Tag Archives: notebook

Fun Embroidered Tree Frog

My first try and mutli-color thread machine embroidery – yes, today!  I totally understand the machine and its prompts.  So watch out!  Once I get the correct type of stablizer figured out, it’s smooth sailing and will be SO much fun.  But here’s what went into the shop today……..

The inside of the portfolio – nope, there’s no frog there! Just fun fabrics and I adore this color combo.  (click on the pic for the Etsy shop)

Ah, ain’t he cute?

My sister turned me on to this website for machine embroidery.  Their designs are TO DIE FOR!  I only get three free ones per week, but I have 4 designs just sitting in my cart waiting for a paycheck so I can purchase them:  a magnolia, two types of roses, some flip flops and some tulips.  They’re fine just sitting there – that way I know where they are at.

Take a look over at their site:  Embroidery Designs – there is a TON over there and you could lost in space just looking at it all.  :)

Thank you, Donna, for putting this site in my email box.  You’ve helped me put my machine to the work it was designed to do.  YIPPEEEE!


How to Make A Notebook Cover – FREE Tutorial by ME!

As I couldn’t teach tomorrow at Joann‘s, due to lack of students, I decided that there was still a need for me to share something.  So today is my contribution for a simple way to cover notebooks, journals or binders.  So bear with me, this is my first try at writing sewing instructions.

This is what I will be teaching you how to complete.  We’ll go from beginning to end for the entire project.

Finished 3-Ring Binder Cover

To complete this particular project, these are the materials that were needed:

1/2 yard cotton fabric of your choice (do NOT iron before starting project)

1/3 yard iron-on fleece or batting

1/3 yard (or even scraps) of lightweight iron-on interfacing.

thread to match fabrics

Embelishments of your choice

Purchased 3-ring 1" spine binder, cotton fabrics, thread, pins, scissors, rotary cutter and ruler

Binder opened flat on fabric

Don’t bother ironing the fabric as the fold line is the best and easiest way to find the center.  Open fabric out flat with right side facing down.  Place open binder flat centering the rings with the fold in the fabric (center).  Hold the binder down as steady as possible and with a pen draw the binder’s outline directly on to the wrong side of your fabric.  Don’t worry, no one is every going to see this but you!  IMPORTANT!!!!!!  At each end (not bottom or top) ADD 1/4″ to your drawn line.  You now have 2 lines at each end and you now must IGNORE the inner line.  Scribble it out if you need to, just to remind yourself it’s not needed any more.  The reason for the extra 1/4″ is so that when the binder is closed, there is enough room for the cotton sleeve to have a relaxed hug to the binder.  If this step is forgotten, the binder may not close correctly, or your fabric will stretch in funny ways we don’t even want to talk about.  :)

Cut excess fabric off away from drawn line – leaving yourself about 1″ from the line for you to work with.  DO NOT throw the extra fabric away – we’re going to put that to good use.

Important! Look at diagram in detail please.

See the three arrows in the photo?  The pen line that you just made might be fairly faint, but you can always go over it again with pen.  These lines were very faint on this photo, but I wanted you to see the pen marks and how even the corner was traced onto the fabric.  These lines are important in the following steps, so please make sure if this is your first try, make those lines as dark as you’d like.  I would highly suggest NOT using a Sharpy Pen as they may bleed into the fabric.

How to cut the iron-on fleece so it fits!

Take you pen-marked cotton fabric and fold it in half, right sides together, making sure the center fold already on fabric is still your center!  Notch both ends on the fold so when you iron your piece, you will have your center markings VERY obvious.  Take your iron-on fleece and fold it in half also – remember to be frugal with this stuff as it is a little pricy.  Line up your folded cotton, where you have your pen markings, along with the edge of the folded fleece.  With a ruler, either mark with pen or pins where you will need to cut the OTHER side of the fleece.  The piece you are going to cut is going to fit directly INSIDE the boarder lines you drew in step one.

Flat right side down

Do you see where the corners were rounded with the iron-on fleece?  Keep working at getting the fleece to fit within the boarder you drew – and then IRON IT ON!  The cotton I had obviously wasn’t cut very well at some point, but we’ll fix that later.

Initial HUG

After ironing your cotton and getting the fleece to hold on tight, bring it back up to a surface you can see how things are fitting.  NOW is the time for adjustments to be made if needed.  This photo just shows that things are on the right track.

Folder out - time to construct.

This photo shows the two sides folded in and the spine area is showing the iron-on fleece.  That’s okay!  Don’t worry as that’s going to get covered up here in a little while.  But look at that raggedly bottom edge!  Let’s cut that down straight and workable.

Evening out.

