a photocopier, just my computer and printer and I couldn’t enlarge the template without it getting all pixelated.  If you are more adventurous than me you probably could sketch out your leaf shape and just eyeball it, but that terrifies me.  I am a nut and like everything all symmetrical.

     

For the rest of my table decor I just used my red plates, which always spice up a table, some new green bowls (for our tasty lobster bisque) and the napkins that I made.

I love this fabric for my Thanksgiving napkins.  It is a large scale leaf print on a brown background.  I thought they were perfect for the look I was going for.  (I also had enough fabric left over to make a few trivets for all the yummy casseroles.)

     

And finally, for my centerpiece I found this stalk of wheat at Publix while getting all our food for the holiday and thought it would be the perfect touch.  I put it into an old fashioned milk jug and scattered some on the table as well.  I then tucked a few mason jars among the wheat and put in some tea lights.  My original plan was to wrap them in lace, but after getting the table all set I realized that wasn’t the right look.  I left them plain and that was definitely the right choice.

     

I was really happy with the finished product.  A simple tablescape but soooo much better than last year!

My other big Thanksgiving project was making the girls their dresses.  A million years ago (it seems) a friend posted a cute holiday dress on Pinterest and I had the brainwave of making the dress reversible with a holiday design on one side and a different holiday design on the other.

I don’t have an embroidery machine, but I found tons of cute iron-on patches that some folks make on Etsy.  I saw an adorable little turkey and the same lady made Christmas trees as well.  I purchased the patches for both girls and set about making my reversible dresses.

The Thanksgiving side is a dark green with the little turkey applique, red buttons and yellow, orange and red rickrack as trim.  They turned out so cute and we got lots of compliments on them while we were out and about the Sunday before Thanksgiving.

A couple notes about how I did these:

1. The pattern – For Esther the pattern was easy.  I’ve had this pattern since Dinah was a baby and have used it for several things before.  For Dinah, things got a little dicey.  I am new to drafting patterns so it took me some time, lots of measuring and math, and quite a bit of frustration.  I did figure it out, but after the dress was assembled I noticed a couple things that I would want to fix.  Notably the width the shoulders…it is just a leeetle too big there and kept slipping down on Sunday. It seemed to fit better on Thursday, so I wonder if it shrunk up a bit more in the wash or maybe she grew that much in 3 days.  I’d believe it.

2. Appliques and trim - For my trim I used my secret weapon, the glue stick, to baste.  I just measured with my hem gauge , dabbed on a bit of glue and stuck it onto the fabric.  Prefect basting with no pins.  After I had everything all basted I straight stitched all the ribbon and rickrack to the dresses.  And because I used a washable glue stick all the sticky residue simply washed away.  I love it!

The appliques I purchased were supposed to be iron-on patches, but for some reason I was not able to get them to stick.  So, I decided just to stitch them on (which I probably would have needed to do anyway). I just so happened to have thread in my stash to match every color on the appliques (thanks again, Grandma!)  I then used the glue stick to baste the appliques to the dress fronts and I hand stitched them on around the edges.  I think I am the only one who can see the stitches and they are nice and secure.

3. The assembly – The pattern instructions had to be altered since the way I wanted to do this was different than how they tell you to do it.  Basically what I did was:

  • Attach the appliques to the dress fronts.
  • Sew up the side seams of each layer of the dress.
  • Attach all the trim.
  • Put them together right sides facing and sew the arm and neck holes.
  • Clip all corners and curves and turn right side out.
  • Press, press, press!
  • Turn up the hem of the inside layer and press. (Fold wrong sides together.)
  • Turn up the hem of the outside layer (matching the inside layer hem) and press.
  • Topstitch the hem 1/8″ away from the edge.
  • Sew on buttons and make button holes.*

*Because I wanted bows on the Christmas side I experimented with removable snap on bows and I am very pleased with how those turned out.  (I’ll post more about the Christmas side soon.)  So, in my case I attached the snap and then sewed the button over top of the backside of the snap.

4. The bow – And I just had to make a turkey hair clip for Dinah.  It is two fabric covered buttons that I embroidered and some left over rickrack for tail feathers.  Turned out pretty darn cute!

     

Here are some action shots…they are both pretty silly after church.

And I wanted to close by saying what I am so thankful for: a Savior, a doting husband, precious and healthy children, friends who also happen to be family, our parents who spoil our girls, our home, our church and Georgia beating Georgia Tech.

I hope you all had a great Thanksgiving holiday and found many things for which to be thankful!

Next up: Christmas!  So much sewing and crafting to do…my favorite time of year!

I am closing up shop for the next few months while we prepare for and welcome our new baby! Check back with me in Fall 2013!