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DIY Jubilee Party Dress

diy jubilee party dress
diy jubilee party dress
Oh, this glorious sunshine may have done crazy things to my head. Like how when someone said ‘I challenge you to DIY a special Jubilee party dress with only things you have on hand’, because I immediately thought oh yes, why of course! Then immediately wondered what on earth I would have on hand that could make something so very jubilant indeed. Sadly I didn’t have a giant supply of old union flags on hand, which might have been a more obvious choice, but it does mean you will be spared any sort of Spice Girls influence in patriotic dress sense. Instead, a bit of blue, red and black to make something for the Jubilee Street Party at The Making Spot. And to be worn on Jubilee weekend, of course, whilst the entire country tries to set a new world record for simultaneous barbecue cooking.

sewing supplies
In terms of supplies, I rummaged up one failed dress attempt, which had been added back to my fabric stash, still half-finished, plus one plain black t-shirt from my wardrobe. That, plus thread and elastic, made the dress – no buttons, zips or facings. But all that had zero red involved, so the red cardi came from my wardrobe and I’m thinking that by just adding red in the accessories, it’s a dress I can wear in a non-patriotic way too.

gathering the waist of skirt
It’s hard to tell from a photo, but it’s a dress rather than a skirt and top. But I started with a process of making the skirt, salvaging something between an a-line and a circle skirt from the original pieces of the abandoned sewing project from years ago. Using a running stitch on the longest setting, I basted a trial waistline and gathered the thread to see how it would look… and this sort of make-do-and-try-it-on is pretty much how I sew. It’s a little different to following directions, but I find I understand what I’m doing a bit better and therefore get less frustrated than when I follow a pattern with something not completely obvious. This stitch is just to see how the pleats and gathers will work, so I usually sew it in a contrasting colour to make it a bit easier to work with – and easier to find when I take it out later! Once the trial gathers were working just about right, I pressed the top edge back to get a clean crease at the top, then swapped out the thread in the bobbin for elasticated thread and stitched all the way around the gathered skirt three times, holding that top hem in place with the same stitches that secured all the gathering. The result is a simple skirt with a bit of flare to the length and a super stretchy waist.

DIY peter pan collar on t-shirt tutorial
The top part of the dress started as just a plain t-shirt , but the cut was far too boxy to suit a dress, so I took it in with three darts – one on each side to taper in the waist and another at the back of the neck, as the neckline didn’t hang very well, which was how it ended up in my pile of ‘cut this up and sew it into something else’ clothes. And everything is both better and more 1952 with a peter pan collar, so presto! There are lots of templates and tutorials for adding a collar to a top, and some make it look complicated and others don’t. I had a look at them and then decided I mostly needed to make a template that would be the right length from the front of the collar to the centre point at the back. As the collar is made from a non-stretchy material sewn to a stretchy jersey t-shirt, the collar needs to be two pieces, so it’s still possible to get it over one’s head. (I hate it when I don’t think of those things and I make something that can’t physically be worn. I am particularly ace at knitting hats that look really cute on the needles but have one or two rows of intarsia so tight you can’t stretch it over your head. It’s a talent, I tell you.) So anyway: paper template to find the right length from the front to the back on one side, then a bit of playing to get the rounded part right.

diy peter pan collar on a t-shirt tutorial
Folding the fabric up so two sides are pattern up and two sides are pattern down, then it’s just a case of cutting all four layers at once to make four identically shaped collar pieces.

diy peter pan collar on a t-shirt tutorial
I cut outside the pattern to create a seam allowance. It turned out I didn’t need to do this really and my collar is a bit on the extreme size. So keep that in mind, I think: collars could do with being slightly smaller than one might expect.

diy peter pan collar on a t-shirt tutorial
Pair the pieces, with right sides facing in. Cut a few little slices at the very edges of the curves so it won’t pucker. Sew almost around all the edges – leave a spot on the short straight edge open so they can be turned inside out. Then press them out, including folding in that unstitched spot, and top stitch around all the collar edges.

diy peter pan collar on a t-shirt tutorial
Then stitch it to the edge of the t-shirt – easy as that. Try the shirt on with the skirt and mark where you want the two to meet. I started out thinking the skirt should sit at a natural waist line, but in the end it looked more like a party dress with the waistline raised a bit. It’s not quite empire height, but it’s a couple inches higher than my actual waist. Oh – and that top edge of the skirt! Because there are no zips or buttons, the gathers create a quite bulky top edge, so I stitched it to the outside of the top rather than putting the two right sides together and stitching around. Either would be easy enough, but this has a cute texture with that top edge of the skirt, I think!

