Professional Duo Complete from Repurposed Ladies Jacket

The recycling and redesigning the women’s tapestry jacket was rather difficult, if I were to tell the truth.  Even though things look one way in your head, accomplishing that goal can be a whole different chore.  :)   But the jacket has now been completely disassembled and reassembled into two useful items.  Here is the tapestry jacket’s photo history…….

Sleeves cut away from jacket and splayed for cutting (in previous post)

The completed iPad cover made completely from the sleeves of jacket (in previous post)

Jacket body formed into a tote - items to complete are only laying on body. Handles, magnetic closure, black belting....

Professional tote/iPad cover set - not sure how to set this up to photograph decent. :)

Complete tote from tapestry jacket showing off its true color outdoors.

I lined it with a gray embroidered satin lining and couldn’t resist to put a final little touch to its closure – a silver leaf.  As soon as that went on, it truly had my name on it.  Not sure what will happen with this yet as Bill thinks I should be the one to enjoy this one.  He’s one of my biggest supporters, but if this could sell and make a couple of bucks, then that’s what we have to do.   :)

Thank you for stopping by and giving this a final look over!  One day it may make it into the Etsy store, but until then I’ll enjoy looking at it and thinking of ways to improve on the upcycling and repurposing of the great thrift store finds we have in our possession.  Yep, there is a whole tote full of beautiful sweaters, jackets and suit coats to re-fashion.

Happy Monday and happy crafting everyone!

Monday Teaser

As I was taking a break from working on Season’s Royal Messenger Bag yesterday…. getting some ice water with lemon, taking the dog outside…….. sitting looking around at what’s out our back door….. something came to mind.  Coming in, I told Bill the idea for the next bag had been born.  And he proceeded to say, “Well, you’d better get on that right now before you forget exactly what it is!”  No kidding, that’s what he said.  So here’s a little teaser of what’s coming up next……….

Brown Sheep Company's 100% wool Lanaloft

Lanaloft wool

Isn’t he the best in making me sit and get this started?  He’s my biggest motivator and supporter.  It almost looks like a crown!

This will be the FIFTH in the Prairie Cable Series of handbags – and just a little bit smaller than the previous ones.  Keep watching!

 

 

 

 

 

 

Moonlit Prairie Cable Knit – Second in Prairie Series Originals

Wanted to share another design that’s in the works and on the needles.  This one is using the Lamb’s Pride Bulky from The Brown Sheep Company here in Nebraska.   What a fabulous yarn this is turning out to be to work with.  The plan for this bag is to make is just a little taller than the Prairie Land Cable bag that just got felted this weekend.

This one talks to me and tells me it has to have ‘Moonlit’ in its title.  There may be surprises coming along on this also, so please check back in from time to time and see how it’s morphing into the 2nd Original in the Prairie Series of designs.  This will be a one of a kind, also – unless I get the nerve to write the pattern.

Double Triple Start

Just needed to put a little preview up about how the Double Triple is coming along.  The photo actually shows the color a little more vibrant than they are, probably due to using a flash.  There are so many cables and twists that this has taken a long time to get even this far.  Having to set up the colors for each row untwisted makes the job a little tougher.  But I think the end result will be solid.  Sorry I didn’t move this to a better background, but there were too many hanks of yarn to haul off and not get twisted.  Lazy you say?  Yep!

Sumatra Tote needs a Buddy!

After enjoying the Sumatra bag I made last weekend by looking and touching and smiling with a small feeling of success, I decided to donate the bag to an auction for charity.  But I got to thinking, I had scraps leftover from the last two brown bags I made, why not make a little mini buddy bag for the Sumatra tote?  I have until October to get this completed, so tonight I got it all cut out:  base, lining and interfacing.

Sumatra Bitty Buddy

I’m naming this the Sumatra Bitty Buddy, but it won’t be super small at all.  That silver frame you see there is close to 8″ across and will snap open and snap closed upon demand.

I think should make a great combo for the auction – and I’ll keep you updated on the progress.

The inner frame is the find I located in Hong Kong and received 5 in the mail this week at an incredible price.

Please check out and donate to our local charity Friendship Home, a safe place for abused women and their children.

Sumptuous Sumatra – Complete

This was a fun bag to put together and I’m fairly happy with the end results.  Now I just don’t know what I’m going to do with it!  I love it, but I honestly don’t know if I’ll ever use it.

But anyway, here’s how the day progressed….

Pieces cut and at the ready...

