Fine Heirloom Sewing, Smocking and Hand Embroidery

"Baby will be well and smiling in little garments made by Mother, Auntie, Grannie and loving friends!"

Please join me as I teach the old fashioned techniques and skills needed to sew baby clothes. You will find lessons that start at the very beginning and take you step by step as we sew little baby clothes together. May you find much joy and pleasure in making them.
It's easy and it's fun!!

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Showing posts with label Lessons. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lessons. Show all posts

Friday, August 27

Daygown Sew Along - Lesson Five

Follow your embroidery instructions on your pattern and refer to your embroidery design.
We are going to Embroider View  2 of  OFB Embroidered Raglan Daygowns.

Good Morning!!  Today we will stitch the Embroidery.  You can embroider the top only or the top and the hem design.  You will need either 10 Sharp or Crewel needles.  And your embroidery floss. Use one strand of embroidery floss.  I am stitching tone on tone.  I think the look is elegant.  It does not show up as much as would a color that is different than your fabric.  You might decide to use a different color.  If you are a beginner, tone on tone doesn't show up your mistakes as much!  This is all a personal decision (the hardest part).  Sometime I really am not sure until I start embroidering with a certain color, so you might want to start on a fabric scrap to see how you like it.

I don't use a hoop on any of the embroidery stitches we are working today.  If you like to use a hoop , that is fine to do.  However, you need to work your project a little differently.  You would need to draw your pattern onto your fabric (along with your embroidery design) in the beginning instead of cutting it out.  You would need to do this so you can have the room on the fabric for the hoop.  So today, since we are all cut out, you will have to be hoopless like me!

There are many ways to tie on to the fabric but  we are going to use  the Away Waste Knot .
Click Away Waste Knot to see how to Tie onto your fabric and also to tie off.


Ready to Embroider!  I am going to begin at the left side of my top embroidery design and work my way to the right.  The stitches used in this design are the Lazy Daisy stitch (the flowers and leaves), the Stem/Outline stitch (all the stems) and the French Knot (the flower centers and the dots at the hem.

For instructions, click onto Embroidery - French Knot and  Lazy Daisy and Embroidery - Stem/Outline stitch.

Question for Lesson Five:  Do you use a thimble to stitch?  If not, please try one!  It makes stitching faster!!


Stitch a little while and then join me for a very nice tea!
Buttermilk Pound Cake with Coffee ice cream. 
 English Breakfast tea to revive you after all that stitching!

Sunbonnet Babies
At four o'clock, the Babies three
Said, "Really, it is time for tea!"
So up they got, set off once more,
And wandered on along the shore.
But as the sun was getting hot,
They sat down in a shady spot.


From The Sunbonnet Babies by Eulalie Osgood Grover














All Designs Are Copyright Protected copyright 2010 Jeannie Baumeister

Friday, June 25

Entredeux Embellishment

Technique I used on the white dress in the Sew Beautiful article.
It made the Dress!
Use a 6 Crewel Needle and 4 to 6 strands of floss. 
 I separate the floss and then put it back together, thread the needle and iron the floss.
Weave the needle in and out of the entredeux edge.
I love white with just a touch of color and this is an excellent way to get the look I want.
Samples from a Class I teach on Embellishments.
Top picture shows floss woven through every hole of the entredeux.
In the bottom picture I have woven under two bars of the entredeux and over one bar. You can get many cute looks depending on how you weave the floss through the entredeux.
Using blue floss to match the embroidery I have woven the floss through the entredeux at the bonnet front where the snail shirring is attached.
Close up of Bonnet/Entredeux
Christmas gown by Catherine.
Hem has red floss woven through the entredeux on the Swiss trim.
Pink floss woven through the middle of fancy entredeux.
Pink floss woven through the hem and the front swiss trim.

Remember to smooth the entredeux/floss out before you tie off the floss.  You don't want the floss to gather up the entredeux.

Have fun with this technique!!





All Designs Are Copyright Protected copyright 2009 Jeannie Baumeister

Wednesday, January 13

Bees's Wax and How to Use it.


 Use a refined Bee's Wax.  A colored wax might transfer to your fabric.

Bee's Wax is used to coat the thread to strengthen it and prevent tangles when hand sewing.  It is never used on Embroidery or Decorative thread.


Thread your needle and hold the thread snugly against the wax.


Pull the needle and thread through the wax to coat.  It's that easy!


 Miah helping me package my Bee's Wax.

Wednesday, September 16

Lesson 3: Cut out and mark Daygown


It's now time to lay out our fabric, cut it and mark it.  Are you with me?? You can click on the pictures to make them larger.


1. Your Instruction Guide for Priscilla's Layette is the valuable tool that tells you what you need to know to make your garment.  It will tell you the order to put the pieces together and the method that should be used to put them together.   So get your Instruction Guide out. You should have already read the instructions for review.  We are making View 2.  The instructions refer us to View 1 for the layout guide.   You will use the pattern pieces listed in View 2 and follow the layout in View 1.  I am using the shorter (3/4 length) sleeve but if I lived in the North, I would use the long sleeve for View 2.  You need to cut apart the pattern pieces you will use (do not cut around the lines like a paper doll, just separate them).  I like to press mine with a dry iron to flatten them.  Be gentle so the pattern  doesn't tear.

2.  Layout - Fold the fabric as directed with selvages meeting.  Smooth out all the wrinkles.   Lay the pattern on top of the fabric as directed on the Layout Guide. Use pattern weights to keep each pattern piece in place while you arrange them.  When you have them just right, then you are ready to pin them in place.  This saves you the unpleasant task of unpinning the pattern to re-arrange it.