diy jubilee party dress
But of course it was still very blue and black at this point, so some red to accessorise for all things jubilee! I was going to wear red shoes as well but remembered I bought this pair of blue platform sandals at the end of last summer for a big day out and then it absolutely bucketed with rain that day so I couldn’t bring myself to wear them and ruin them, of course! Bonus of brand new shoes just waiting for this summer then – and they match perfectly. Plus every party dress needs a petticoat, right? At least in honour of 1952. I don’t have a red petticoat. I do have black, white and pink. That’s perfectly acceptable in 2012, right?

Fancy some more jubilee-themed fun? The Making Spot are hosting a street party right on the interwebs, so check out this post for plenty more projects! They also have a special offer of half off crafting patterns this weekend as part of the celebration, if you fancy something to knit or stitch. (I quite like this to pop in a frame above my sewing machine, but I haven’t the slightest idea when I would get it finished!) Or you might find a little jubilee inspiration here with this ridiculously easy bunting tutorial or five ideas with bunting including gift wrap, cakes, party decor and papercrafts!

Have a beautiful weekend and thanks for stopping by!

Scrapbooking Giveaway Day

scrapbooking giveaway day
Mustache Cookies
This weekend, one commenter will win Mustache Cookie Cutters from Fuzzy Ink.

Fuzzy Ink is an awesome shop dedicated to top lip fuzz, John the owner says “Fuzzy Ink is a brand based entirely around mustaches. Offering everything from t-shirts, plushies and even cookie cutters, all of our products are facially friendly and sure to make you smile. Give us some time and we’ll grow on you!”

To enter, just leave a comment on this post describing, how, if you had a mustache, you would style it!

Entries close at midnight Thursday UK time and the winner will be posted Friday evening, so be sure to check back to see if it’s your lucky day!

Good luck!


scrapbooking giveaway winner
Colour class pass

Congratulations to Selenaintx, who wins a class pass to Through the Kaleidoscope

Selenaintx, please email me (shimelle at gmail dot com) with your address.

There’s a new giveaway every Friday night, so check back next week for another chance to win just by leaving a comment.

Glitter Girl's tips for scrapbooking about yourself

Glitter Girl's tips for scrapbooking about yourself
Glitter Girl's tips for scrapbooking about yourself Class content ©twopeasinabucket.com.

This week Glitter Girl takes on a question from the Two Peas community about where to start when scrapbooking about yourself. She has two layouts to share with you this week – one with an older photo and one with a current picture. So you can take your pick of perspectives to make your own scrapbook page.

For a full list of this week’s supplies and a collection of some of my favourite ‘about me’ pages from other scrapbookers at Two Peas, please see this page with all that goodness!

scrapbook page :: right now
This week Glitter Girl challenges you to scrapbook yourself in any style and share it in the Two Peas gallery. You can also leave a link in the comments here if you like.

Onward, covered in glitter, my dear scrapbookers!

adventures of glitter girl

The Adventures of Glitter Girl is a weekly series on Two Peas in a Bucket, and goes live every Wednesday. I’ll share each adventure here shortly after that. I hope you enjoy her quests for crafting happiness, and if you ever have a scrapbooking dilemma yourself, you can always call her to action on the message board.

Gardeners' Digest :: Scrapbooking News from the Garden Girls (May 2012)

Gardeners' Digest :: Scrapbooking News from the Garden Girls
scrapbooking supplies
On the twenty-second of every month, we bring you Gardeners’ Digest – a blog hop of scrapbooking news from the Garden Girls at Two Peas in a Bucket! Since last month, I’ve had five different videos at Two Peas: ideas with the new DIY Thickers, products and page ideas for travel themes, how to choose scrapbooking supplies for a page kit, scrapbooking with 8×10 and larger photos and the eight layout craziness that was my National Scrapbook Day challenge – maxing out a set of scrapbooking supplies. And tomorrow is Wednesday, so that means a new video from Glitter Girl. Here’s a little peek at this week’s episode… can you guess what her adventure might be?

through the kaleidoscope - colour workshop for scrapbooking by amy heller
Definitely the most inspiring thing for me at Two Peas right this second is Amy Heller’s new workshop on colour – Through the Kaleidoscope. I’m taking this workshop and I just started working on the ideas in chapter one yesterday, but I cheated and looked ahead at all the layouts because I couldn’t wait to see them all. I’m really loving how this is expanding my view of colour and making me try some new things mixing my papers and using colour to tell my stories… due in large part to the fact that I have never met an Amy scrapbook page that I didn’t like.

