baby

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    NEW Pattern! Prize Bloom Quilt

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    I have two new sewing patterns to announce this week, starting with the Prize Bloom Quilt. This three-dimensional floral design is a rewarding project. It gives you the opportunity to practice a variety of techniques (curved piecing, inset corners, appliqué), yet it is quick to sew. You complete one, large flower and a simple, pieced foundation, then put them together and you're done. Practically. There is quilting and binding as well, but those go quickly too.

    QP001PB_PrizeBloomQuilt_470w3The large, dahlia-like flower is gathered at the center and a round of three-dimensional petals is added. These details draw you into the design and add depth. The cover quilt is sewn entirely from my Up Parasol fabric collection. However, there are a number of sneak peeks of my upcoming Clementine collection all through the background of the image—hint, hint

    Use your quilt as a wall-hanging, a small lap quilt, or as a baby blanket. (I use mine for church. Our building is ALWAYS freezing cold. During the week, it decorates our wall on a petite curtain rod.)

    The pattern includes a full-color booklet of instructions, along with a cutable pattern sheet. This is our first pattern with full-color instructions. With the petal pieces in the quilt appearing similar in contour, I felt that color illustrations would be the best way to help everyone see which pieces are which. I'm thrilled with the results. 

    I hope you are too.

    Prize Bloom is shipping now. Ask for this new pattern at your local sewing shop. Or order a copy online today at HeatherBaileyStore.com. A full Materials List is posted on the product page.

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    Up Parasol

    UpParasol_HeatherBailey

    Up Parasol projects are starting to show up all over the web. I'm excited to share many of them with you with links out to their makers. Before doing so, let's have a closer look at this new collection which is available now at independent quilt shops and online at HeatherBaileyStore.com.

    Up Parasol is centered around two prints from my previous Garden District home-decor collection—Cakewalk and Mockingbird. These two designs were repeatedly requested on quilting-weight cotton, so I heeded the pleading and pinned swatches of these two on my design board to let them seep into my subconscious. 

    UpParasol470A

    What was born of this pairing is the new Up Parasol collection. I added many all-new prints of various scales and themes, including an extremely useful pinwheel blender named Devon Check, a vintage-flavored mum print named Mum Toss, a modern little flower repeat that looks a bit like a tiny umbrella named Stella, a fresh and trendy lattice print named Trellis, an inviting Summer Plaid and another super-useful two-tone print named Lulu. Among these is my favorite new print which shows a wood-cut style bird with flowers on his wings alighting from a branch, Meadowlark.

    UpParasol310BI'm not sure if it's my favorite new print because of the finished look or because I had such a happy time creating this particular design. Again, of course, there's the mother-hen in me who believes it's just not right for me to pick any favorites. 

    I do really love how these prints work together. They are cheerful and buoyant while also sophisticated and chic.

    I had the pleasure of creating a couple of Up Parasol quilts for the industry trade show, Quilt Market. One quilt will be out soon as a new pattern—so I'll wait just a few more days to share the details of that design. And the other is a large crazy-quilt-style design where I mixed Up Parasol with my basics collection, True Colors, as well as a couple of hand-selected solid colors for punch. This freely-pieced quilt is shown in the photo above on the turquoise quilt rack.

    UpParasol470C

    Crazy-Quilt How-To

    Each block was started with a five-sided semi-pentagonal shape that was free-style cut with a ruler, but without set dimensions or proportions. I then pieced wedge-like strips around this center piece the way you would with a log-cabin block, trimming excess fabric from each newly-attached strip to keep the edges straight and ready for the next strip to be added.

    As each block became bigger, I used a 12.5" square ruler as a guide to keep my piecing on track. Once the whole stack of blocks were made and I had arranged them into a layout, I used the same ruler to trim all blocks to a tidy 12.5" square before piecing them together. 

     

    If you can make sense of that, then you can make a crazy quilt too! Let me know if you have any questions about how to put it together and I will be sure to answer those here, or in a follow-up post. 

