Beading Aida

I still have heaps of Aida fabric left over from my days spent cross stitching, it might be something I pick up doing again. So many crafts, so little time!

This is a little piece I made last night to amuse myself :)

Follow the yellow brick road

Not one of my favourite Action Man outfits I’ve made, but it would be wrong not to share it!! This is Dorothy and Toto. Toto is actually Cerberus, the Action Man dog that came with the sled and other Action Men I got off ebay!!

actionmanyellowbrickroad

Stuffed and mounted bear’s head

It’s not what you think!

This is a knitted bear’s head mounted to hang on the wall. I know it would have been easier to rip the head off a bear and mount it, but I’m not that cruel. Especially when we have a tribe of bears upstairs that might take revenge!

I’m thinking of doing another version with a less complicated head so I can knit more of them and personalise them for sale. This one took several days to complete, and thinking of how to mount it took almost as long again! In the end the head I mounted the head on art card covered with felt and sewn to a thin piece of wood that was also covered in felt. This enables fittings to be fixed safely to the wood for hanging; using card is also easier for making the neck hole than drilling through wood…and have you ever tried sewing onto a piece of wood?!

How primitive!

I thought I’d do a bit of sewing and something quite different to what I normally do. I’m not usually a pink person and certainly not pink gingham.

But I guess it’s cute :)

Izzy

This is one of my favourite doll patterns, and not one of the easiest. The arms are made in four parts, the legs in one with two boots. The head is sewn to the body. Then the arms and legs are sandwiched inbetween the two body parts inside out. You need extreme patience not to scream as arms and legs fly around all over the place, these dolls are not well known for being cooperative!

And when you finally manage to pin and tack all the pieces together and have sewn all the way around the edge, you then have to get all the insides, out. Fortunately I have made one before, a larger version. But that was over a year ago and I have a brain like a sieve. So once again the legs ended up the wrong way round, Izzy wasn’t amused!

Then as I was turning her legs out I found out the hard way I’d left some pins in. There wasn’t much room between arms and legs to get hold of the pins, so I just had to be brave, suffer the pain and carry on turning her inside out. What we suffer for our art!

As for the one I made before, well I listed her on eBay not thinking for one minute she’d sell. I really wanted to keep her, but thought I’d better try to recoup some of the cost of all the materials I’d bought! At the end of the bidding I could say ‘oh dear, she hasn’t sold, I’ll have to keep her’ :)

But she sold, on the one hand I was chuffed…but on the other…very sad. That’s why I decided to make Izzy. Would I sell I her? I’ll think about it!

Freya

This morning I finished Freya’s outfit by making her a pair of black felt boots. I actually cut out a pattern for shoes, but Freya had other ideas!

Her hand knitted dress has a pair of matching knickers and I am more than chuffed with the overall effect.

I tied her hair up with a lace bow and unlike the first doll I made, Freya has a little red felt mouth. The eyes and mouth were stitched on, not glued which I think gives a better finish.

Well now Freya is finished, it’s on to the next!!