Showing posts with label wedding. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wedding. Show all posts

Wednesday, 17 September 2014

Quilt border and basting

Having constructed the top of my guest book quilt a while ago, the process was interrupted by a house move and the premature birth of our first child.

Picking up where I left off, the quilt needed a border and then the layers needed basting together.

I cut strips of green fabric and pinned the parallel sides to the quilt, sewed them together and pressed the seams before sewing on the other parallel sides:


Here is the inside border with all seams sewn and pressed:


I then did the same for the outer border:


Here's what the top looks like with all the borders done:


I'm sure there are a few different ways to baste a quilt but I used the following method. Firstly I taped the backing fabric (right side down) to a flat surface. I do usually cut off the selvedge off but this piece of fabric was larger than the quilt design so I knew it would be trimmed off later:


Then the wadding was added on top before the completed quilt design. All the layers were pinned together using curved pins. It's best to work from the centre out towards the edges. 


Next step: sewing and then the final edging.

Friday, 26 April 2013

A few photos

Professional photos are yet to come from the lovely Elly Mac Photos but here are a few to whet your appetite...

The bride and groom (3 piece suit from ebay and dress from charity shop):


The shoes:



The reception venue after 3 hours of decorating (all handmade decorations):




Part of the cake table (all cakes and cookies made by friends and family):





Thank you to everyone who made our day so perfect.



Wednesday, 17 April 2013

Monday, 8 April 2013

The countdown begins

Less than two weeks to the wedding now and our house is overflowing with wedding bits and pieces.

Stacks of pieces for the Order of Service, ready to be delegated as a 'wedding chore':


Completed table numbers:



Quilt blocks, backed with freezer paper and with the seam allowance taped off:



Saturday, 23 March 2013

Wedding gifts

It is lovely having such generous, talented friends. One has made me a beautiful shawl from Rowan kid silk haze (knitted centre with crocheted edge):


and tiny crocheted flowers for hair decoration:





Monday, 18 March 2013

Leaves

I decided that leaves needed to be added to all the bouquets. The leaves consist of two or three pieces of felt which were sewn together with blanket stitch:


A piece of wire was cut and inserted into the leaves to make them malleable:



Each leaf was put in place before a hot glue gun cemented their home.


Alfie got bored watching on...


A strip of brown felt was glued in place around the handle: 


I think I can finally cross these off the list!



Monday, 11 March 2013

The Invitation

By now wedding guests should have received (and possibly been baffled?) by their invitations. They were sent an A4 sheet of paper with the following instructions on the bottom:



Correct folding should have resulted in this (as modelled by my bridesmaid):


If you are my father, they apparently resulted in this:



Sunday, 10 March 2013

Order of Service

This is the Order of Service prototype:



 I foresee lots of cutting.

Monday, 18 February 2013

Zipper flower

I had a large amount of open white zipper left over from my wedding dress so I stitched together a flower while searching for some veil inspiration. Recycling craft materials is very satisfying and, who knows, it could be incorporated into the headpiece??


Sunday, 17 February 2013

A Guest 'Book'

Rather than a guest book, we will (fingers crossed) have a guest quilt.

Thankfully I have borrowed a Grand Calibur from a friend which has saved me some cutting time. Alfie sleeps while I cut squares:


Two sizes are cut in separate colours:


The smaller squares are halved and then pinned to either side of the larger square:


These are stitched and the seams pressed. The edges are trimmed so that it is completely square:


Freezer paper is ironed to the back of the square which makes it easier to write on the front (I tested this theory on a corner):


Masking tape around the edges will stop guests writing/drawing on the seam allowance. One down, another 80 to go... Pictures of the finished product will appear after the wedding!

Monday, 4 February 2013

Wednesday, 30 January 2013

A bouquet for a bridesmaid

My bouquets have been quite a process, it started with the thought I didn't want a "traditional" bouquet combined with my housemate in London and his vintage button collection.

I started by painting three polystyrene balls (the one for me is slightly bigger than the other two). The stems are made from an old wooden broom handle, sawed and sanded, and I've glued them into the base of the balls:


A lace bouquet holder was stripped back to the plastic base. I then covered the top with 'leaves' and the bottom with 'stems':



Many hours of cutting felt flowers produced this bounty:


Which then needed sewing together:


After some experimentation (with hidden pins), I chose to use my hot glue gun to attach the flowers to the ball:


I think the base still needs some leaves which overhang so my brain is running overtime. The flowers also seemed a bit flat to me so I added some wired pearls. What do you think? 





Monday, 28 January 2013

Letterbox

Who wants an ivory letterbox when you could have an orange one? Two coats of paint later:




Plywood letters were covered with gold glitter and attached to the front of my box with a hot glue gun:




In hindsight, I think the 'D' is back-to-front but it just provides a bit of added character :-)

There are a few finishing touches to be made but this project is nearly finished.

Monday, 21 January 2013

Buttonholes

Some time ago I completed four buttonholes and needed to make two more before the task could be crossed off my 'Projects to Complete' list.

I cut the felt out using a paper template and layered them over each other:


Punching small holes through the felt, each was threaded onto a piece of wire:


The wire was then twisted at the back:


If the wearer does not have a buttonhole, I wanted a nice finish to the stem so that it could be pinned on. To do this, I used a soft plastic covered wire and twisted it around the other wire:


 Some stitching detail on the leaf completes each buttonhole:


My little collection: