A tote bag experiment…

Miss Mouse tote bag
Miss Mouse tote bag

I sneaked a little something new onto the website last week – Miss Mouse & friends tote bags

They’re made from 80% recycled cotton with 20% recycled polyester. They measure 37 x 43cm (so they’ll easily fit an A4 pad sideways), and they have a small gusset at the bottom so they’re not completely flat. The handles are 65cm long, so the bag will tuck neatly under your arm. 

fox & badger tote bag
fox & badger tote bag

There are four designs, each on a different colour of bag, and they’re £15 each.
(If you’re a Patron at www.missmou.se or a subscriber to the mailing list, you should have a discount code.)

Mr Magpie tote bag
Mr Magpie tote bag

The tote bags are produced by a company called Stanley/Stella, who are based as far as possible on sound ethical principles. (I have a grumble about the fact that they don’t offer any plus sizes in their t-shirts, but that’s another story.) 

They’re printed by Inkthreadable, who are a print-on-demand drop-shipping company. This means that you buy a tote bag, I confirm the order with Inkthreadable, and then they print it and send it straight out to you. It takes a few days – there’s no next-day delivery because it takes a while to do the printing. But if you order a bag, it should be with you inside a week. 

chocolate coins tote bag
Woodland Gang chocolate coins tote bag

I think this one’s my favourite – it makes me laugh to think about carrying a shopping bag with the Woodland Gang saving up their chocolate coins. Well, except for Pip – as usual!

Miss Mouse’s Garden Picnic

Those of you who follow me on Instagram will have already seen some of Miss Mouse’s day-to-day shenanigans. Today she decided that the weather was perfect to take a friend and have a picnic in the garden.

15/08/22 Miss Mouse's Picnic

Oh, I do like your teapot Miss Mouse!

15/08/22 Miss Mouse's Picnic

It’s the perfect size for your tiny teacup! And what a lovely picnic basket to put it in.

15/08/22 Miss Mouse's Picnic

Another cup of tea? Why, thank you very much. And look at all the lovely things you’ve foraged from the garden! Golden raspberries, lovely ripe tomatoes, and a few blackcurrants too.

15/08/22 Miss Mouse's Picnic

I’m glad you’ve got those little plates, Miss Mouse. You wouldn’t want to get blackcurrant juice on your lovely white dress. (Or on my Great-Aunty May’s embroidered tablecloth, thank you!)

15/08/22 Miss Mouse's Picnic

Help myself? Thank you, Miss Mouse. I don’t mind if I do! There’s definitely plenty to go around.

15/08/22 Miss Mouse's Picnic

Ummm… Miss Mouse? I know your friend seems very knowledgeable about these things, but I’m not altogether sure you should be picking that one!

Universal Aunts Day Trip: Harry Potter

I’ve been more unwell than usual lately, so I’ve missed out on a couple of fun day trips with friends. Paul was kind enough to take along a Universal Aunt for me each time, so they could have a little fun on my behalf.

Universal Aunts at Harry Potter

Their first trip was to the Harry Potter studio tour! The Aunt was very, very excited by this scale model of Hogwarts – it’s just her size! She was very sad to find out that muggles aren’t allowed to stay.

Universal Aunts at Harry Potter

She made lots of new friends, including this owl…

Universal Aunts at Harry Potter

…and she didn’t seem too nervous about meeting Aragog!

Universal Aunts at Harry Potter

Slightly worryingly, her favourite part of the tour was Umbridge’s office – all that pink! And kittens! She was extremely tempted by these cups and saucers in the gift shop. I do hope that her taste in crockery is the only thing she has in common with Dolores Umbridge!

Universal Aunts at Harry Potter

And here she is at the end of the tour, looking extremely happy with a Butterbeer that’s almost as big as she is! I don’t think she drank the whole thing, although reports say that she may have been snoring a little on the car journey home…

I’ve been posting quite a few pictures of the Aunts doing things, over on Instagram, using the hashtag #universalaunts. I’m very much hoping that as the Aunts all head off to their new homes, lots of people will start to post pictures of their adventures!

Meet Miss Mouse.

Miss Mouse

This is a project I’ve been meaning to get around to for a long time. I started with a Patti Medaris Culea pattern (well, a combination of two patterns), enlarged from A4 to A3 on a photocopier. I’d already worked out that this would result in a doll that was about three feet tall, which seemed about right for the scale I wanted to be working at.