As this picture shows, the handles I’d originally picked were black.  But will it end up that way?  This was everything all cut out:  linings, interfacings, fleeces, base fabrics, the whole thing.  This pattern (again) is a free download off of Fabric.com – look for it!

Lining with Zippered Pocket

Other side of lining with cell phone pocket....

Does this lining look a little familiar?  It is!  I used the reverse side for my sweater re-make bag in earlier posts.  This time I used the un-shiny side of the fabric – just for fun.

Outer Bag Sides - Before and After

I’m probably too much of a believer in lining, interfacing, strength and durability – and it probably shows here.  I had three thicknesses going on in the gathered bag front (bottom right).  The fabric (top left) is what the pieces looked like before the pleating at the handle’s edge.  Cool, huh?

Completed Construction

You can sure tell I took these pictures at different times of day – the lighting is all messed up, but at least you can see the construction and the basic size of it.  Plus you see the handles?  Yep, I had to switch the black ones out – they weren’t working for me.  Had to be the bamboo ones.

Sumatra's Evening Pose :)

Different lighting, different setting on the camera, Karen’s having too much fun playing……  but isn’t the shimmer of the fabric just awesome?  The top trim is an upholstery velour – that fabric isn’t going anywhere on this bag.  Very stable.

Finale

I had placed a buttonhole just big enough to get the stem of a silk flower through before I lined the bag.  This was the flower that I fell in love with at Michael’s a week ago.  The colors are perfect and makes the bag just a little more fun even.  And if one would get bored with that flower, it would be an easy switch-out.  I did leave the stem of the flower fairly long, maybe 10 inches.  But that thing isn’t going to fall out, nor did I have to spend a lot of time making some funky corsage thing I’d have ended up hating.

Thank you for checking in – this bag will probably go up for grabs.  But I just need to look at it and touch it just a little while longer.

Three Bags on the Burners

With a title like that, you must be wondering if I’ve lost my sanity.  HA!  Well, never had it in the first place, so there.  :)

Since I’m on a sewing frenzy, I have to use every bit of excitement I have for it now, while I still GOT it!  I go through phases of ‘crafting’.  Oh, how I hate that word.  Anyway….

Bag #1 is going to be the BWR (black, white, red) bag that my sis has requested.  And even if she decides she doesn’t want or like it, the fun is in the creating of it!  So here are the materials for her bag.

This is going to be done from a Hotpatterns.com pattern that she had her eye on.   It is pictured in a previous post sticking out of my little file box and from the HandBag Heaven line.  She said “NO BOW”, so she isn’t going to get one then.  I think the fun black button may work just fine.  But that can always be changed as it progresses.

Bag #2 is going to be done in something I had in my fabric stash!  I adored this piece when I bought it, and I STILL love it to this day.  There may actually be enough to make 2 bags because I think I purchased all that was left of it at the time.

I stopped at Michael’s on my trip to the southern most tip of the city today.  (Felt like I was driving to Texas)  They had the most GORGEOUS silk flowers out and I do believe I touched each and every one of them.  One stuck out in particular and is going to adorn this bag upon completion.  The pattern is also from HotPatterns.com and is called the Sumatra Bag.  You can also download this pattern for free from from Fabric.com.  I think that the leftover lining fabric from my Sweater ReStyle Tote will work perfectly for this lining, too – only I’m going to use the WRONG side!  Why not!

Bag #3 is a fall bag that is also screaming for me to try.  I think I must love fall or something as I gravitate towards these colors more so than others.  Going to use the new pattern I got in the mail yesterday and the technique on the bag handle is very different.  I’m either going to LOVE it or HATE it.  But I must TRY it!  :)

If you look real closely at the lining fabric on the left you can see it is a forest!  Now how cool is that?  Joann’s had SO many things on sale that I picked up this little quilter’s bundle for 25% off.  It has all the right colors in it to make fabric flowers and leaves.  But for the price PLUS 10% off your entire purchase today…?  Come on now.  You know you’d do it, too.

Please keep watching as I will do my best to keep posting how things are looking around here.

Up-Cycled Sweater Tote Complete!

After a work meeting, going to Joann’s for supplies, paying rent, renewing our Sam’s membership and dropping off supplies to the clinic it was time to enjoy my afternoon of vacation time I needed to use or lose.  Of course, I seem to have to play a couple of computer games and then kick myself into gear to accomplish something.  So here is the continuation and completion of my re-cycled sweater into a bag.  A total of 4 hours were put into it today, and done.

