I used up a lot of small pieces of fabric yesterday on these projects. Both came from free tutorials I found online.
The first was these little tissue pouches. These were super-fast to make and I am really pleased with how they turned out. There are loads of tutorials for these online and, to be honest, I can't remember which one I used now!
The second project I completed was ten of these little button pouches. I adapted the tutorial in all sorts of ways to suit the materials I had. Very pleased with the results. Also pleased to have mastered using my sewing machine to sew on the buttons.
Haven't photographed my third project yet, which was some pencil cases. That one can wait for tomorrow - might even manage some instructions as well!
I'm sharing this post at the following link parties:
Sew Many Ways
Nifty Thrifty
Family Every After
This blog shows my recycled denim creations, along with tutorials for items I have designed myself. I collect old jeans (a strange collection, I know!) and cut them up to make bags, purses, animals and other items of varying sizes and shapes. I then sell these to raise money for weomen and children in the town of Utange, near Mombasa, in Kenya. I help women to set up their own businesses and am supporting the building of a new school for disabled children.
Sunday, 11 March 2012
Saturday, 10 March 2012
Belinda Bag
It has taken me a few days to complete these, but now that I have I thought I would share them with you. The pattern is the Belinda Bag, designed by Helen Coverley who is a regular tutor at Tudor Rose Patchwork where I attend courses. It is a lovely bag to make, and, I think, ideal for denim recycling. An added bonus in this case is that I lined them with Kenyan fabric. Whenever Debbie goes to Utange I ask her to buy me some fabric. This, I believe, curtain or furnishing fabric and seems to be linen. It is lovely to sew with and a great weight for larger bags. It is also incredibly cheap! Can't wait till Debbie returns with further supplies for me in a few weeks.
Anyway, here are my three new Belinda bags:
I'll be offering these for sale next weekend at the Green House, Letchworth if you are anywhere near!
I'm sharing this post at the following link parties:
Six Sisters' Stuff
Sew Country Chick
Serenity You
Bacon Time
Anyway, here are my three new Belinda bags:
I'll be offering these for sale next weekend at the Green House, Letchworth if you are anywhere near!
I'm sharing this post at the following link parties:
Six Sisters' Stuff
Sew Country Chick
Serenity You
Bacon Time
Wednesday, 7 March 2012
Cobblestones bag
This was a really good bag for using up scraps.
I cut 2" strips of fabric. Between two identical strips of denim I put a strip of patterned cotton and sewed along all the long seams. After pressing, I cut this into 2" slices. At the top and bottom of each piece I sewed another 2" strip of denim. This made each of the "cobblestone" patches.
As I am making these bags to sell, I usually make at least 5 of one particular style at a time. So I make cobblestones in lots of different colourways and mix them up for the different bags.
I used 9 of these for each side of the bag. I joined them in strips of 3, then sewed the strips together. Then I sewed the sides together round three edges.
The handles for the bags were made from 4" strips of denim. I pressed the long edges in 1/4", then folded the straps wrong sides together and sewed 1/4" in along each long edge.
I cut lining to match, and a 2" binding strip. I sewed the lining together, then put it inside the bag, wrong sides together. I pinned the handles in place then sewed the binding round the top of the bag, slip stitching the binding by hand on the inside.
I cut 2" strips of fabric. Between two identical strips of denim I put a strip of patterned cotton and sewed along all the long seams. After pressing, I cut this into 2" slices. At the top and bottom of each piece I sewed another 2" strip of denim. This made each of the "cobblestone" patches.
As I am making these bags to sell, I usually make at least 5 of one particular style at a time. So I make cobblestones in lots of different colourways and mix them up for the different bags.
I used 9 of these for each side of the bag. I joined them in strips of 3, then sewed the strips together. Then I sewed the sides together round three edges.
The handles for the bags were made from 4" strips of denim. I pressed the long edges in 1/4", then folded the straps wrong sides together and sewed 1/4" in along each long edge.
I cut lining to match, and a 2" binding strip. I sewed the lining together, then put it inside the bag, wrong sides together. I pinned the handles in place then sewed the binding round the top of the bag, slip stitching the binding by hand on the inside.