    BirdFabricEmbroidery_HeatherBailey

    Meanwhile, visit your local quilt or sewing shop to get your hands on these delicious Up Parasol fabrics. Or visit HeatherBaileyStore.com if you don't have a sewing hub nearby. Remember to include some True Colors and Lottie Da fabrics for an expanded variety of compatible designs, perfect for your modern quilting and crafting projects.

    Pick up a copy of my Blooming Borders embroidery pattern while your at it. There is a border print included that features the same two birds shown in the Up Parasol Mockingbird print. Just imagine pairing your beautiful embroidery work with coordinated fabric in your next project—yum. 

     

    RELATED POSTS:

    BirdEmbroidery150

    NEW Embroidery Patterns 

      GardenDistrict150

    Garden District

      TrueColors150

    Introducing True Colors

     

  • Giveaway Day 25

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    Day25_EvanBailey_CatDoll1T2

    In honor of Evan's birthday on the 25th, our Day 25 HELLO Giveaway is one of our favorite children's toys, Theo the cat, an 18" knit doll. A $56 value. Theo is chartreuse for heaven's sake. It doesn't get better than chartreuse.

    A brand-new Theo made his way to our studio from LaylaGrayce.com, an incredibly diverse and inspirational online store, carrying everything from chandeliers and designer sofas to apparel, gifts and toys.
    I urge you to go take a look. Their taste is impeccable. Whether you're
    redecorating or just picking out a few gifts here and there, you will
    find so many great options on their site.

    Day25_EvanBailey_CatDoll2gT

    Thank you, LaylaGrayce.com for generously donating today's prize and for offering such a wide variety of these adorable Blabla Kids knit dolls,
    including raccoons, foxes, bunnies, bears, wolves, mermaids, monkeys
    and elephants, to name a few. They are soft and squishy and alltogether
    cool.

    Look at how many of these dolls work for boys as well as girls. I love that.

    Day25_BlaBlaKidsDolls4

    For decorating inspiration and first news on new products, follow Layla Grayce on twitter, facebook, instagram, pinterest, and on their inspirational blog.

    Read More “Giveaway Day 25”

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    Giveaway Day 13 — Puj

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    Day13_Puj_Tub

    Today's giveaway is from my friend, Katie Richardson, who invented this crazy-cool folding baby tub and quickly expanded her business, Puj Baby, to include several other hip and helpful products for families.

    Day13_Puj_Tub2Katie
    is good friends with Isaac's sister, Maureen. She and I have met up a
    couple of times and every time I see Katie she's reached new heights in
    design. I'm incredibly impressed with her and her success.

    I discoverd the Industrial Design program at my university when I was
    just about to graduate in Apparel Design. I have kicked myself ever
    since for not learning about it sooner. At one point, after I had
    abandoned my plan to pursue Medicine, I had hunted for a degree that
    would lend itself to animatronics (mechanical puppets and special
    effects for the movies, that kind of thing). I wanted to know how to
    make anything and everything, sewn items on through to electronics.

    Day13_Puj_Hug

    I am still mad that the Industrial Design program never came up on that hunt. I
    had grouped it in with Civil Engineering and passed it right by. If I
    could do college again, I would major in Industrial Design and minor in
    Apparel Design. The inventor in me still craves that education on
    materials and processes. Perhaps I can find a program somewhere yet and
    scratch that itchy itch.

    Day13_Puj_NubsWMy point is that Katie here majored in Industrial Design. As did her
    husband, Ben. And look what they have created! Isn't this impressive?
    Together they are a design power house. And I can't wait to see what
    they do next. You can too. Follow Katie and Ben's journey on their company blog and on Katie's "Secret Blog"—I sure hope it's not a true secret—Katie? Puj Baby can also be found on Instagram and Twitter at @PujBaby and on Facebook as well. Check them out.