Fold it all up, like it’s actually already on your notebook.  Get that top edge all even (the one you cut and left about 1″ for working area in an earlier step) and line up the folded spine edge to you cutting board.  Make one fell swoop with your rotary cutter for the entire bottom edge to be straight.

Hemming

The two raw edges, or what may still be your selvage edges of fabric, need to be turned under and stitched down.  Get creative!  Here’s a good chance for you to try out some stitches on your sewing machine you’ve never had a chance to try.  You are really the only one who will see this part of your project – so have some fun!  Yeah, I know.  I just made two straight lines on each edge.  Boring.  :)

IMPORTANT!!!  STOP HERE!!!

Before you go even ONE more step, now is the time to embellish to your heart’s content.  Open your piece out flat, and if you need to mark which is front cover/back cover/front inner/back inner – DO IT!  You won’t regret it.

Here is what I did to decorate my own notebook to use for teaching.

Getting set up for my TygerLIly embroidery.

Of course, I wanted to put my TygerLily logo on the front of the cover.  So I started out with 4 layers:  cotton fabric, iron on interfacing, batting, and scraps from another project.  Yeah, I don’t ever throw anything away.  That polka dot won’t be seen anyway.

Layers basted together ready to machine embroider.

I couldn’t believe the beige leaves cotton print I found lurking in one of my drawers – it had to be used.  So this is all 4 layers basted together and ready to have my logo embroidered on.  Just watch…

Embroidering our team name for the front of the notebook cover.

While that was sewing on it’s own, a few more things needed to be prepared…

Fabric cut for logo embellishment

I cut a 2″ strip of black fabric that I was planning on folding in half and making into a make-shift ruffle.  Yeah, I’m not really a ruffle girl, but I couldn’t find any piping or cord on hand that would work.  So we’re trying a different look.  I took this 2″ strip, folded it in half and sewed a basting stitch (long stitch) down the whole long side of it….

Thread color didn’t matter as it would all be hidden anyway in the finished design.

Prepping an oval cut-out...

After embroidering my name, I looked around for a good shape.  Trimmed the excess off the edges and drew an oval design on tear-away paper (sold in fabric stores).  Pinned the tear-away onto my logo, centering as good as I could.

I used a scrapbooking template I hadn’t gotten rid of yet to draw my oval.  Once drawn, I sewed along that line through all layers of the padded logo and tore the paper off.

Black strip, drawn up and ruffled. Sewn around perimeter of oval.

So now I had a base shape drawn, and next was attaching a little lightly ruffled black piece all around the edge.  I trimmed all the excess fabric all the way around so when I tuck it all underneath, there won’t be a lot of bulk.  I hate bulk.

Centering Front Cover Embellishment

To get that oval placed in the best spot, I measured the REAL notebook to see exactly how wide the front was:  10-1/4″.  So I folded everything up like it was already a ‘notebook’ and measured in 10-1/4″ from the right front side.  Tried to center the logo at 5-1/8″, but really, that’s splitting hairs.  So I proceeded to pin the embellishment to the front and got ready to attach it.

Attached!

As I sewed around the oval, I tucked all that excess bulk (ick) underneath towards the center of the oval.  I then put black upper thread in and did the old “stitch in the ditch” method of sewing:  sewing as close to the edge as possible.  You can’t even see where it was sewed on and the ruffle poofs out just enough.

HOLD ON!  I’m not done embellishing yet!

Gotta have special places for special things.

I cut a piece of vinyl 4″ X 2-1/8″ and zig-zagged it on three sides to the inner front cover.  Best place to show off a business card and have easy access to hand out!

Tagging

Now is the time to put a tag on the back inside flap if you want.  Gifting the item?  Throw your tag, label, whatever back there so they know who made it for them.  :)

SCRAPS and PENS!

Who doesn’t need a place for pens!?!?  Measured a piece that was cut off about an hour ago to fit the pen.  I cut the fabric right where the wrong side starts showing.  I sewed three sides, turned it inside out, ironed it, and sewed it on right above the vinyl business card holder.

What the heck is this? :)

OK, now that all the embellishments you want to add are completed, this is what your piece should look like all sprawed out with the right side facing down.  See the oval shape?  That’s where the TygerLily embroidered piece went.

Don't throw anything away!

Remember the piece that was cut off after you drew those lines?  After we used some of it for the pen pocket, we have a great strip of it left.  The cover itself is laying there, each side folded inward towards the center, right side together.  The best thing I’ve learned is to use LONG pins.  That way their little heads stick out WAY beyond the fabric so whichever way you decide to sew your seam, those pin heads will always show and warn you.  Now go iron that scrap and on each long side, iron about 1/4″ in for a hem to be stitched.

