So you want to know about Robin?

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Hi All! A little about myself, I'm a 27 year old living in Jersey with my hubby and our 75 lb fur-child, Gunner. I recently landed my dream job as a Speech Language Pathologist in a huge acute-care hospital in our area and I couldn't be happier! In addition to my "day-job", I moonlight as a crazed crafter, lol. I have been a lover of anything "crafty" for as long as I can remember but didn't have time to actually ENJOY the crafts I was making until I finished up with my masters degree. Now, I'm done and have some more time available to create things that I love. Hope you enjoy!

Sunday, December 26, 2010

A Christmas Gift

Shortly after I posted From Tragedy to Treasure, my friend from LaSalle, Christine, asked me if I would make her a T-shirt blanket for her to give to her parents for Christmas.  She said she wanted to make a memory blanket from her brother's old t-shirts.  Her brother passed away at the very young age of 23 from cancer, in 2007.  She knew that having a personal blanket would be the perfect way for her, and her parents, to keep her brother's spirit around on a daily basis.


As I sorted through his t-shirts, it was easy to see that he was a die-hard Penn State fan... from his Penn-State football gear, to his fraternity garb... It was also easy to see that he had an awesome sense of humor, as evidenced by a t-shirt of a man in sleeveless shirt and tie with grizzly bear arms and the caption "2nd Amendment"  


I'm super happy with how the blanket came out, and it meant even more when I got a a heartfelt text from Christine telling me that her parents absolutely loved it.  Not only do I love making crafts, but I love the reactions even more :)


I attempted to take as many pictures as I could remember while making this blanket (but sometimes, I forget because I was so enamored with my new sewing machine!), because I've gotten a few requests on "how-to" make a blanket.  So here it is :)




I wanted to keep things as symmetrical as possible for this blanket, so I cut all of the squares to the same dimensions.  This part is totally subjective, but I found that the easiest way is to measure the biggest design you have on a t-shirt and base the rest of the t-shirts on that measurement. 

This is the coveted interfacing, it's the stuff that you iron on the back of the t-shirts to temporarily take the stretch away.  Therefore making sewing easier!

This is the particular interfacing that I use for t-shirt blankets, it's fairly thin, so it doesn't make the t-shirts too stiff.  You can buy it by the yard, or on the cardboard thing, like I did.  These things ALWAYS go on sale... I got this whole thing (10 yards!!) for TWO DOLLARS on black Friday

There are two sides to interfacing... the side with the dots has a bumpy feeling to it, THAT'S the side that you iron against the fabric.  If you do it backwards, you will get glue all over your iron.... I only know that because I may have done it myself once (ok twice!)... whoops! 
Look Ma!  No Hands!  To iron the interfacing on, lay the fabric with the patterned side down (like it should be facing the ironing board), then place the interfacing (bumpy side DOWN) on the fabric).  then slowly move the iron around.  You'll know when it's done because you won't be able to peel it off of the fabric.  

See!  It also changes colors too... the middle is done, outsides still have to be ironed

Then figure out what pattern you want to use (please ignore the sloppy t-shirt on the bottom row, I temporarily lost it and realized it when it was missing from my design)
MISSING PICTURE ALERT!  I got excited with my sewing machine and neglected to take pictures when I was sewing the rows together.  My approach is to sew a horizontal row together.  Then sew the next horizontal row together and then sew those two rows together.  I use a 1/2 inch seam.  so in a nut-shell, that means:  take two t-shirts, match up the seams (patterns facing in together)... then sew a straight line 1/2 inch from the edge of the shirts.  

This is after 2 horizontal rows have been sewn together.  this (and the pictures below) is the part where they are attached.   I match up the seams and then pin the hell out of them, so it rows don't slide when I'm sewing.  

Almost ready to sew!  
Repeat the above steps as many times as you need to until the front of your blanket is together.  



This is how I know if I'm going in a straight line.  I just keep my sewing over the line that indicates 4/8
OK, TONS of missing picture alerts... I was so caught up with sewing, that I TOTALLY forgot to take pictures of how I did the trim.  Essentially, I cut skinny strips that matched up to the width of the squares and sewed them all on.  For the back, I cut blocks to the same dimensions of the front squares and sewed them together the exact same way as I did for the front (minus the interfacing because I didn't use a stretchy fabric)

So here is the final product!! I decided to use a navy blue and grey for the trim because of all the Penn State t-shirts :)












Well, that's it!  Hope you all love it as much as I do :)


<3 Robin

Corn Pillows

Hi all!  As promised, here are some of the posts that I couldn't reveal before Christmas :)  Last year, my friend Kaitlyn gave me a "corn pillow" for Christmas... now while my orignial has since been eaten by the lovely Gunner-man, I have made more than one in it's place.

What's that you say?  What the heck is a corn pillow?  Well, a corn pillow is simply the best :)  It's  pretty much exactly what it sounds like... a pillow filled with corn (corn feed: the whole kernel kind).  It's amazing because you pop it in the microwave for 3 minutes and it gets nice and hot... and it holds the heat for a long time!  So it's perfect for snowy-days, for your cold ride to work in the morning or to throw under the covers at the foot of your bed (I'll stop now because I know I'm sounding very infomercial-like :) ), but for real, it's that awesome!

So for any of you who want to make a very inexpensive (a 50 lb bag of corn feed costs no more than $10 and a yard of fabric is about $4) but very functional and amazing gift for someone, here's a little "how-to"

First step would be to go to a fabric store and buy flannel-type fabric.  I use fabric called something like "snuggle flannel".

Measure big squares.... around 10 x 24 inches.


 This is roughly the size you want once the fabric is folded in half.
Then fold it together so the patterned side of the fabric is on the inside.
 Sew around 3 and 3/4 sides of the fabric
 Pull the pillow right-side out... you should have about 2-3 inches open still.
 Then get your corn ready.  The easiest way to fill the pillow is get a wide mouthed funnel.  If you don't have that, the next best thing is to cut the top of a 2-liter bottle of soda.  You can use that as a funnel.
 Fill the pillow so it's about half-way full.  If you fill it up any more than that, it won't hold the heat as well.
 Then pick a "fancy" stitch and sew up that 2-3 inch opening.
and here is your finished corn-pillow!

Make up a cute little tag that says to microwave for 3 minutes and you're done.  Also, for anyone who lives in a hot area, these pillows can also be put in the freezer and they stay nice and cold for a long time too!




Oh.... important side-note:  The first few times you microwave these corn pillows, they will feel damp.  That's just the corn releasing some remaining moisture.  That feeling will go away after a few trips to the microwave :)

Enjoy!

Friday, December 24, 2010

Slacker

I know, I know, I've totally been off my game.  Go ahead, call me a slacker, lol.  I PROMISE I have goodies coming!  Let's just say that I can't reveal a few things until after... let's say December 25th :)

Until then, Have a very Merry Christmas!!

<3 Robin