A couple of days ago I was looking for some ideas in blogland, as I often do, and wandered off track from my usual card-making blogs into a sewing blog (usually I wander off track into cooking blogs, so sewing was a nice change!). TaDa Creations is worth a look, especially for little girl ideas. The particular page I ended up on, was about a Ribbon Baby Blanket. I have always wanted to make one of these. My littlest girl would have LOVED a blanket full of tags, she's eaten the tags off just about all of hers over the past three years! So I had the best excuse with my nephew/niece arriving soon, to test out my non-existent quilting skills. :-)
This is the end result:
So right now I will point out that this is my very first ever attempt at ANYTHING resembling quilting. I was so pleased with myself I am going to make more of these little comfort blankies and I am also going to attempt a bigger quilt for my big girl, at her request. (I love it when my girls like my projects so much they want one for themselves.)
Not knowing if the baby is a boy or a girl, I tried to go a bit gender neutral on the colours. I was doing well, until I found these beautiful Japanese print cottons, which are very floral. I looked further around the shop, but I kept coming back to the beautiful blues/purples of these flowers and the lovely smooth, soft cotton fabric. So now I'm hoping that if the baby is a boy, that he doesn't mind some flowers on his blankie. LOL.
I'll give you a little tour through my creative process. Those of you who are quilters, don't judge me too harshly, I didn't follow any instructions for quilting and my sewing machine started having issues with tension a very short way into the project, which has resulted in some stitching issues. I decided to quilt rather than just follow the TaDa Creations instructions because the floral cottons I chose were very fine, and I thought they needed a bit more strengthening to stand up to baby use (and frequent laundering).
While I was out buying fabrics and ribbons, I bought a cutting mat and a rotary cutter. WOW!! I am so, SO glad I bought those. I never knew how fast you could cut out fabric using a rotary cutter. And I used it on the ribbons too. Silly story: The instructions for the rotary cutter say to keep the safety sheath on when not in use because it is sharp. I was thinking "Of course it is sharp, it's a cutter." Well, a word to everyone else about to use one for the first time - rotary cutters are SHARP. When lifting the cutter up from the fabric, I bumped my other hand with the cutter, didn't feel anything, but next second I had to run for a band-aid to keep my fabric clean, oops!
This is the pile I started with:
Such beautiful colours. The florals are fine cotton, soft and smooth. The pale yellow is a baby corduroy, lovely texture that both my girls couldn't keep their hands off. The blue is a thicker/coarser cotton. I was thinking baby experience when choosing textures as well as colours. The ribbons were satin, rick rack, and velvet. I prewashed all fabrics and tumble dried them to pre-shrink.
First step was to sew four squares together for each side. Sounds simple, but there is a challenge in matching the seams. I experienced beginner's luck and they matched beautifully. Check it out!
Next step was to overstitch the seams. I used this opportunity to stitch the natural cotton batting onto one side of the blankie (I didn't want it moving around during washing later).
Once I had the two sides stitched, I had to pin the ribbons all around the edge and then sew them down to hold them in place before stitching the two sides together. This was the most time-consuming part of the process - selecting the pattern of ribbons and pinning them down evenly and then stitching them STRAIGHT.
Pinning the two sides together, I had to make sure the seams were matching and the ribbons were not getting caught in the seam. If you are going to try this, I'd recommend you look at the tutorial I looked at, and not follow my instructions! You need to leave a little hole to bring it right side out again once you stitch it. Here it is ready to be stitched together:
When I turned it back out the right way and stitched the hole closed, I then stitched a little cross in the middle to hold the two sides together and to prevent too much movement. Don't look too close to the stitching, remember my machine broke down during this process and the stitch tension was all over the place!
Close up of the ribbons:
And a photo of it today in its new home:I'm so happy with this little project. I hope that baby and mummy like this blankie. It's made with lots of love by Aunty Michelle.
So what do you think? Do you like it? Let me know.
Michelle
xxx