I've linked this bag at:
Saturday, 3 March 2012
Pocket purse
My latest creation is a pocket purse. I always like to use as much of a pair of jeans as possible in my recycling, but the front pockets are a real challenge.
First I cut out my front piece. Careful placing is needed here to avoid any metal studs. Cut the back to match from another part of the jeans.
I used the zipper food to sew the zip to the front piece, and then to the back.
Top stitch the pieces for a neater finish.
Put the two pieces right sides together and sew round the edge. Make sure you open the zip first! After sewing, clip the curved seam and turn right side out through the zip.
First I cut out my front piece. Careful placing is needed here to avoid any metal studs. Cut the back to match from another part of the jeans.
I used the zipper food to sew the zip to the front piece, and then to the back.
Top stitch the pieces for a neater finish.
Put the two pieces right sides together and sew round the edge. Make sure you open the zip first! After sewing, clip the curved seam and turn right side out through the zip.
7x7 awards
Pam from Threading My Way, nominated me for this award - a surprise, but a very pleasant one. To be honest, some of the questions are going to be very hard to answer in this still new blog, but I will do my best!
Share 7 things about yourself:
Share 7 of your blog posts that fit the following categories:
This is going to be hard - my blog has only been up since the beginning of the year!
Share 7 things about yourself:
- I'm not naturally tidy! My sewing room is a huge mess and I work on the principle of periodic clearups rather than neat working!
- My Christian faith is really important to me.
- I find it really hard to sit still and just be - it's something I am working on!
- Getting the chance to go to Kenya and visit the village I raise funds for last year was a life-changing experience in so many ways.
- I usually have at least five sewing projects on the go at once.
- I have two daughters and am immensely proud of both of them.
- I wish there were more hours in the day!
Share 7 of your blog posts that fit the following categories:
This is going to be hard - my blog has only been up since the beginning of the year!
- Most Beautiful ~ I think the bag I made with curtain fabric and a complicated (for me!) patch pattern qualifies for this.
- Most Helpful ~ I hope that my tutorial for the pocket bag will help others to get ideas about how to reuse jeans in an interesting way.
- Most Popular ~ Based on feedback in comments, I suspect it would be the Owl Bag Tutorial.
- Most Controversial ~ I suppose putting a link to the video I made about the feeding programme could be seen as controversial on a sewing blog. I've been pleased that some people have followed the link and watched the video, however.
- Most Surprisingly Successful ~ the monster phone cases. I didn't expect them to come out as well as they did.
- Most Underrated ~ I'd like to think my owl phone case was a new and novel idea, but it didn't get much feedback. That's possibly because it was my first post, however!
- Most Pride Worthy ~ I think I am most proud of the post about why I do all this, which you can find here.
Lastly, nominate 7 other bloggers for the 7 x 7 award:
Such a hard thing to do! In the end I have chosen an eclectic mix - I do hope that at least some of them will take part in the award!- Bag n Craft - I have seen so many really inspirational ideas here.
- Pink Penguin Lots of lovely tutorials on this blog.
- Homemade by Jill A mix of sewing and craft projects, with lots of bag tutorials thrown in to the mix!
- Green Issues because it links in with my love of recycling
- Quilts, bags, gardens and me whose blog seems to reflect so many things which interest me!
- The Blessing of Verity - an inspirational blog about Suannah's family. Worth visiting - if only to see the difference made in one little girl's life.
- Alice's Bucket List - another inspirational blog, by a 16 year old girl with terminal cancer.
Friday, 24 February 2012
One of my favourites
This is a bag I love to make.
It's a simple rectangular bag, with the base squared off. The orange squares in the side, and the lining, are made from some lovely Gambian fabric a friend brought back for me. It really sets the denim off, I think.
It's a simple rectangular bag, with the base squared off. The orange squares in the side, and the lining, are made from some lovely Gambian fabric a friend brought back for me. It really sets the denim off, I think.
Wednesday, 22 February 2012
Owl bag tutorial
I haven't provided printable patterns for this, but I will tell you how I made the patterns.