You can find her workshop here, but I’m also giving away a free place this week. Find that giveaway here.

scrapbooking supplies
That ‘max out your supplies’ idea may have gone the wrong way in my head because I’ve ordered two boxes of goodies from Two Peas this month! Oh goodness. I’ll have to keep scrapping in overdrive or I’ll be back to square one with nowhere for it all to live! (At least they weren’t gigantic orders. Medium-sized, I promise.) Five favourites I’m loving right now include this special kit with a gorgeous mix of things. It can be used for an upcoming minibook workshop but I’m using it for a series of 12×12 pages and loving the colours and designs; this exclusive stamp set has such a great mix of words that can be used on all sorts of projects and I love the clean look of the fonts; these paper pockets from Whisker Graphics are brand new to the shop and just twenty-five cents; papers from Summer Fresh by Simple Stories and the newest collection from October Afternoon, 9 to 5, made a big impact on my need-to-order-twice decision this month! Look for all of these products in layouts appearing over the next few weeks!

Now to kick off this month’s Gardeners’ Digest with a funny little giveaway this time! The more comments left, the better the prize gets. We’ll start with a $10 gift certificate to spend on anything you would like at Two Peas. After 100 comments are left, a second prize is added – the Oh Happy Day exclusive stamp set. After 250 comments, a third prize is added – five rolls of washi tape. If we get to 500 comments, I’ll add the Pieces of Me scrapbooking kit. And what the heck, if for some crazy reason we hit 1000 comments, I’ll add another ninety bucks to the gift certificate to give you a total of $100 to shop for whatever you want at Two Peas. Which means if we really do get that many comments, the winner would get a prize that is worth $185 plus shipping. Um… don’t expect this to be a regular thing! So yes – one comment per person, and you have one week to leave that comment. Entries close at 3pm UK time next Tuesday, the 29th of May 2012. Telling a friend is a good thing!

Now, once you’ve left that comment, remember to click on over to the next Garden Girl. Your next stop is the incredibly fabulous Jen Gallacher, a blog you should definitely bookmark if you haven’t already. Check out her sidebar for all the scrapbooking videos she creates. And enjoy the digest posts from all the Garden Girls!

Gardeners' Digest :: Scrapbooking News from the Garden Girls
Gardeners’ Digest is a monthly update from the Garden Girls, the design team at Two Peas in a Bucket. To keep up with the Garden Girls throughout the month, check out the garden gallery, find us on Twitter or subscribe to all our blogs with just a couple clicks.

Scrapbooking Starting Point :: Pink & Grey

scrapbook starting points
scrapbook page detail
Starting a new week with fresh energy and bountiful intentions. How are you this find morning? And would you fancy a scrapbook starting point, perhaps?

scrapbooking starting point
This starting point and resulting page comes from this month’s kits at JBS Mercantile. This includes elements from both the main kit and the minibook kit. (There are still a few of the main kits left. The mini has sold out, I’m afraid, but many of the items from that kit can be found here.)

Somewhat odd for my layouts recently, this actually requires two sheets of cardstock: one 12×12 for the background and one cut smaller to mat the two patterned paper boxes in the centre of the page. That full area in the middle pieces together to be 11.5 inches wide and 10.5 inches tall. Then a gathering of patterned paper scraps, a journaling card and some washi tape forms the start to the embellishment. But where will you go from here? Is that the space for writing, the title or more layers of pretty paper?

scrapbook page
In this case, that spot was just right for the title, and a few more layers of paper both here and at the top left balanced things out, leaving room to add writing on the green patterned paper above the title. I’d been toying with how to write about these pictures without my album starting to have a sort of farmers’ almanac twist since the pink trees turn up in my photos every spring. Then I realise the farmers’ almanac was actually pretty nifty as it goes – so each year it will document that little bit of perspective on the weather and the seasons and so forth. This year there was very little of the pink on blue and instead pink on grey, with many of the cherry blossoms struggling through since we had one week of really warm weather followed by a cold front and freezing rain. In the end I photographed these under an umbrella in a downpour because I was afraid the rain would bring all the blossoms down, but I did manage to get a few blue sky shots the next morning when we had about two hours of sunshine. So yes, apparently I’m now so engrained in British culture that I will scrapbook the weather. Next: a page about queueing, obviously.

scrapbook pages
We’ve actually had two starting points since I last posted a round-up, so here are a few favourites from those two. Click the corresponding link to take a closer look and get to know the scrappers behind these pages: one, two, three and four.

