Christmas break

Hello there friends.  Things have been busy here, but all of the crafting that’s been happening can’t be blogged about until after Christmas.  We’re preparing for our annual Messiah Sing-along party tonight, Barry’s parents to arrive on Sunday, his promotion to Major next week, and then the big holiday itself.  I’ve decided since I haven’t made any blog posts lately and have been fretting over that fact, I’m just going to give myself permission to take an intentional break until the new year.

Here’s wishing you a wonderful Christmas.  It never ceases to fill me with awe that the Creator of worlds without number was born so humbly as a helpless little baby.  I love Him… more than I can put into words.

Thank you all for stopping by and reading.  Don’t forget about me!

I’ll be back in the new year.

pattern giveaway!

**UPDATE** The giveaway is over and the winners have been announced at Bloom!

I’m a new sponsor over at Bloom and today we’re doing a giveaway of my patterns.  If you’ve been wanting to try them but haven’t yet, head on over and enter to win!

All you need to do is comment on this post and you’ll be entered for a chance to win the pattern of your choice.

Head on over and spread the word!

on the mend

This morning as I was getting dressed I noticed that the knee of my favorite (read only) pair of jeans that fits right now had a little hole worn in the knee which promised to grow to much larger proportions the first time I kneeled  on the floor to play blocks or read stories.  So, I promptly headed down stairs to my sewing machine and got to work.

mending

I just cut a scrap of denim from an unrecoverable pair of kid jeans and pinned it inside, then zig-zagged the bejeebers out of it.  I used a grayish blue thread on top to try to camouflage it a bit.

trimming the patch

Then I trimmed the patch inside with pinking shears.

I find myself needing to do this a lot.  You see, I am not a shopper.  Spending money gives me stress.  I don’t like to buy things I don’t absolutely love, but often when I find something I do love it’s too expensive, so I won’t buy it anyway.  I guess that’s why I only have one pair of jeans.  These Eddie Bauer classics are the only kind I’ve found that fit just right and look cute, but I have a hard time spending the money to get a pair or two more.  I shop for my kids the same way– hardly ever.  This is posing a problem now that the weather is cooler because my kids need pants.  I thought I had just bought them all some, but as I caught up on laundry and put away all the summer clothes this week I realized that “just” that was in my mind was a year ago or more.  Every pair I found had holes in the knees or patches or holes in the patches.

The problem is, my boys especially wear holes in the knees of their clothes within a couple of weeks of getting new ones.  I’ve realized I can’t buy cute jeans from the Gap or Old Navy because they just won’t last– it’s all the rigorous Lego playing that they do. I usually end up with a stock of these Land’s End double kneed pants because it takes a while to wear through both layers.  They just aren’t the most fashionable thing.

Anyway, I’m gearing up for the shopping I need to do.  I’m thinking I probably need to work up to 5 pairs of pants for each kid.  2 pairs of everyday pants or jeans, 2 pairs of sweats (because that’s what my kids will wear everyday if they could) and a pair of nice pants for church and such.  Does that sound about right?  My friends out there with lots of little kids– how do you keep up with kids’ clothes without breaking the bank?  What number of shirts, pants, etc. would your ideal kid’s wardrobe consist of?  Are you a mender?

As for me, I’ll probably be sticking to this one pair of jeans for quite a while longer.

it hardly shows!

I noticed as I was reading this morning that you can hardly even tell they’re patched up.  That’s got to make ’em good for another year at least.  Right?

so, here’s the dress!

new dress

I used McCall’s 3436.  My criteria for making this dress were– modesty (it is so hard to find dresses with sleeves and enough cleavage coverage), simplicity, and something I could put a big flower around the waist.  The advantage of this pattern was that it was in 2 pieces so that I could make the top a smaller size than the bottom.  That meant I had to buy 2 copies of the pattern since it came in sizes 6-7-8 and 12-14-16.  I think I said in the last post that I’m lucky I made the top in muslin (twice) first because the measurements on the pattern said I needed a size 12 top which was way too big.  Then I went back and bought the smaller patten and tried a 10, which was just right.  After looking at the finished measurements chart on the pattern they included something like 4 inches of ease around the bust and waist.  Who wants 4 extra inches?  Totally weird to me.  I also added about 2 1/2 inches to the bottom of the top to make the length of it a little more modern.  The skirt worked fine in a size 16 (Seriously?  I’ve gained a lot of weight since I stopped nursing.), but I had to shorten it by nearly a foot.

back

I used pretty buttons down the back and made a flower for my hair.

flower close up

The entire dress is lined in a navy china silk.  I serged rolled edge hems along both sides of a strip of it, then made a line of gathering stitches down the center, to make a ribbon for my waist.  I used scraps of both fabrics and the peony pattern from Martha Stewart weddings to make my flowers.  I used the smallest template for my big flower and then copied it at 75% to make my smaller one.  To make sure that the petals didn’t unravel I put fray check around the edge of each flower I cut out.  That was time consuming and stinky!  It stiffened the silk up a bit and made the petals hold their shaped well, though.

new dress

It was so comfortable!  I didn’t have to worry about things shifting the wrong way and showing all my under clothes, and china silk against my skin was truly luxurious.  I don’t think I’ll ever buy a polyester dress from David’s Bridal again.

Now, I know you all want to see pictures of Barry in his mess dress, right?

mess dress

:)

Sorry I didn’t notice I needed to straighten his tie.

Now, I wasn’t the only one who did some sewing.  Behold the party shirt–

unveiling the party shirt

When all the formalities are over and the dancing gets going the guys take those hot jackets off.  And, if you’re a cool Air Force guy you have a party shirt.  So, Barry ordered some spacey fabric (that has glow in the dark stars) and borrowed my seam ripper, then used the old pieces as a pattern.

the party shirt glows in the dark

He needed a little coaching, but he did all the sewing himself.  Pretty awesome, huh?

ahh

It was a pretty inspirational evening and I left feeling really proud of my husband.  What he does is pretty crucial to the well being of our country, those soldiers on the ground, and the whole world.