Placement

Now that you’ve ironed that long piece, stitched a little 1/4″ hem on each long side, place it along the center spine area (see the notch at the bottom there) and pin pin pin everything down.

Fleece side showing.

Now that everything has been pinned, flip it over so the fleece side is facing up.  See the pin heads sticking out so you can see them?  Uh-huh.  I knew you did.  Now get ready to SEW the final seams that will make this into something very YOU and very UNIQUE!

HUGELY IMPORTANT!

Not a great photo, but listen to the instructions here.  When you sew this seam, remember the pen marks you made way at the beginning showing the outline of your binder?  Those marks should also be the ENDING point of your iron-on fleece.  DO NOT SEW ON THE PEN LINES!!!  Set up your seam to be about 1/8″ BEYOND the fleece and pen marks.  This is so hugely important if you want your creation to turn and stay flat.  Remember how I don’t like bulk?  If you don’t do this, you will not only have bulk, but you may have a binder cover that won’t easily slip on or off the binder for easy cleaning.  So please heed the warning.  :)   After sewing the top and bottom seam, trim these seams down to 1/4″ to 1/2″, whatever you are comfortable with.  Just get rid of the extra BULK!  :)

To every thing, turn, turn, turn....

Once you have done all your seams (and yes, there are only two seams to be sewn in the last step:  the top and the bottom of the binder cover) it’s the time for the REVEAL!  Take you hand and get underneath that middle section you did in the last step, and grab either front or back fabrics and pull it through.  Do the same for the other side.  Take a chop stick, YES, a chop stick and get the corners turned the best way possible (this one shows rounded corners, but they don’t have to be if you’re a beginner – make STRAIGHT lines if it’s easier).

Once it has been turned right side out, get your steam iron in gear and press along all edges.

Complete and ironed.

See what can happen if you are not afraid of your iron?  Steam your cover into place – make it crisp and sharp.  I know you can do it.  This just shows the inside front and back of the embellishments I decided to include.

Now get your binder – fold front and back backwards on itself and slip the ‘sleeves’ of your cover right into place.  Work with it a little and hopefully it will be JUST enough of a loose fit that there are NO struggles getting it placed onto the binder.

Before it gets slipped on the binder.........

After it gets slipped on to the binder.

Now it's just showing off. :)

Front and Center

Bottom to top view.

Thank you for coming along this ride with me!  I’m now all ready for class, and if this has inspired you to do something creative for yourself, or someone you love, I would love to see what you’ve created!

Please leave questions, ideas or comments – I would love to hear them all!

Happy creating to all my blog-land friends.


Nature Dreams Journal – Completed Design

One more swatch needed to get itself out of the sewing area before I start another project from scratch.  So the turquoise wool swatch was nabbed and sewn up.  This is knitted in Brown Sheep wool in absolutely the best tone of blue/green around.  Here is the process this morning (after gathering all the materials together).

Materials laid out, cut and assembly started (it morphed as it went along - believe me)

Swatch laid upside down to sew to the length of cotton fabric - to be flipped over and have a neat spine at the center.

Swatch flipped over and stitched to base fabric - don't want any movement going on here.

Pockets were put in, one on the right to hold a journal, notebook or sketch pad. And one on the left bottom to hold pens, pencils, art items - or a candy bar.

Not a good project to put my embroidered TygerLily name on, so the suede logo was the best match. See the clips at the top? Those are holding the turning area together while the super magnificent German glue sets. I placed two heavy duty cardboard pieces into the front and back flaps of the cover - helps with the shaping and writing stability.

Look what was hanging on my supply pegboard!!!! Have to use it somehow.

Finale #1

Finale #2

Finale #3 - Final Bow

This project used some high quality yarns and some awesome 100% cotton fabrics and thread.  There is no way to tell you the hours it took, or it’s real value.  THAT I will have to think about.  I think it would make a terrific Mother’s Day Gift – hey, moms still need to write their hopes and dreams down!  What woman doesn’t?  It would make a great gratitude journal, too – and keep those colors pencils and pens in the front cover to make it a joyful thing.  Think on that one – would love to hear feedback.

I have to admit, it felt incredibly good to get my fingers going on something I truly adore this morning.  As mentioned before, this was one rough week on many levels and I was emotionally and mentally fatigued.  So glad to have gotten a chance to take the time and enjoy the gifts that God has given me.  And thank you for letting me share.


Just For Fun And I Didn’t Break the Bank!

With a new year comes new challenges and projects – is there any other way?  Didn’t think so.  :)   Of course there’s always going to be the hand knitted handbags happening around here, but the sewing room needed something a little different going on.  I have had an idea or three rolling around my head for a long time and yesterday, out of the blue, came an opportunity to stock up on items that can be upcycled in to new, useful and fun things to offer.