After getting the corduroy bottom and sweater top all sewn together with piping as the trim in-between, it was time to get some antique gold purse feet put onto it.   I was hoping this would help with the wear and tear on the bottom of the bag, as I keep my purse on the floor by my feet at work.

In the interior of the bag, you can kind of see that I cut a piece of plastic canvas the size of the rectangular bottom and placed at the very bottom.  This way the ‘feet’ had something extra to grab onto when I attached them to the bag.

Next I worked at getting the pockets sewn up and into the bag.  I was hoping that I had made the pocket second from the right big enough to hold my HUGE sunglasses case, but I didn’t calculate that one quite right.  It will make a great place to put my pens and longer lipsticks, though.  The pockets on the left side will be great for business cards, cell phone and short lipsticks.

After sewing all the side and bottom seams on the satin lining, it was time to make sure it all FIT!  I count myself lucky that all the measurements were right on and it fit like a glove.

SEE!!!!!!!!!  :)  Success!!!!

Now came the critical time, and that was securing the outside and the lining together – and GOOD!  I pinned the line where I knew I wanted my top band to eventually be attached and sewed along that line.  Then I sewed an inch away from that line to make a good cutting line got getting rid of excess fabrics.  This also will make the band at the top more sturdy and thick.  I didn’t think flimsy would be the right route for this design.

Now came a tricky part.  That was to get the black piping sewn as CLOSELY to the original sewing line and then place the first piece of the banding on.

It’s looking pretty sturdy so far, isn’t it!

This is just a bonus photo.  I was VERY happy with how things were turning out.  Even though I knew it was going to be dinner time soon (my hubby is the chef) I just couldn’t stop and felt the NEED to take this project to the end this evening.

Before one can put the final strip of banding on, those dog-gone handles have to be put just in the right spot.  So I just cut 4 pieces of 2-1/2″ X 4″ corduroy and treated them like belt loops.  Of course the handles had to be placed in the loops before I could attach them to the bag itself.

Things were getting pretty thick!

After sewing the handle tabs on, making sure they were REALLY on there good, it was time to put the back part of the top border on.  As you can see, I decided to use a hefty magnet for closure just in the middle.  I rummaged around in the trash can thinking I had some iron on interfacing that would have been just the right size to put behind the fabric for extra strength.  As you can see, I found it!  :)  These magnets take almost super human strength to pry the tabs back on ‘em.  But they aren’t going anywhere now!

Not a great photo, but this is the completed bag.  I folded back the 2nd piece of the band, folded the edge under about a 1/4″ inch and hand sewed with teenie tiny stitches all the way around the inside to keep it tacked down in place.  That part took nearly a half hour – SO many little stitches!!

The before shot – BEFORE I get all my crud and crap put into it to see if it’s going to work for me.

Looks good in this pic!  And I really like how the handles always flop to the sides when you open the bag.  Nothing worse than fighting handles and whatnot when you need something fast.

And it worked!  It honestly worked!  I fit everything in there I need, just waiting for me to let go of my cell phone long enough to put in the right pocket there.

It’s sturdy but soft, and very utilitarian.

When I completed this project I ran upstairs to show my husband and the first words out of his mouth were, “Are you going to keep this one, or sell it?”  I never really keep what I make, but you have to remember that this was made from one of my all-time favorite sweaters.  This little number is staying with ME!  And I also showed him that with the kangaroo pocket on the front, now he has a place to put his sunglasses when we go shopping and they won’t get scratched.

And I completed something!

Sweater Re-Style Beginnings

In a previous post, I’d mentioned I had all the materials set for taking an old sweater of mine and restyling it into a handbag or tote.  If I didn’t LOVE this sweater so much, I’d have never even started.   But as time goes on I get a little wider and the sweater was getting shorter!  :)  So here is today’s updates as it took over two hours just to get this much accomplished.This is the sweater front and back that have been cut to size.  Ever cut a sweater?  It’s scary business.

Here are the corduroy bag bottoms and satin linings and pockets.  They are just cut to size (hopefully correct) and interfaced.  The bag bottom is interfaced with an iron-on batting for a little bit of softness.

I’m trying to figure out a way to get the bag stiffer by using plastic canvas on the sides and bottom.  If I have some in storage somewhere, I think it would be a good idea to keep the bag sitting upright.

I have not cut the bias corduroy top yet, nor the tabs that will connect the handles to the actual bag.

One step at a time…..