Now it's time to do a tutorial on the primitive bunting I saw at the craft fair I worked!
As you may remember, the lovely Shannon of Random Sacks of Kindness
showed me some primitive bunting she made to
decorate her booth and her camping site when she went camping:
I loved, loved how they fluttered in the slightest breeze;
and was determined to make some of my own.
To the crafting table!
I wanted to make these as quick as possible, since they were going to be looooong.
I started with an easy width: six inches wide, so I could just zip across
my six inch wide ruler.
To make the triangles, I also wanted easy, so I used a triangle template I already had.
This triangle template came from a set I got years ago;
it's a "triangle within a rectangle" template.
As a bonus, I found a Mother's Day card in the template envelope.
Judging from the tippy writing,
I'm guessing I got this from the kids when they were about three.
I'm guessing I got this from the kids when they were about three.
Awww!!
(*Takes a minute to get misty about those sweet little preschoolers, then recovers
when I realize my almost twenty-one-year-old twins can both now
drive their own dang selves wherever they want. Hurrah!*)
Most of these fabrics are either batiks, plaids, or okay-when-viewed-on-either-side,
and I only used a single, unseamed, unfinished thickness of them for the bunting.
BUT, I did have this cupcake fabric I wanted to feature
and I only used a single, unseamed, unfinished thickness of them for the bunting.
BUT, I did have this cupcake fabric I wanted to feature
that really wasn't that cupcake-y on the back side.
So after cutting the six-inch strips, I placed two six-inch strips together,
WRONG SIDE TO WRONG SIDE,
marked the triangles instead of cutting them...
... pinned along the edges of the two strips...
then sewed a quarter inch on either side of the blue lines.
Once I did that, I cut along the blue lines, so I had a two-sided cupcake pennant!
Now it was time to sew!
I nerdily used a complex method of assuring there was a sufficient randomness
to all the pennants.
Then I stacked the pennants to the left of my machine,
zigzagged over an eighteen-inch "attaching" tail,
placed the yarn above the upper edge of the first one,
and just zigzagged right over the yarn.
zigzagged over an eighteen-inch "attaching" tail,
placed the yarn above the upper edge of the first one,
and just zigzagged right over the yarn.
You can't see it, but I put a little Sharpie dot on my clear surface,
about an inch in front of the sewing foot.
When the sewn pennant was all the way sewn, I would line up the NEXT pennant
on the dot and put the yarn on it.
It made the spaces in between the pennants pretty uniform.
To keep the yarn corralled, I put it in the box taped on the edge of my sewing table.
I found the trick to the yarn to be keeping it nice and taunt. I pulled it straight back, firmly,
so it wouldn't go wibbly-wobbly on the top of the pennant when I was sewing it.
I used about fifty pennants, and it made a looong string! About eleven yards!
For some of the fabrics, I couldn't find a wide enough variety,
so I did a little fabric painting before sewing.
so I did a little fabric painting before sewing.
For example, I used some gold paint on some yellow-gold batik to make this pennant
for my Harry Potter Gryffindor bunting:
You can see below I also painted some of the red fabric for this string.
That's all the same string! Like I said, fifty pennants made a lot of bunting.
Wouldn't this Gryffindor bunting be awesome at a Harry Potter party?
The idea of it being used at a Pirate Wedding makes me clutch my heart and swoon.
This silvery-green bunting was hard to photograph to do it justice,
but it would make the coolest Slytherin bunting
OR
the prettiest, sweetest garden bunting for a wedding.
(Every once in awhile I make something that I'm tempted to keep,
and I can't stop imagining this around my own back patio.)
Sometimes, a girl would just like to get her princess on.
The pinks, purples, whites and creams would be great for a real girly-girl.
And what about that cupcake bunting?
These are adorbs! I need the Gryffimdor. Oh, and the sylvery green. And yeah, the cupcake one, too.
ReplyDeleteThey're fun to make, too!
ReplyDeleteI made the cupcake bunting for my cousin, who has an Etsy shop called Raging Cupcake. http://www.etsy.com/shop/RagingCupcakes?ref=seller_info She does craft fairs; I think this kind of bunting would look great fluttering around an outside table.