Michaels Craft Fabric and the Studio Pup

Yesterday I went to Michaels to see all the new craft fabric. The faux Sherpa caught my eye and all I saw was a puppy. Look at this photo- do you see the puppy too? Inspired to craft a little friend for my studio I hurried back home to create. Now, as you scroll down this post, don’t think this project is too complex. The semi-stretchy Sherpa is the most forgiving fabric ever for such a project and you can create your own pattern very easily. I even stitched this craft by hand, not machine, making it even simpler.  IMPORTANT: The finished craft is for a decorative purposes only and NOT intended for play by a child. Cathe-Holden-Michaels-Studio-Pup-02Back at the barn, I sketched up pieces and parts to my little pup.Cathe-Holden-Michaels-Studio-Pup-03I picked through my buttons for good nose and eye specimens.Cathe-Holden-Michaels-Studio-Pup-08I arranged some buttons to decide on a face. A good thing to remember when designing a face, the lower and more spread apart the eyes are on a face, the more baby-like.Cathe-Holden-Michaels-Studio-Pup-07Once my buttons were chosen, I grabbed some plain paper, folding some in half for symmetry, and freehand cut out simple shapes for the head, body, limbs, tail and ears. Cathe-Holden-Michaels-Studio-Pup-04I used the paper shapes as patterns and cut front and back sections for each main body part from the white Sherpa and two of each section from the tan for ears one section each for the spots. No pattern pinning necessary if you use the pattern to cut one layer of Sherpa at time.Cathe-Holden-Michaels-Studio-Pup-05With tan thread, I topstitched the spots in place on the head and hiney areas, trimming away any hangover fabric. See how great this Sherpa is? You can’t see any of the stitching!Cathe-Holden-Michaels-Studio-Pup-06

I used a running whipstitch 3/16″ apart at about 3/16″ from the cut edge of the limbs, ears and tails, connecting front and back pieces, and pulling thread snug as I went. This stitch creates a nice fusion of layer edges, rolling them together snug to prevent fill leakage. Again, the stitches disappear into the fur! I left a fill hole in the top of each, (though the ears and tail were not to be filled.) Cathe-Holden-Michaels-Studio-Pup-10 With the head section back piece fur side down, I stitched the ears in place just inside the outer cut of the head shape. I placed the face front piece onto the back piece and stitched around the outer edge and through the ear bases, leaving the top of the head open to fill. I filled the head loosely with dried barley found in the back of my pantry, then stitched the top of the head closed. You can also use beans or rice. A fiber fill didn’t have the saggy-weight effect I prefer.Cathe-Holden-Michaels-Studio-Pup-11I filled the limbs about half way, and connected them in place with a few stitches to the inside back section.Cathe-Holden-Michaels-Studio-Pup-12I stitched around the outer body shape as I did with the limbs and sewed down through the limb bases, leaving a fill area open at the neck. I filled the body loosely with barley and stitched the neck area closed.  I stitched the lower back area of the head to the neck section of the body. I stitched the base of the tail to the center of the hiney spot. I then sewed on the eyes and nose buttons.Cathe-Holden-Michaels-Studio-Pup-13Here he is completed, front and back.Cathe-Holden-Michaels-Studio-Pup-01My finished studio pup is making himself right at home on my couch.Cathe-Holden-Michaels-Studio-Pup-14Cathe-Holden-Michaels-Studio-Pup-15Later, I caught him doing this:Cathe-Holden-Michaels-Studio-Pup-16I’m really glad Michaels is now carrying craft fabric- just enough textile to create or complete many smaller projects. And since there isn’t a fabric store anywhere near my local Michaels, these new fabrics are going to come in real handy! Check out Michaels.com and Michaels Pinterest Boards for more fabric project ideas.

UPDATE: You can download the Studio Pup pattern HERE.

 

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Michaels Announces Craft Fabric

I was asked to help spread the word that Michaels has added pre-cut craft fabric to the thousands of creative products available in its stores, providing customers with one-stop shopping for their DIY projects. I drove down to my local Michaels today for the big reveal! JSIM-michaelsfabrics03

The pre-cut fabric, includes cotton, canvas, burlap, felt, faux fur, crushed velvet and tulle, and will be available in a variety of sizes from a half-yard to 2 yards. There’s even laminated burlap, a Michaels limited exclusive, which can be fed through most home printers to add personalized messages and images. The pre-cut fabric will be carried in the majority of U.S. and Canada stores.JSIM-michaelsfabrics02

“With the addition of crafting fabric to our mix, our customers can find everything they need for their projects in one store,” said Michaels Executive Vice President of Category Management Philo Pappas. “And because the fabrics are pre-cut, customers can simply select the size they need and be on their way – no waiting for measuring and cutting.”JSIM-michaelsfabrics01

Other crafting fabrics available at Michaels include costume silk, glittered tulle, sequined tulle, faux Sherpa, silky fleece and embossed alligator and snake prints.

Michaels.com and Michaels Pinterest Boards feature project ideas that use fabric. See the project I crafted completely inspired by the new Michaels pre-cut fabric!

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Ornate Apothecary Labels: Free Printables

apothecary-labelsOnce again I’ve teamed up with WorldLabel.com to bring you some fantastic goodies- I think you’re really going to like these! They are five separate sheets of blank border labels in lots of sizes I designed using graphics pulled from some of my favorite antique resource books, such as old rubber stamp catalogs, printer cut catalogs and advertisements found in very early 20th century magazines. Below is just a sampling of the many designs.blank-bottle-labels-You can download the free label designs, which have been prepared as fillable PDF files (which means you can type in the labels following the instructions,) over at WorldLabel.com’s blog. Print the files to full sheet label stock, trim with scissors, a craft knife, or paper trimmer to use in so many ways, from decorating bottles, boxes and things, to gift tags, to product labels. I keep a blank stack of them cut and handy as craft supply organizing labels!

Can’t get enough? Download even more designs previously shared by clicking the image below!WLCHapothecary

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