Miss Mouse

This still resulted in some of the trickiest sewing I’ve ever done – and you can see that I wasn’t totally accurate! I used the hand wheel a lot to manoeuvre the needle slowly around the fingers, which seemed to work pretty well. The fabric is silk noil that’s been dyed with tea, and it was absolutely perfect for this project. Nice and soft, easy to sew and sculpt, and not in too much danger of unravelling along tiny little seams.

Miss Mouse

I started with the most fiddly part of the doll – the hands. I don’t have haemostats or tube turners, but at this scale the fingers were easy enough to turn through with ordinary tweezers. I made a pipe cleaner armature for each hand, which fitted into the fingers perfectly. I still needed to add a little bit of stuffing, which was quite fiddly, but I’m really pleased with how the hands came out. They’re just poseable enough, and I kind of wish I’d been brave enough to go with the option that had all five fingers sewn separately. (Next time.) I’m pleased I decided to go with this enlarged version of the pattern though – I really don’t fancy making these little hands at their recommended size!

Miss Mouse

Limbs and body made, I had a momentary crisis when I came to the end of my bag of toy stuffing with one lower leg left to fill! Thankfully, being a ridiculous hoarder who used to work in a fabric shop, I knew I had another half bag lying around somewhere in the back of a cupboard. It’s a slightly different texture and density, but as this doll’s most definitely not for sale, it doesn’t matter too much. 

I also had another minor crisis when I discovered that I’d completely failed to read the instructions for the elbows and knees correctly before I sewed them closed. So the arms and legs are jointed in a somewhat experimental manner, but again, it works for me and my plans for the doll, so it won’t be a problem.

Miss Mouse

And here she is, giving us a little wave! I do love those hands. You’ll notice that she’s missing one rather vital body part – her head! As you can see, it was rather late at night by the time I got to this stage, so I decided to go to bed and think about her head the next day.

Miss Mouse

And here it is! I spent a long time looking up pictures of wood mice from lots of different angles, which I then tried to translate into a three-dimensional pattern. Spatial awareness is really not my strong point, so it took a lot of scribbling and crossing-out and trying again before I got to this stage. I’d anticipated having to make three or four heads before I got the pattern right, but I’m very pleased to report that this was the first one! Her nose is perhaps a tiny bit over-pointy, but I’m very pleased with how she’s come out.

Miss Mouse

 

And here’s the completed Miss Mouse, relaxing in the big armchair. Doesn’t she look sweet?

Miss Mouse

And to give you a sense of scale, here she is relaxing on the sofa with Paul.

(They were watching Terminator. I think Miss Mouse found it a bit scary, but at least she’s got her own little Universal Aunt to cuddle.)

The markings on her upper arm and foot are from the tea-dyed fabric. She has more on her back. I’m slightly disappointed that she doesn’t have more staining, but I somehow managed to avoid the most mottled parts of the fabric.

Miss Mouse

Of course, what Miss Mouse needs now is a little outfit. I don’t know yet exactly what she’s going to wear, but I do know that she needs a lacy shawl. This led to a long search through my knitting magazines to find a pattern that I could scale down to fit a doll. This is Leona by Anniken Allis, designed to be worked in a 4-ply yarn on 3.5mm needles. I’m making it in lace weight on 2.75mm needles, and I can reduce the number of repeats in the main section without messing up the border if it starts to look a bit big. It’s going to take flipping ages to knit though…

Miss Mouse

…wouldn’t it be so much easier if Miss Mouse could knit it herself?

Miss Mouse

Oh look! She’s found a perfectly mouse-sized sketchbook on my desk! I wonder what she’s going to write or draw in it?

Miss Mouse

I’d been thinking about mouse-shoes as I was making her (as you do), but it wasn’t until I started knitting the shawl that I realised she’d need socks as well. Obviously. Because mouse-feet aren’t the same shape or size as people-feet, I’m working out a pattern from scratch as I go along. The handy thing about toe-up socks is that you can try on your work in progress!

I still haven’t decided what the rest of her outfit’s going to be like, but at least she’ll be well-served for knitwear…

Meet the Universal Aunts!

Universal Aunts

Do you miss your Mum? Fancy a chat with your sister?
Need a word of wisdom from your Grandma?
Has your favourite cousin gone off travelling
the big wide world without you?
Simply choose your favourite Universal Aunt,
and you’ll always have a companion at your side! 

(Please note: advice given by Universal Aunts cannot
be guaranteed. Some of them are wiser than others.)

Universal Aunts
If you’ve been following me on Facebook or Instagram lately, you’ll have seen these little Ladies popping up all over the place.