I started with a semicircle, and sliced the top off a little more than half way. My semicircle was about 10" diameter. You will need to cut two of these in your main fabric and two in your lining.
I started with a semicircle, and sliced the top off a little more than half way. My semicircle was about 10" diameter. You will need to cut two of these in your main fabric and two in your lining.
The head part is made from two overlapping circles, extended for the flap. You will need one in your main fabric and one in your lining.
I used a gusset strip 2" wide. For the eyes I used fleece for the whites, and just found objects of a suitable size to draw round. I used large black buttons for the pupils, but you could use fleece for this as well. The beak is made from two diamonds. For the strap you need a strip of fabric 6" wide and as long as you want the strap to be. Finally, I created the wings by tracing my body pattern and then drawing on the shape I wanted.
My first step was to applique. I used a zig-zag stitch to sew the inside edges of the wings on, and to sew first the whites and then the pupils of the eyes.
Next I put my head pieces right sides together and sewed around all the edges except for the long straight one - leave that one open.
Sew the two pieces of the beak right sides together along three sides. Clip the corners and turn right side out. Press well, folding the open edge inside. Put in place and topstitch onto the head, all the way round.
Take one body piece and sew it to the gusset along the curve, leaving the straight edge open. Then attach the other body piece in the same way. Repeat with the lining, but leave a gap in the curve for turning later on.
Add your fastenings at this point.
Make the strap by pressing the fabric in half lengthwise. Open out, then fold both sides into the middle and press again. Finally press the whole thing in half. Topstitch down each side.
Turn the main bag right side out. Pin the straps to the gusset at the top.
Turn over, and pin the flap piece to the body back along the straight edge.
Put all of this inside your lining and stitch all around the straight edge.
Turn through the gap in your lining and stitch up the gap by hand. Then press and top stitch all round the top of your bag.
Enjoy! Let me know how you get on, and if you make this bag and post images please post a link to them in the comments.Shared at Green Crafts Showcase
Monday, 20 February 2012
Some background - why I do this and how I got started!
I have loved sewing since a child, and have, in my time, done many forms - cross stitch and tapestry, making clothes, soft toys, dolls' clothes, patchwork and applique. It was the patchwork which led me into mag making; at the shop where I went on patchwork courses, I attended my first bag making one. I got hooked!

Money was tight, however, and those lovely patchwork cottons are expensive. One day I saw a pattern in a magazine for a bag made from old jeans. "I could do that", I thought. I haunted some charity shops and picked up a few pairs of old jeans for £1 each. I was off. My first bag, adapted from the magazine pattern, ended up something like this.
My daughters are still using them!
I carried on picking up jeans, and made a number of bags from them. I tried to sell some at fairs, along with other items I had made, but without a huge amount of success.
Fast forward a few years, and a friend told me about Casuarina House, and the work another friend had put in to set it all up. I heard about the fundraising involved. The following Christmas I gave the friend one of my denim bags. She loved it. As an afterthought, I said, "Do you think Debbie would like some of these to sell?" I had about 20 left over. The message came back, "Yes please." That was the start.
I don't haunt the charity shops any more. Instead, jeans are collected for me at a growing range of locations. Pupils at the school where I teach regularly bring them in. My church collects them. The patchwork shop I frequent does so too. I have also been given masses of other resources - bags are lined with curtain fabric, sheeting, and any other suitable material I can get hold of. Buttons, zips and trims have been passed on. Recycling to raise funds has captured people's attention.
Gradually I have become more involved in the fundraising myself. Last year I took bags to half a dozen sales. This year I have at least one per month booked. Boxes of bags go out to various place - kind people take them to their workplaces and sell them for me.
Last January, amazingly, I went out to Kenya myself. I met the children,
saw the home, heard about the feeding programme, soon to start feeding 600 starving children in the village on a regular basis.
It has inspired me even more. When I saw the children, heard the need, felt the appreciation, the welcome - how could I not?
Please follow some of the links and look at our Facebook page for regular updates. If you would like to be involved yourself, in any way, please get in touch with me through the comments. There are children all over the world starving. I can't help them all. I have chosen to focus on 600 children in Utange, and there The Sure Foundation is making a difference.
