Pages

2012年6月16日星期六

Sewing For Christmas - 9 Fresh Ideas

Sewing For Christmas - 9 Fresh Ideas

In the summer of 1967, Sophie Lahner, my immigrant Hungarian neighbor, taught me how to sew. My father had recently died scarpe nike, and the money that had always been tight raising four kids on a teacher's salary, became nonexistent. Mrs. Lahner thought that knowing how to sew could be a wonderful contribution to the family. I could make my own clothes, patch the knees of my brothers' school trousers, let down hems, take up hems, replace zippers and sew on buttons.

Over the years, I've sewn everything from wedding and brides maid dresses, prom dresses scarpe nike, school clothes, costumes, quilts, dolls, uniforms, just about everything you can imagine. But my favorite is sewing for Christmas.

Sewing for Christmas requires planning and time management. You do not want to spend every last minute, the week before Christmas holed up with a sewing machine, because you invested all your money in fabric and notions and you're forced to finish your projects because there's nothing else to give.

Here are some tips for success:

Sewing for Christmas - Tip #1:
Pick projects that can be completed in one of two evenings.

Sewing for Christmas - Tip #2:
Unless you are 100% positive of the gift recipient's size, sew things that don't require fitting. Scarves, hats, pajama bottoms, vests, ties scarpe nike, purses, place mats, napkins, pillows , totes, belts and lap quilts work up fast, are popular with all ages and usually one size fits all.

Sewing for Christmas - Tip #3:
To save time, mass produce. Every year I make about 15 flannel pajama bottoms, in 5 different sizes.

Every one gets a different flannel, so that when I'm sewing, nothing gets mixed up, but there will be 3 or 4 blue prints, 2 or 3 red prints and so on. That way, one large spool of thread can complete 2 or 3 different bottoms and I do not constantly have to change thread spools and wind bobbins.

When it's time to sew, I spend 1 or 2 evenings cutting out and marking the fabric. Then I thread up the machine and sew all blue bottoms with the same color thread. I sew one color group from start to finish, including the waistband treatment. However, I save all the knot tying and thread snipping on all the bottoms to do at one time.

Sewing for Christmas - Tip #4:
Sewing is a great way to stretch your Christmas budget. The trick is to shop year round. Buy on sale. Use store coupons. You can find great savings on fabric at Ebay and other online stores, but remember to figure in the shipping charges.

Sewing for Christmas - Tip #5:
Sewing that special outfit for your office Christmas party is another way to help stretch that Christmas budget. But instead of going for a whole new outfit, take some time to exam one of your old party outfits. Can you take it in? Let it out? Shorten it? Add some sparkles? Freshen up some tired accessories? Add a flounce or beaded fringe? Even if you're the Queen of Sheba, you'll feel better about reusing things from the back of the closet. And if you are the Queen of Sheba? You can donate the money you would have spent on a dress to a soup kitchen or other charity.

Sewing for Christmas - Tip #6:
Think about sewing for others. It seems that around Christmas time, hearts soften and people want to do something for those who are less fortunate. Here's an opportunity to let your needle shine. You can turn lengths of polar fleece - which you got on sale - into warm blankets, or scarves or hats. You can make a baby quilt for the Linus project. You can make cancer hats. You can make dolls.

Sewing for Christmas - Tip #7:
Start a tradition. Sew with a bunch of friends. Projects go fast when there are many machines and many hands to help.

An old friend of mine would spend the month of October making her two darling daughters the sweetest, over the top Christmas frocks you could imagine. In November the three of them would make a day of taking the family Christmas portrait and then going out for high tea. This continued until the girls were in college. She has the best Christmas portrait collection I've ever seen.

Sewing for Christmas - Tip #8:
Christmas ornaments are a great gift idea for teachers, coaches and people you work with. You can find patterns at the big fabric stores, quilt shops, Ebay and even some free ones online. Usually they are fast and relatively inexpensive to make.

Sewing for Christmas - Tip #9:
Do you decorate your house for Christmas? If you make a special doll, pillows or ornaments, remember not to stuff them with beans or rice. They could attract bugs and vermin while in storage the other 11 months of the year.

Remember, people love to get homemade gifts. It sends the message that you cared enough to spend your valuable time making them something. Most of the gifts you make will be made better than the things that you find in stores and made with better quality materials.Related:

0 评论:

发表评论