I have a couple of BIG DOLLS wandering about in my head. (As you do.) They’ve been in there for a year or two, but I’m too intimidated to let them out. So, I needed to improve my doll-making skills, and what better way than by making some little ones? I started with the Lady above, just as an experiment really, using up scraps from my sewing room and trying to create a character.

Universal Aunts

I wasn’t sure who this Lady was, to begin with, so I started carrying her about with me, showing her to people, and waiting to see who she turned into. (Here she is, in my Fairysteps handbag, bringing a packet of chocolate biscuits to a friend.)

Universal Aunts

Over the next week or so, more Ladies started to appear, wearing different outfits, and keeping me company. (This Lady, as you can see, is doing a spot of shopping.)

Universal Aunts

It has been suggested that some of these Ladies are incarnations of various different parts of my personality over the years. I couldn’t possibly comment.

Universal Aunts

(I spent far too long deciding which books the Ladies should be looking at. So far, nobody seems to have noticed that the two Sensible Ladies are interested in the Women’s Land Army, while the Goth Lady glances sideways at Harness & Saddlery.)

As I was carrying a selection of small felt dolls around in my handbag (doesn’t everybody?), I found that I was really enjoying thinking of places where I could photograph them, and also feeling comforted by the quiet sense of companionship from having a tiny character who I could just glance at during a stressful day.

Universal Aunts

(A friend suggested that this very smartly-dressed Lady should be named Mrs Partridge. Because she’s in a pear tree. Get it?)

It was at this point that the Universal Aunts were born.

A small felt keepsake doll, just right for sitting on your bedside table, keeping you company at your desk, or tucking safely into your handbag. I think of them as a cross between those tiny little “worry dolls” and my niece’s beloved Bunny, who goes everywhere with her. We may think of ourselves as “too old” for bunnies and blankies and even dolls… but who couldn’t do with somebody friendly to confide in every once in a while?

Mr & Mrs Smith Go On Honeymoon

They also reminded me of my honeymoon, where we took little knitted incarnations of ourselves (beautifully made by my Mum) and had great fun taking photographs of them on their holiday!

Universal Aunts

These first few Ladies aren’t for sale – they’re made from acrylic felt, with plastic eyes, and a lot of them have some distinctly experimental stitching involved! But now that the patterns are developing nicely, I’ve bought some wool felt and some glass beads, and I’ll be making a lot more Ladies of a much higher quality to pop into the Inexplicable Emporium.

(They’re going into the Emporium rather than the Eternal Magpie shop because I thought they might get a bit lost amongst the hats, and I wanted the Universal Aunts to have a little showcase all to themselves.)

Universal Aunts

I’m planning to go back through my Instagram posts and tag all of the Ladies with #universalaunts, in the hope that once they start making their way out into the world, I can encourage other people to do the same. Wouldn’t it be lovely to see what kinds of adventures the Aunts end up on? (Here, they’re admiring my small collection of ceramics by Sue Mundy.)

So, there you have it.

Universal Aunts.

I hope you like them!

Hats, Shoes and Dolls.

IMG_3001

I mentioned, back in my New Year post, that my One Word for 2015 was going to be “focus”.

I also mentioned that the three things I wanted to focus on were HATS, SHOES and DOLLS.

So, as you do, I promptly took a three-month sabbatical from making hats.

Although this might seem counter-intuitive, it actually gave me time to think about how the hats had been received at the wedding fair in January (nowhere near as well as they were at the Christmas craft market), and start to gather some extremely useful feedback. As a result, I’m having a bit of a re-think about the styles of hats I want to make.

IMG_3804

This is the first experiment off the blocks (well, actually, off an old biscuit tin!), and I have to say that I’m quite pleased with it so far. It’s a small top hat, about 10cm in diameter, and about the same high. The brim was blocked flat and then hand shaped and wired, and finished with bias binding. The embellishments are some felt “tentacles” I made a while ago, and you can see that I’ve started to add a few sparkly Swarovski crystals, which I love against the matt felt. This particular one won’t be for sale, as it’s part of an outfit that you’ll have seen a sneaky glimpse of if you follow me on Instagram. All will be revealed when it’s complete!

1484686_10153201584303829_6462138847438017447_n

As far as shoes go, a plan is currently in the works! These are a few cotton pairs that I made back in 2011, but decided not to take any further. This time I’m changing both the materials and the method, and I have a few people signed up to do some wear testing of a batch of prototype wool felt shoes.

