Saturday, March 26, 2011

And then there were two - a cloth book project


My second grandson Liam was born a few weeks ago in Bangkok. He is the dearest little boy. I can't help marvelling at how he seemed to change and grow before my very eyes while I was there. Here he is just 3 weeks old.


On one of his first outings, Liam Cindy and I visited Pretty Quilt Shop a nearby quilt shop - a rare find in Bangkok - and we found some eye-catching black and white printed fabric. Tiny babies see contrasts most easily so the black and white fabric, seemed perfect for making a simple little cloth book - one for Liam and one for his cousin Jake who was born just 6 weeks earlier.


Cotton quilting fabrics.
We set out to make a book about 15 cm x 15cm with the inspiring fabric, but only a vague idea of what we would do. Cindy was still feeding the baby every 2 hours. That left me with quite a lot of the actual sewing to do to complete our joint project before my return to Cape Town a few days later. We had to work on the dining room table because the work room has changed into the baby's room. We also all ate at the dining room table. You can imagine there was lots of clearing up and setting out to be done between meals.

The starry fabric is a bit like an op-art design. It makes your eyes feel a bit peculiar and you have to concentrate to focus on it when you see a big piece. That was a nice quick easy page to do. One Cindy could squeeze in between feeds. The problem came when it backed onto a white page. The 'show through' of the stars was a bit distracting and we had to put in an extra layer of the white cotton fabric.

The starry fabric showed through from the back



I rather liked the strong lines of the black and white striped fabric, but as a page in the book it needed a little extra 'something' - like a red line. In her blog, Mary Corbet had just suggested using two rows of buttonhole stitch as a line stitch which I liked, but I had no time to experiment with it first. In the end I stuck to good old chain stitch and a single red line added a focus and a bit of pizzaz. I still like the idea of the blanket stitch as a line stitch and want to try it sometime. Don't you think the unexpected wavy lines of this fabric are rather fun?

 
The front and back cover pages
Originally we wanted to applique some shapes onto a white background using a machine satin stitch. Its quick to do. That didn't work out too well though. The sewing machine we used didn't have a foot for satin stitching. Simple straight satin stitch lines were manageable, but definitely not the curves. Instead, blanket stitch did the trick for the circles. The red circles were fused onto the fabric before the hand embroidery was done and it made working with the rather coarse red cotton fabric a whole lot easier too. You can see the circles in the picture below where we are working at the dining room table - just before supper.



Embroidering the faces - our last page!

Apparently babies recognise faces very early on. Its got something to do with the spacing of the eyes, the nose and the mouth. Liam's dad Paul is very talented and he dashed out a number of faces for us to choose from. It was hard to choose just one, but we did and we embroidered the outlines with stem stitch.

And here are the two books, stitched together just hours before I flew back to Cape Town.




I'd love to receive your comments and also hear about any cloth books or quiet books you have made.

3 comments:

  1. Two lovely little books for two lovely litle babies.

    Beryl

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  2. I am very excited to see the books! Jake will love to see his own personalised copy - very special.

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  3. Liam loves to look at his book! The colors and designs definitely catch his attention.

    Cindy

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