After completing a few small projects using English paper piecing, I wanted to go 3-D. I decided to make a soccer ball, since it is a familiar shape that would look really cool done up in colors other than black and white. I decided to use a solid coral color fabric for the pentagons and several aqua batiks for the hexagons.

The secret to productive hand sewing is to have your project ready to grab as you run out the door. I like to use boxes, rather than a tote bag, because sharp things like scissors can’t stab, and the lid gives me a small platform on which to work.

EPP, which uses a whip stitch, takes about three times longer than regular hand piecing, which uses a running stitch. This little project has kept me entertained for a long time, but it was all done during meetings, in waiting rooms, etc. when I would otherwise be trying (and failing) to concentrate on a book. The good thing about hand sewing is that I can converse or concentrate on other people while I stitch, although I really can’t follow complicated TV or movie plots very well, I admit. That requires too much looking up from my sewing.

Because this is a puzzle ball, I could not just use a ladder stitch to join the polygons. I have to use tiny whip stitches, because the puzzle ball must be stuffed until it is very stiff in order to fill out the shape completely.

Just a few more pieces to add, then I can start to stuff.

Don’t just sit there, go sew something!

Mar 302012
 

Have you ever tried to mark template lines on felt? It’s nearly impossible. I don’t know what others do, but I find it easiest to draw the shape I want on freezer paper, adhere the freezer paper to the felt, then cut out the shape with scissors.

Here’s the technique in more detail:

1) Use freezer paper. You’ll find it in the grocery store, near the plastic wrap. It has a shiny side, and a dull side.

Reynolds Freezer Paper

2) Draw the shape you want directly on the dull side of the freezer paper. It is easy to see through the freezer paper, in order to trace from a book or pattern.

3) Roughly cut out your shape, removing most of the excess paper around your drawn lines.

4) Use a hot, dry iron to press the shiny side of the freezer paper to the felt. Don’t press hard — only until the paper just sticks lightly.

5) Cut on the line with scissors. Peel off the paper. Done!

(I also use freezer paper for hand applique. I’ll have to tell you about that some other day, because that technique is slightly different.)

Make a simple pin keeper from a piece of felt. Carefully trace a nice, round circle onto your freezer paper. Press it to the felt, cut it out, and you’re done!

Felt Pincushion

This pin keeper works well if you carry your sewing supplies in a hard box. Don’t toss this into a tote bag!

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