They will be shoes, not slippers, as they’ll have a durable rubber sole that can be worn outside. They’ll need the same sort of treatment as any fabric summer shoes, although I think the wool will be fairly robust. If they turn out well, I have other fabrics in mind. Harris Tweed, anyone? Silk, for weddings? We’ll see. Fingers crossed that the prototypes turn out well!

997089_874126692605897_9198584000115880573_n

As for the dolls… well, they’re firmly stuck in my imagination at the moment. They were going to live over at Mr & Mrs Magpie’s Inexplicable Emporium, but I simply haven’t had the time or the energy to do anything other than think about them. Olaf hasn’t even been tweeting very often.

I know exactly what the characters all look like, and I know how I want the dolls to turn out… but the gap between my current skills and the finished dolls seems impassable right now.

For the moment I’m concentrating on the new top hats, plus my favourite shape of close-fitting cloche. I’m ordering the materials for the shoes this week, so I can start to get those into production as soon as the felt arrives. But after that, and my Proper Job, and my Aromatherapy distance learning course, I think the dolls might just have to wait for a little while.

I’m sure they’ll demand to be made when they’re ready.

Back again.

 

Hello! I seem to be getting into a very lazy habit of only updating the blog about once a fortnight. My excuses are that it’s too frustrating trying to post using the iPad, and it’s so much easier to update Instagram and Facebook. Probably best to follow me there, if you feel like keeping up with me on a more regular basis.

Here you can see me in a fantastically stereotypical Instagram shot – staring whimsically into space as I contemplate how I’m going to get out of this dress when I haven’t added the front placket yet.

I was originally going to make a dress, then I changed my mind and decided to make a shirt. Thanks to a slight maths error (okay, the fact that I didn’t measure my hips properly) the shirt didn’t fit, so I decided to chop off the bottom eight inches and make it into a dress after all. But because I was cobbling together two patterns, I hadn’t quite worked out how I was going to get in and out of the thing. My task for today is to cut into the skirt and add a placket, so I’ve got room for buttons below the waist.

I have quite a few buttonholes in my future – this petticoat needs eight of them. (I just need to find eight matching lingerie buttons from my stash.) The pattern is Butterick 3263, and I made the slip to test the fit of the bodice before I embark on the combinations. Just as well I did, as the petticoat didn’t fit me at all! I took in two inches at the centre back bodice, half an inch at each side, an inch out of each shoulder, and added a dart at the centre back skirt to accommodate my sway back. I’m now slightly paranoid that I’ve made it too tight, but I won’t find out until the buttons are in place. (Cue the traditional cursing of my sewing machine that refuses to make buttonholes unless I’m standing in the sewing machine shop complaining to Sue about it – when of course it makes them perfectly. Git.)

In an attempt to be more organised, and to try and keep both my pattern and fabric stashes under control, I’ve started work on a new system. I’ve printed out a little picture and the fabric details for each of the patterns I sew most often, and glued them down to the pages in a small Filofax that was sitting empty in a drawer. I plan to add swatches for each garment as I make them, so that I can see what I’ve got already and where any gaps might be. The second section will be swatches cut from my fabric stash, so that when I go fabric shopping I can see what I’ve got at home, and make sure I’m not duplicating things. This will also allow me to match up the patterns with the swatches, and hopefully shrink the stash a little bit by actually sewing something from it!

Section three, which you can see poking out on the right, is swatches from clothes that are already in my wardrobe. (These were cut from inexplicable horizontal loops on the back of my jeans.) Having these with me will mean that I can buy fabric (or wool) to match clothes that I have already, thereby creating Actual Outfits rather than a wardrobe full of lovely clothes that bear no relation to one another. (Currently I have nine pairs of smart trousers, and no tops at all to go with them. I’m very bored with black t-shirts already.) I’m also contemplating knitting tiny swatches to match my cardigans, though I think that might be a step too far into madness. Perhaps just sticking in a few strands of yarn would do just as well.

Speaking of madness… the other day I made this little doll face. I found her a bit fiddly (hence the slightly squiffy eyes!), so I enlarged the pattern, thinking I’d try making a doll on a slightly larger scale. Except that when I really looked at the photocopied pieces, I realised that “slightly larger” is actually going to turn out about three feet tall! Do I really want to make a doll at that kind of size? Well, I’ve got a big enough piece of felt, so why not?! We’ll see how long it takes for me to get bored of stuffing all the pieces. (I predict: Not Very.)

In Other News… 

I’ve been clearing out my pattern stash into the Etsy shop.
There are a few vintage patterns that turned out not to fit me, a few that I bought and then changed my mind about, and a few that are cut out to sizes that I now can’t fit into. More to come over the next week or so.