Pattern arranged on the fabric and held in place with Pattern Weights 
 

The Layout Guide shows the Bias for the sleeve and also for the Neck.  There is a Bias Sleeve pattern piece, but not a pattern  piece for the neck.  We are told to cut out the Neck Bias  using the measurment in Step 4.  We need to plan for this as we lay out our pattern on top of the fabric.  We need to make sure there is room for the neck bias.


Close up of three of the "OFB Vintage Look Pattern Weights" used to hold the pattern.

3.  Bias Binding - The fabric must be cut on the "true" bias (45 degree angle).  It is easy to do this if you have a ruler with the 45 degree angle on it.

Place the 45 degree line along the selvage of the fabric.  Use a fabric marking pen or pencil and draw the bias line.  Step 4 tells us the Neck Bias should be 12 1/2" long X 7/8" wide.  Draw the line 12 1/2" long.
I like to use my smaller 2" X 18" gridded ruler to trace the width (7/8").  It is more accurate because I can see the line easily. Trace the correct size.  You now have the Bias Neck band on your fabric.  We only need one piece for the neck but it is just as easy to cut two.   Shown here is a Neck Bias that is the same color as the gown.  Mine will be red/white mini gingham so I will use a separate piece of fabric to cut my bias.  It will require almost 1/3 yard of fabric to make.





 4.  Pinning the pattern - We want to make sure the pattern is laid onto the fabric correctly before we pin it in place.  Read the markings on the pattern pieces.  The Daygown Back must be on the Fabric Fold.  The Daygown Front is placed  along the selvage.  We don't want to line the pattern up right along the selvage because the fabric weave is tighter there and can cause your gown to pucker.  We will avoid the edge and move our pattern piece in about 1/2" to 3/4".


The black cutting line of the Daygown Front is placed a short distance from the selvage.
The seam allowance for this Daygown is not large (1/4" and 3/8" in places) so it is important to pin the pattern securely to the fabric.  If the pattern slips while you are cutting, you can change the seam allowance which will affect the garment pieces going together nicely.

Pins are placed along the cutting line, closely spaced.  Take care that corners and curves are secured.
When we pin the sleeve, we need to make sure it is pinned on the straight of grain of the fabric.  This affects the fit and is very important.  Pattern pieces that are not placed along the selvage or the fold usually have a Grain Line printed on the pattern.  It is a straight line with little arrows on either end.  The Grain Line needs to be parallel to the selvage of the fabric.






  
Line up the ruler with the grain line and the selvage.

 Here you see the ruler lined up with the grain line.
Line the ruler up with the grain line.  Both the grain line and the selvage should be straight.

5. Cutting Out - Cut on the outside of the black cutting line.  If you cut inside the black cutting line, you are cutting the pattern smaller than it was designed to be.


I like to use a 7" Scissor instead of the larger, more standard size.  I find when cutting out little garments, I have more control of the scissor when it is smaller.



6.  Marking the fabric -  It is important to mark the pattern before unpinning.  Your pattern guide will tell you what you need to mark.






Insert Pins at the top of the buttonhole and use a fabric marker to mark them.
Do the same to mark the dots that show where fabric will be gathered.




An easy way to mark buttonhole placement is to insert a pin at the top of every buttonhole and mark with a fabric marker .  That will insure that they are correctly and evenly spaced.  Use a fabric marker to mark a dot where the pin is. Later, when you are ready to sew the buttonhole, use the button to get the correct length.  We will mark the entire buttonhole later, when we stitch them.  Use the same method to mark the dots that indicate where the gathering will be.  It is also used to mark the back of the sleeve so you can tell it from the front.  The pin goes all the way through the fabric so you can mark both sides.

Mark the foldline for the front facing at the top and bottom  and use a ruler to trace the entire fold line.  Only the inside fold line needs to be marked (the line farthest away from the edge of the fabric).


Place a piece of masking or painters tape on the wrong side of each piece of fabric.  It is important to know the right side from the wrong side.  If the tape does not stick, use a tiny safety pin.  Keep the pattern piece attached to the fabric with one pin until you are ready to sew that piece.

All ready to begin sewing.
Please let me know if this information is useful by leaving me a comment or a question.  I will answer them as often as I can.


Next Lesson - Begin Sewing.  Make sure your Sewing Machine is clean and in good working order!!

Thursday, September 10

Will my pattern fit my baby?


Baby Emma Rose is a few days old and is wearing a  long sleeved daygown made from OFB's  Priscilla's Layette, made in pale green geiger batiste.

Babies can always grow into a daygown,  so when making a daygown for a gift, don't wait until the last minute, give your gift early!  But how to know if  it will fit your own sweet little one?  Because baby clothes are meant to be loose and comfortable, you usually will rely on the weight of a baby to determine the size you need to make.  A newborn baby is very small (even those large 9 pounders are really little people).  Everything will be loose on them at first.  Then,  the baby's arms quickly grow longer and the arms, legs, neck and belly will fatten.  That's why it is good to measure baby's wrist and arms for fit. The shoulders do not grow quickly and the baby's length  does not affect the size of a daygown.      Daygowns are made for babies who are laying about and not yet standing.  They will fit almost any baby until 6 months and will fit most until 9 months.  They will fit a great number of babies, long after the usefulness of the daygown has gone.  Click Here for information about sizing garments for your baby.
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