Money was tight, however, and those lovely patchwork cottons are expensive. One day I saw a pattern in a magazine for a bag made from old jeans. "I could do that", I thought. I haunted some charity shops and picked up a few pairs of old jeans for £1 each. I was off. My first bag, adapted from the magazine pattern, ended up something like this.
My daughters are still using them!
I carried on picking up jeans, and made a number of bags from them. I tried to sell some at fairs, along with other items I had made, but without a huge amount of success.
Fast forward a few years, and a friend told me about Casuarina House, and the work another friend had put in to set it all up. I heard about the fundraising involved. The following Christmas I gave the friend one of my denim bags. She loved it. As an afterthought, I said, "Do you think Debbie would like some of these to sell?" I had about 20 left over. The message came back, "Yes please." That was the start.
I don't haunt the charity shops any more. Instead, jeans are collected for me at a growing range of locations. Pupils at the school where I teach regularly bring them in. My church collects them. The patchwork shop I frequent does so too. I have also been given masses of other resources - bags are lined with curtain fabric, sheeting, and any other suitable material I can get hold of. Buttons, zips and trims have been passed on. Recycling to raise funds has captured people's attention.
Gradually I have become more involved in the fundraising myself. Last year I took bags to half a dozen sales. This year I have at least one per month booked. Boxes of bags go out to various place - kind people take them to their workplaces and sell them for me.
Last January, amazingly, I went out to Kenya myself. I met the children,
saw the home, heard about the feeding programme, soon to start feeding 600 starving children in the village on a regular basis.
It has inspired me even more. When I saw the children, heard the need, felt the appreciation, the welcome - how could I not?
Please follow some of the links and look at our Facebook page for regular updates. If you would like to be involved yourself, in any way, please get in touch with me through the comments. There are children all over the world starving. I can't help them all. I have chosen to focus on 600 children in Utange, and there The Sure Foundation is making a difference.
Saturday, 18 February 2012
A profitable half term!
I have had a creative burst this holiday, and the curtain samples have been inspiring. As well as the three bags I posted in my last post (which were extremely quick to make) I made three of the pattern pictured here.
This was a much more complicated proposition. The pattern came from a magazine, and I have used three different colourways of this particular curtain sample in the design. Sadly the two that I used in the main panel looked very similar when pieced; I wish now that I had used the blue colourway (which I used in the top and bottow stripes) as one of the main panel colourways.
It is a lot of piecing, but came out looking really effective. I used denim for the other pieces of the bag, and lined it with fabric from an old sheet. To the inside I added a zipped pocket on one side and a simple full length pocket on the other. The other two of this design are in different colourways; I tried photographing them but it didn't come out so well.
This was a much more complicated proposition. The pattern came from a magazine, and I have used three different colourways of this particular curtain sample in the design. Sadly the two that I used in the main panel looked very similar when pieced; I wish now that I had used the blue colourway (which I used in the top and bottow stripes) as one of the main panel colourways.
It is a lot of piecing, but came out looking really effective. I used denim for the other pieces of the bag, and lined it with fabric from an old sheet. To the inside I added a zipped pocket on one side and a simple full length pocket on the other. The other two of this design are in different colourways; I tried photographing them but it didn't come out so well.
Wednesday, 15 February 2012
Recycling curtain samples
I was given a pile of wonderful curtain samples - you know, the type which you see in shops, in a huge book with holes punched through the tops. Far too good to throw away, but none of them large enough for a lining on its own, I got my brain in gear to decide how best to use them. Here is my first solution:The pattern came to me via Pinterest, and you can find it here. Looking at the pattern (and particularly the image) I had no idea the bag would come out so large. However, I am quite pleased with it even so. The curtain samples formed the patttern on the front - each sample made the front and back of one bag with very little waste. I used denim for the stripes and the straps, and the linings were more curtain fabric - this time offcuts which curtain makers had passed on to me. The bags have a simple internal pocket, but I decided to omit the fastening from the original pattern.
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