My zipped pouches were reviewed over at Blonde Ambition.
Thank you Katie, for the lovely review!

The Vintage Haberdashery Mystery Boxes have disappeared from Etsy
…but I do still have one left. Let me know if you’d like it, and I can pop the listing back up just for you. Otherwise it’ll sit on my shelf feeling lonely, until I can find a good home for it.

And now? Buttonholes. Lots of buttonholes.

(And hoping that it doesn’t rain on the four loads of washing currently drying in the garden, because I’ve got no room for all that laundry in the house if the weather decides to chuck it down!)

Doll Dresses & Dad’s Shirt

Doll dresses and Dad's shirt

A bit of nice easy sewing today – or so I thought! Well, okay, the doll dresses weren’t exactly difficult, but good grief they’re fiddly! I know I say this every time I make one, you’d think I’d be used to it by now. The first couple of doll dresses I made for Milly were fastened with velcro. These two fasten with poppers, which I’m hoping she should be able to get the hang of herself. I’d like to make future dresses with buttons, but that depends on whether I can convince myself to work hand-sewn buttonholes on doll’s clothes. (I’m not fighting my sewing machine for it, it’s not worth the swearing.)

The shirt, on the other hand, really was easy. My Dad picked it up in a charity shop, and it wasn’t until he got it home and tried it on that he discovered the sleeves were far too long! There’s no easy way to shorten shirt sleeves (you can do it, but involves taking the cuff off and re-working the placket, which is a pain in the proverbials), so the really easy thing to do is simply to chop the sleeves off at the elbow, hem them neatly, and call it a short sleeved shirt. Much better.

Even though it was only a small refashioning job, the quality of the fabric was very noticeable. The labels are very faded so this shirt’s obviously been washed a lot, and the cotton is densely woven and incredibly soft. It’s an Yves Saint Laurent shirt, so I guess it must have been quite expensive originally. Another reason why I often haunt charity shops – if you can get past all the Primark items being sold for more than they cost new, you can quite often find a piece that might be old, but is of a much higher quality than you might ordinarily be able to afford. Thanks to a very simple alteration, my Dad should get plenty of wear out of this – once the weather warms up enough for summer shirts, that is!

Bloom

Winx Club Bloom Doll

This is a Winx Club Bloom doll. I have no idea what that means (it says Nickelodeon on the box, so maybe she’s a cartoon?), but she was reduced to £6 in my local toy shop, so I brought her home with me.

I’ve been reading forums on customising dolls like Liv, Moxie and Monster High, but I thought it would be better to practice on a cheap doll before I effectively ruined something that a little girl might like to play with. I chose this one because I liked the shape of her face (I thought it might customise nicely into something pixie-ish), and because her proportions aren’t as ridiculously exaggerated as some other fashion-type dolls. She also has a little x-shaped hole in her back specifically for the addition of wings, so she might turn into a really nice fairy of some description.

Sadly she’s not very poseable, as she’s only jointed at the shoulders, hips and neck. This probably makes her useless for my original idea of customising her and taking photos, but it also hopefully means I won’t be too precious about having a few goes at repainting her face or replacing her hair.

Of course, what I really want is something like this beautiful Luts Super Senior Delf, but in the absence of a spare $546, I think Bloom will have to do!

Merry Christmas!

Milly's Christmas Doll

This little lady is my niece’s Christmas present, dressed in a very festive outfit!

The pattern is Simplicity 1900, and I’m pretty pleased with how she’s turned out. It was a little bit fiddly though – I don’t know whether I sewed the doll together with too-large seam allowances, but the arms were impossible to turn through and I had to re-draw them and try again. Some of the clothes are also coming out too big, which suggests that I’ve sewed the doll a bit too small. She’s also a bit wonky – I managed to sew one arm on about a centimetre higher than the other. Oops.

Turquoise Dress

This outfit’s a bit of a sentimental one. The fabric is a tiny remnant left over from a dress that was made for my Mum when she was a child. Hopefully she’ll enjoy seeing it being worn by her granddaughter’s doll.

I also made a pair of little doll-sized bloomers, trimmed with lace, as the pattern didn’t come with any pants. How rude!

Milly opened her presents yesterday while we were visiting, and the doll seemed to go down well. Her current favourite game is getting everyone to take a jumper on and off a teddy bear, so a doll whose dresses and shoes (and pants!) could be taken on and off was pretty good.

Although five little pairs of socks (for Milly, not for the doll!) were even more popular – they were tried on by the doll, the bear, a bunny and a hippo. Who knew socks could be so much fun?