Thursday, February 28, 2013

Pillow Pop - Project #1 finished!

Amanda from Little Treasures by Amanda started a sew-a-long for the Misfit Quilters. She chose the Pillow Pop book by Heather Bostic. I purchased my copy from Amazon and I love all the projects in it!


She chose the first pillow is called "Life Aquatic" designed by Heather Bostic. (All the pillow designs in this book are not by Heather. It is a compilation of projects from many wonderful designers.) Heather's pillow was made with aqua and orange fabric scraps. Originally, I planned to make mine using a different color scheme, but when I went through my scraps I realized something. I think aqua just might be my favorite color. My blue bin of scraps was overflowing. Literally. So I decided to throw caution to the wind and just copy everything Heather did. No shame, right?


Here is my pillow top after I sewed all the squares together. I wasn't really sure about it at this point but I continued on. After I had the top quilted and it was assembled with the back I really loved it! It's funny how a little simple quilting can change something entirely.


This is my finished pillow. It now lives on my couch and has already been used in a few pillow fights and licked by my dog.

Next month (which is actually tomorrow, I guess. What happened to February?!?!) we will be starting a pillow designed by Katy Jones, who makes super awesome stuff! Want to join in our projects? It's not too late. You can join in anytime. We'd love to see your finished pillows!

Saturday, February 23, 2013

Being Green

I love recycling. I love the idea that you can take something you would normally throw away to pile up in a landfill, and instead use it to make something else. Lately I have been interested in finding ways that I can make the products that are usually a disposable item into something reusable that doesn't need to be thrown away at all.

When my children were babies I used cloth diapers. And for a long time, I made all my own body products including soap, scrubs, and lotion. I suppose it makes sense then that I would be thinking up ways to make reusable feminine hygiene products for myself. Really, when you think about it, how much waste is that? Every woman in the world, multiple times a day, for a week every month throwing used products in the garbage.

The following excerpt was taken from natureswizard.com if you'd like to read the full article:

"The effect your disposable feminine hygiene has on our environment
Every year over 45 billion feminine hygiene products are dumped somewhere. This means that over 12 billion sanitary pads and liners are buried in landfill or incinerated every year in the United States and Canada. It takes approximately 500 years for a pad to break down into tiny pieces in a landfill site. This breaking down into small pieces is called Degrade and is very different to the process where things Biodegrade.
Over 90% of a sanitary pad is made of crude oil plastic; the rest is made from chlorine-bleached wood pulp. If you think about the impact on our environment of making the absorbent material that fills out the pad, which includes chopping down large areas of forests to source the wood and then chlorine bleaching the pulp, the use of crude oil plastic is a massive burden on the environment. We are rightly concerned about the billion plastic shopping bags given away daily, but by using plastic laden feminine hygiene products, each year we add the equivalent of 180 billion plastic bags to our waste stream.
According to the Algalita Marine Research Foundation, 80% of the plastic floating in our oceans comes from land as waste under 5mm passes through the filters and enters our streams, rivers, oceans and the stomachs of birds, fishes and other wildlife. If plastic is burnt in an incinerator, it will release dioxin into the air that we all need to breath, and will eventually go on to also pollute the water we need to drink and the soil that we depend on to grow our food."
Crude oil plastic and chlorine-bleached wood pulp? That sounds like just the sort of thing we ladies should be putting near our nether regions, don't you think? I decided that I was going to do something for the earth (and my lady parts). So I made some of these:

I purchased Kam Pliers from Etsy to add the snaps. I wasn't sure how absorbent these would be and I was a bit skeptical about them at first. But honestly, I have now made and used many and I love them! I like making them out of fabrics that I love. It may sound weird, but it makes it kind of fun to have your period.

I mean, c'mon. What woman doesn't want a Star Wars maxi pad? This one is actually for a friend of mine who requested I make her a couple. 
In keeping with my reusable theme... today I also made some UNPAPER TOWELS! Again I used the snaps and rather then buy terry cloth (which you can find at JoAnn's or any other big box fabric store) I opted to use a couple of beach towels that were headed to Goodwill anyway. I armed myself with this tutorial and had a set done in about half an hour.

The use of my serger made the process a lot quicker, but I prefer the more finished look of the towels in the tutorial. Just a note if you decide to make these... terry cloth is a pain in the a$$!!!!! It is shifty and stretches out as you sew it. Go slow, use your walking foot if you have one, and pin like crazy. If you use a serger like I did, a little basting spray might be a good idea.

Saturday, February 16, 2013

New Cutting Table

I have been wanting a new cutting table or a long time. For awhile I was using one of those tall, white fold-able craft tables from Jo Ann Fabrics. You know, the really wobbly ones that have wheels on the legs that you have to put a piece of folded paper or cardboard under to keep it from teetering as you cut fabric with a super sharp razor blade? Yeah. That.

Then I started using a small dining table. It was pretty ugly and way too low to the ground to be comfortable cutting for extended periods of time.

I found some bookshelves at Shopko on sale for $25 each (score!!!!). They have 3 shelves on them and are 36" high. I bought two of them, along with 12 small tupperware bins. The shelves serve as the legs for my new cutting table, and double as storage. I didn't have an idea for a table top until I brought home the shelves. I was moving things around in my room trying to make space for my new cutting table. As I was moving the old white craft table, I realized that I could just unscrew the wobbly legs from the top and just use that! It was a little too big so I took one of the fold-able sides off and it was perfect. My cutting mat fits on top with some leftover room to store my bolt of fusible fleece.


And if you were wondering what all those small plastic bins were for... COLOR CODED SCRAP STORAGE!!! This is very exciting to me because I have so many scraps. I never used them in project because it was hard to sort through a huge bin where all the colors of the rainbow were all jumbled together. So far since I have organized them, I have made 3 different projects using my scraps.

I built the shelves with the help of my 11 year old daughter. Including the time it took to sort through all of my scraps, this was a project that was about 2 hours from start to finish. It was inexpensive, saves my back from hunching over while cutting, and it looks pretty! It is so simple, I would encourage anyone who hates their current cutting space to give this a try.