This is a sculpture I did for a friend. It was inspired by her three beautiful daughters. I call it "Sisterhood" and had a lot of fun making it.
The heads, the hardest part.
And the full thing, looking from above.
Sunday, February 28, 2010
Small and Simple Things project #1
For an explaination of why I'm posting this see here.
These are some very simple Bun Buttons I made. (Cute name huh?)
All I did was slip a few old buttons from my button box onto bobby pins. I had a bracelette on that day that my friend made. It has a button on it, and I wanted to have a few more buttons on that day (plus it was a crazy hair day and a bun was a good idea, lol.)
So, here they are in my crazy messy bun, can you find all 3?.
These are some very simple Bun Buttons I made. (Cute name huh?)
All I did was slip a few old buttons from my button box onto bobby pins. I had a bracelette on that day that my friend made. It has a button on it, and I wanted to have a few more buttons on that day (plus it was a crazy hair day and a bun was a good idea, lol.)
So, here they are in my crazy messy bun, can you find all 3?.
Re-covered backpack
My husband bought a new laptop a few months ago, the other was "old" after a few years of use. (This will surprise no one that knows him.)This time instead of making him sell the old one to one-third pay for the new one I gave in and accepted the hand-me-down electronic. (This is why I have two iPods, lol.)
With the pretty blue laptop came a not so pretty bag. It was still functional, but stained and ugly and definitely not "me." So I started looking for laptop bags.
Ever notice how much it costs for one of those? Yeah, to much for me, I'm so silly about spending money on things. If it isn't something I'm in love with, I don't want it, and I certainly don't want it $60+ worth.
So I started thinking of making a bag or re-covering the old one.
That's when I went to the fabric store with my sister. (Ahh the bliss! The excitement of fabric shopping has been known to put me in labor, hence the birth of my son.)As soon as I walked in I found ASIAN BROCADE 40% off! Yes, I know, God and JoAnne's love me. I am very blessed.
So I bought a quarter yard of 5 different exquisite fabrics.
Then (a month later, you know me)I sat down to make the bag. I lovingly pulled threads to get the cuts perfectly on-grain, then sewed the 4" wide strips together. Then I cut 4" strips the other way and staggered them when I sewed them back together. I cut out pieces on the diagonal from the zigzaggedy fabric. I wanted to do it diagonally because Asian art usually has a diagonal line to it. Then I hand stitched the pieces on with silvery thread. I also embroidered the Chinese symbol for "thunder" onto part of it, and added a dragon patch I got off the rack. I did a lot of the stitching deliberately uneven and added lots of unnecessary long reckless stitches on the seams to add a touch of funky-handcrafted feel to the backpack.
It took a while to finish because I only worked on the hand stitching in my spare time (ie during swim class, in the school pick up que, at the doctor's office.)
All in all I am very, very pleased.
It's probably a very good thing I live over an hour from a fabric store big enough to fill my strange tastes.
With the pretty blue laptop came a not so pretty bag. It was still functional, but stained and ugly and definitely not "me." So I started looking for laptop bags.
Ever notice how much it costs for one of those? Yeah, to much for me, I'm so silly about spending money on things. If it isn't something I'm in love with, I don't want it, and I certainly don't want it $60+ worth.
So I started thinking of making a bag or re-covering the old one.
That's when I went to the fabric store with my sister. (Ahh the bliss! The excitement of fabric shopping has been known to put me in labor, hence the birth of my son.)As soon as I walked in I found ASIAN BROCADE 40% off! Yes, I know, God and JoAnne's love me. I am very blessed.
So I bought a quarter yard of 5 different exquisite fabrics.
Then (a month later, you know me)I sat down to make the bag. I lovingly pulled threads to get the cuts perfectly on-grain, then sewed the 4" wide strips together. Then I cut 4" strips the other way and staggered them when I sewed them back together. I cut out pieces on the diagonal from the zigzaggedy fabric. I wanted to do it diagonally because Asian art usually has a diagonal line to it. Then I hand stitched the pieces on with silvery thread. I also embroidered the Chinese symbol for "thunder" onto part of it, and added a dragon patch I got off the rack. I did a lot of the stitching deliberately uneven and added lots of unnecessary long reckless stitches on the seams to add a touch of funky-handcrafted feel to the backpack.
It took a while to finish because I only worked on the hand stitching in my spare time (ie during swim class, in the school pick up que, at the doctor's office.)
All in all I am very, very pleased.
It's probably a very good thing I live over an hour from a fabric store big enough to fill my strange tastes.
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