Anyhow, I wanted to share some of the things I made for the grandkids for Christmas. I didn't get the stuff for the adults made yet, but I'm working on it. Like I said, I've had the blahs.
Here is the nightgown I made for Alex, my granddaughter in Florida. She lives with her mom's mom and husband.
full length view of nightgown |
detail of ruffling on nightgown |
I added the ruffles on my own. I'd seen a tutorial for it a while back and it seemed simple enough....and it was. You just take knit fabric, fray check the edges if it's jersey, stitch a gathering stitch down the middle, gather, and sew to the garment along the gathering stitch. The two outer gathers are the same length regardless of how they look in the photo. I measured them to make sure. The gown was moving when I took the pic and the anti-shake thing made the ruffles look a different length.
According to her Grandma, Alex put this gown on and started twirling all over the place. See, she loves princesses and feminine stuff and pink and flowers. So....she's in love with her new nightie. Apparently she likes all the nighties I send her because they're long and loose, unlike the rot you get in most stores that is made from nasty itchy fabric and is too tight to do much in at all.
Chickadee dress, Christmas 2010 |
According to Grandma she also loves this dress. It makes my Oma heart swell to hear that she likes what I make her. I haven't seen the precious thing since she was 2. I really need to make myself get on a plane and go see my babies. It's hard being so far from them.
This year I finally remembered to send Alex and her brother's presents in pillowcases. I usually do it with the kids up here and I keep forgetting theirs - at least till this year. Like I said, Alex loves princesses and dresses and pink; so, I figured this was an appropriate fabric for her pillowcase/gift wrap.
Now for Tobie's gifts...Tobie turned 9 this year. I called him a month or so ago and asked him if he'd rather have homemade gifts like usual or if he'd prefer something from the store. I know that by the age of 9 some kids don't like homemade stuff and want stuff that looks like everyone else's, and their lives are rough enough without having to tolerate clothing they don't want. He rather quickly informed me he loves the things I make him and he didn't want stuff from the store, but stuff Oma made. What a way to soften Oma's heart!
Here is a pic of the pajamas I made him. The top is interlock knit and the bottoms are made from flannel. I had some fun with these. Usually I don't mix fabric types but with a two piece item I can get away with it.
Tobie's jammies 2010 |
I also made him a hoodie from the same pattern as last year, but this year I made it into a long-sleeved garment instead of short sleeved like last year's was. I think the solid sleeve bottoms came out well and provided a nice contrast to the print.
The only thing is, I made two complete sleeves this time instead of attaching the sleeve bottom to the short sleeves like I've done before. I really didn't like how that turned out. The sleeves are enough different that attaching both of them to the shirt body was rather a pain in the butt. I do the sleeves and then sew the seam from the shirt body to the end of the sleeves, and it caused a bit of a hassle to have the two sleeves there since they don't exactly mesh the way they do if it's one sleeve that looks like two. Lesson learned....I won't do that again. He really likes this shirt as well.
Here is Tobie's pillowcase. I felt it was appropriate considering his age and where they live - half an hour from Tampa Bay.
I love this fabric! |
The kids were with their Grandma today (Tobie lives with his mom's dad) and Grandma texted me to let me know they were there. I let my son know, and he hightailed it over here. I called the kids and talked for a couple minutes, but Alex kept asking where her Daddy was, so I basically said hi, Merry Christmas, and I love you, and they spent the rest of the time talking to their Dad. Now Tobie's Grandpa doesn't let Tobie talk to his dad while he's at Grandpa's house, so JR hasn't talked to his son for several months. I saw his face when he heard his boy (I had the phone on speaker) and he was in tears. I think the best thing we could have given him this year was letting him talk to his kids. He really enjoyed it and it lifted his spirit - he was walking lighter when he left here to go home.
Abby's kids got some games from us - a Memory game (for us, in our day, it was like Concentration - a matching game) and Connect Four; Domonic, the younger twin, got a pack of 50 markers; and his older twin brother, Stanley, got a recorder - the kind you play, you know, the instrument. Domonic wants to be a graphic artist and Stanley wants to be a music teacher, so we tried to encourage them and give them something individualized while staying in our budget.
Their second gifts were a hit from the minute they came out of the wrapping. I decided this year that instead of pajamas I was making them robes. I did Patrick's from Minky, and man, that stuff sheds like mad!! I did Kenny's and the twins' from bamboo velour, which is nice and heavy and warm.
Brown - Stanley Red - Domonic Purple - Kenny Beige - Patrick |
Oma's Boys |
The flower is my own design :o) |
"I'm gonna be a model" |
I'll write more later with some Christmas Eve pics. I just wanted to put these up for now before I forgot and got horribly behind.
Blessed New Year to all, and may God hold you in the palm of His hand.