Saturday, June 20, 2009

Custom duvet/quilt cover in under an hour!

So, you have an old quilt that you love, but the colors just don't go with your style anymore... Recover it!
Here is my old college quilt, mom made it, it is summer weight and covers a queen size bed.
And, as you might imagine, pink and teal aren't in my color palette these days.
So, what's a girl (or guy) to do? Go to Ikea! Or Target or wherever you can find flat sheets for cheap.
Yes, $10 a sheet. Awesome.
Now, unfold them and stuff them in the washer. Wash on hot with whatever detergent you have. Toss the in the dryer on high. Brilliant, now you've preshrunk so you never have to worry about it again.
Now you have to iron them, which is a pain in the ass. But you gotta. Just the edges will do, though if the wrinkles are really bad, hit the entire thing, Both of them. Use the cotton (highest) setting and steam the heck out of them.

See, even the instructions on the label tell you to do that.
Now, find the selvages, The selvages will be the sides that are not stretchy, they may be finished and look like someone fused them or they may be hemmed, like mine are. Either way, you'll have two stretchy sides and two not stretchy, so line them up, sheet to sheet, All you have to do is match one side, and wow, look, all the sides match!

At this stage, you can start pinning. Here's a pic of the pinned edges. You can do this if you like. I only put these pins in to show you. After I took the photo, I took those three pins out. I made sure to match the two hems and just sewed until I got to the end of that side. But if you are nervous, pin that sucker up.

Sometimes when you get to the end, you will find that humans were cutting the fabric. Now the queen (and king) size sheets are HUGE, I do not have that wide a wing span, do you? So, because the fabric is huge, and other humans half a world away cut it and hemmed it, it may not actually be the same size as the other one. See? Don't worry about that. You won't even notice it. Just set the needle into the fabric all the way, lift the presser foot, turn the fabric 90 degrees, put the presser foot down and keep sewing. You'll do this at the end of each side, but keep track! The fourth side is different. You only go 1/3 of the way in on that one.

Sometimes you run into obstacles, thread breaks, you run out of thread on the bobbins, your helper decides to take a break. No worries. Rethread it and sew over the last two inches of stitching, make sure to hit the reverse on your machine and go back over a few of the new stitches as well, ditto if you run out of bobbin thread. I also backstitched at each corner, because I am paranoid like that.
So, you've sewn one third up the fourth side. Back stitch lift the needle and presser foot and cut your threads. Pull the fabric toward you to the other end. Now stitch 1/3 of the way just like before. Now you have your opening!
See, here is my quilt inside already.

It was really late and I had two glasses of wine so I didn't take shots of the insertion and turning part. I will do my best to describe it.

You've sewn it all the way round, left an opening, right? Okay, here's what I do. Sick your hands and arms in the opening, grab the corners furthest away, go pick up the duvet or quilt you want inside by to corners. Hold on tight and shake the cover you made over top. This flips your new cover inside-out and gets the old on lined up inside nicely. If you made the opening a little bit small, as I did on this one, you may need help from someone with opposable thumbs to pull it through all the way. Or, since I was on my own for this project, I extracted myself from the inside and held both corners on the outside with one hand and that way I could pull it the rest of the way down and over the quilt. I then grabbed a corner in each hand and shook the heck out of it until everything lined up and laid flat.
My mom is human and so my quilt does not line up perfectly or fully in the new cover, but that's okay. I still think it looks pretty good on the bed this morning, don't you?

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Beginner Sewing Supplies

If you are a beginner, you will need a few things to get started. Needles, thread, scissors, seam ripper, pins, etc.
Yesterday I went to Ikea for fabric. They have lots of 100% cotton fabrics, meant for curtains, tablecloths, and recovering things most likely, but I love their bold designs and colors, so I buy it for other things as well.

While I was waiting for help (you cannot cut it yourself, on of the few full-serve things at the self-serve retailer) I browsed about and found that they carry little four packs of 100% cotton thread for $2.99. Each spool has 300 meter, roughly 328 yards. They had two color combos, so I grabbed them.



They also carry a sewing kit. It comes in a hard plastic box with a clear lid and has all you need to get you started. $6.99.



The scissors are heavy and sharp. I was very surprised as I had only bought the cheap three pack they sell in the kitchen section before.