Those of you who follow me on Facebook probably saw all my excitement over thrift store finds yesterday.  Yes, I purchased 7, yes SEVEN men’s suit coats.  Bill was honestly intrigued by the idea mulling around in my head, but had to try on each suit coat, just to make sure HE couldn’t use them!  Bill and I are both short people, and finding a coat that doesn’t have arms down to our knees is always a challenge.  Hence, none of them fit him, all were too long.  But for TygerLily and Journal Junction, it was a relief!  Suiting fabrics are beautiful and professional.  It is just a perfect fit for the organizational side of our creations.

We challenged ourselves to come up with a professional type combo item, such as a matched set of something.  I found a perfect women’s tapestry jacket to upcycle for this project.  So Bill could wrap his own mind around how it would work with only a small women’s jacket, I showed him how to get more bang for our buck and started cutting it apart – just to show how much fabric is really IN a jacket!  You’d be surprised!!!

So before I go off and start getting some stuff done (like laundry), I wanted to share the photo of all the goodies purchased at two of our local thrift stores yesterday.  For the price of a movie for two and a large popcorn, this is what we ended up with…..

Future Handbags, Totes, iPad covers and Journal covers.......

There are hundreds of key chain rings in that little bag and under that is a box of FIVE vintage broaches that I found, which got polished up last night.  The stores obviously wanted to clear their racks, and I was more than happy to help them out.  I did sneak one summer sweater out of the group and put it aside for myself to actually wear.  tee hee

It’s time to write up an application to a crafting throwdown and enjoy one more cup of joe.  May you all have a wickedly fantastic day, and please keep checking in now that we’re back up and in the swing.

Blessings, my friends.


Geometry Lesson & Repurposing

CosineTheorem01

With running the JournalJunction on Etsy, there are days that I need to get my geometry skills honed up and used.  So I decided to run with abandon on a project that’s been sitting on the ‘fun’ side of things for months.  If you remember back a bit, one of the doctor’s I work for was letting go of some of her little girl’s clothing.  And I’ve been hoarding those treasured items for long enough.  First item out to repurpose was a darling little knit shirt with incredible embroidery on the front.  It is listed over at the Journal Junction if you want more photos.

Base Cutting and Placement of Pocket made from Embroidered Girl's Shirt

Complete and listed - with a very precious photo I keep by my computer.

It was a good morning to be thankful for all God has blessed us with – in so MANY ways.  As much as we wish Lily would be here and celebrating her 5th birthday soon, we know she is somewhere far greater…. and that she’s sitting with Jesus or throwing a ball or two around with her uncle.  Yeah, have to think of all the good stuff.  :)

Blessings to your Sunday!  Say “I Love You” – often.


An iPad Cover for Paper Nerds Like ME

iPad with on display keyboard

Image via Wikipedia

The small trip we took this weekend totally wore me out.  Maybe it was just because it caused us to get out of sync, not sure.  So no knitting was even looked at today, but I started feeling guilty this afternoon.  So off to the sewing room I go and remembered I had just gotten in a gorgeous garden print by Michael Miller.  No time like the present, so here is the iPad portfolio for paper nerds – yes, like me!

Old School iPad Portfolio Outside

Open.... with iPad skin attached

It's got a TygerLily on it's tail! :)

Well, wish there was more to report, but there just isn’t this weekend.  There’s a few irons in the fire as usual, but no pictures.  But I do appreciate you stopping by and taking a look at what’s happening.

Are any of you paper nerds like me?  :)


Triple Mini’s

Thought I’d share what I put in the Etsy shop tonight…….  aren’t they cute?  :)

Springtime Trio

You know you’re going to want a set of these, or something like them.  Keep your eye on the Journal Junction!!!


It was just a JOURNAL weekend….

Some projects got complete, and a couple finished that weren’t even on the list!

I think there better be a Husker something next, right?

Happy crafting!


TygerLily’s Little Sister Store

Grand Opening of the ‘journal’ side of my crafts on Etsy, called “Journal Junction”.  It’s the baby sister of the TygerLily shop on Etsy.

She’s a newbie, she’s little, but she’d love to have you visit when you can.

All items in the new shop will be perfect for gift giving for all the circles in your life:  family, friends, church and work!

Putting some FUN back in FUNctional!


New Store Items

We are determined to have a good year, no matter WHAT happens!!  So here’s to a new determination to list my whims and projects up in the Etsy Shop.  THREE listings went up today, and THAT was a miracle (but one was already completed).

Travel Notebook/Journal with paperback book cover

Travel Notebook/Journal with paperback book cover

Night Life Mini-Handbag
Stars and Clouds Baby Fleece Blanket with Crocheted Lace Edging

Thanks for hanging in there with me!  :)


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