If you use this week’s starting point to create a scrapbook page of your own, I’d love for you to share it here!



May Photostrip Scrapbook Tutorial :: & Now for Something Completely Different

May Photostrip Scrapbook Tutorial :: & Now for Something Completely Different
scrapbook page
On the twentieth of every month this year, I post a start-to-finish scrapbook page tutorial in just twenty steps. It’s called & Now for Something Completely Different… because each month we try… something different. Amazing, I know.

This month we’re scrapbooking with a strip of photos – either from a photobooth or one you make yourself. You can find notes on the supplies needed for this project (including options for making a strip of photos) here and the final twenty-step page tutorial here.

If you give it a go, upload your page to the gallery at UKScrappers by the end of the month, as three layouts each month win a prize pack of scrapbooking goodies. UKScrappers is free to join and although it is predominantly about scrapping in the UK, you can join no matter where you are in the world and participate in any of the challenges and discussions!

Happy scrapping!

xlovesx

Scrapbooking Giveaway Day

scrapbooking giveaway day
through the kaleidoscope pass

This week I’m excited to give away a place on an amazing new workshop all about something fabulous: colour.

Through the Kaleidoscope is a new self-paced workshop from Amy Heller. Almost every time Amy adds a scrapbook page to her gallery, I gasp in delight. I love the way she designs with a brilliant eye for detail. In my Hitchhiker’s Guide workshop, one of the videos shows my process in taking inspiration from a page Amy made and using her design in my own style… and it’s one of my very favourite layouts this year. I’m excited to be taking this workshop myself, because I know I want to see all that goodness from fifty brand new layouts and Amy’s insight into using colour, with her professional background in graphic design and art direction.

This new workshop includes five chapters, each with a printable PDF and a video. She’s also included flip card and colour wheel printables to keep on your desk while scrapping. Since this workshop is self-paced, you can access all the materials as soon as you sign up and you can work on them in any order and at any pace you fancy. There’s also a private message board to share your work and chat with Amy and the other participants.

The workshop is available for purchase here, and if you’re the winner of this week’s giveaway and you’re already signed up, no problem – you’ll receive a full refund or you can gift the workshop to a friend if you prefer.

To enter, leave a comment on this post including a colour combination you love. Easy! Please include your Two Peas username so the workshop can be added to your account promptly. Entries close at midnight Thursday UK time and the winner will be posted Friday evening, so be sure to check back to see if it’s your lucky day!

Good luck!

Have a lovely weekend!


scrapbooking giveaway winner
winner of camera stap

Congratulations to Ann, who wins the stylish camera strap from last Friday’s giveaway.

Ann, please email me (shimelle at gmail dot com) with your address.

There’s a new giveaway every Friday night, so check back next week for another chance to win just by leaving a comment.

Glitter Girl scrapbooks 8x10 photos and other large prints (scrapbooking video)

Glitter Girl scrapbooks 8x10 photos and other large prints - scrapbooking video
Glitter Girl scrapbooks 8x10 photos and other large prints class content ©twopeasinabucket.com.
Glitter Girl is already on to her twentieth adventure of the year! This week she’s dealing with some supersized scrapbooking, after a cry for help on the message board asking what on earth we should do with 8×10 and larger prints. Never fear: Glitter Girl has some samples and suggestions, plus a start to finish page to share with you.


All of the products shown are available here, plus a collection of links to some of my favourite large-photo pages from other scrapbookers.

scrapbook page
And while Glitter Girl may go around in hiding with a mask over her face, I may have to get on her case if she keeps scrapbooking embarrassing photos of my childhood, complete with interesting choices in hair styles! Oh goodness. Why yes, I did have a battery-powered curling iron in my cheerleading bag, now that you mention it.

This week Glitter Girl challenges you to scrapbook a photo 8×10 or larger and share it in the Two Peas gallery. You can also leave a link in the comments here if you like.

Onward, covered in glitter, my dear scrapbookers!

adventures of glitter girl

The Adventures of Glitter Girl is a weekly series on Two Peas in a Bucket, and goes live every Wednesday. I’ll share each adventure here shortly after that. I hope you enjoy her quests for crafting happiness, and if you ever have a scrapbooking dilemma yourself, you can always call her to action on the message board.