    Without further ado, today's giveaway prize is a generous bundle of amazing inventions from Katie and her company, Puj. Winner will receive one Puj Tub, one Puj Hug baby towel and Puj Nubs, knobs to hang your Puj products on. A $90 value.

    By the way, the Puj Hug towel
    fastens gently around mom's neck so she can get baby from the tub more
    safely—without fuss. Or dad's neck. See how this works at Puj.com. I love inventions!

    I know some rad people.

    Day13_KatieandFamily

    Day13_PujLogoComment to enter today's contest. Be sure to include your email
    address
    so we can contact you if you win. You don't have to type your email
    address into the body of the comment if you entered it in the email-address
    field on the comment form; I can access that info from behind the scenes. Today's giveaway will close at 11:59pm PST on Tuesday 8/13/13. This one requires a U.S. address. And they can't ship to a P.O. box. Watch for the winner to
    be announced within a day or
    two at the bottom
    of the post.

    For more info on my August HELLO Giveaways, click here. Please
    share the word. Check back every day.

    Good luck!

    xo—Heather


    Read More “Giveaway Day 13 — Puj”

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    Giveaway Day 8 — How the Babysitter Named Our Baby

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    I'm super excited about today's giveaway. Erin from The Vintage Pearl is donating a $50 Gift Certificate to TheVintagePearl.com where
    you can find all manner of gorgeous custom silver jewelry and gifts,
    including necklaces, bracelets, rings, baby spoons, boxes, earrings—so
    many cool pieces. The sports-jersey concept is fantastic too. You must
    go take a look.

    Blog_VintagePearl_HeatherBailey

    I featured The Vintage Pearl once before when Erin sent me a mommy necklace with Charlotte and Elijah charms. It is my daily, go-to necklace and I absolutely love it. Of course, since then, I had another child. I needed to add his name onto my mama necklace.

    But what was I going to name him?

    Okay, okay. I know! My baby will be two-years old this month
    and I have never announced his name on my blog. It turns out I could
    only call him "my little bub" or "the baby" or "my youngest" so many
    times without getting caught. And you guys have noticed. Boy, have you
    noticed. You are totally onto me. I'm sorry for leaving you out in the
    dark on that. I'm going to attempt to explain myself today. I know there
    are a number of you who have faithfully watched for this news!

    Evan_HeatherBailey_470

    Choose Your Own Adventure

    If you want the juicy details of my rampant indecision and how the
    babysitter named our son, read on. For the punchline and a fabulous
    giveaway, skip to The Punchline at the bottom. (Know that through all of
    this, on top of having a new baby to care for, I was still healing from that Trash Ties situation and I was under the pressure of an enormous number of design deadlines.)

     

    The Details

    For starters, we listed baby names over and over all through my
    pregnancy and never found a clear winner before the birth. I'm sure this
    is common enough. We wanted a name that was interesting and unique but
    not contrived or trendy. Once a name gets trendy, I can't do it.

    I have always loved my grandfather's name: Imri Joseph (rhymes with "Jim Rye"). I never knew
    him. I have a solitary memory of him giving me a piece of gum. But,
    family heritage is very important to me. I never had extended family as
    a kid and I want my children to have that in their lives. Imri was a
    responsible, interesting and intelligent man. He was the Head Food
    Chemist at Heinz for decades and was pivotal in developing the
    technology that gives Heinz ketchup its signature flavor—making it
    still the best ketchup there is. When he died—I was four—he
    willed me a small amount of Heinz stock that grew a little as I grew and
    helped me pay for college. He was a family man and a hobby
    photographer—long before most families owned a camera. I don't know,
    I've always just felt close to
    him even though I don't know him.

    Blog_TornPhotos_HeatherBailey_470
    I
    wanted to name the baby Imri. I really wanted to, but it made me
    anxious. It's such an uncommon name that we really had no gauge on how
    that name would function for him in his life. How would people pronounce
    it? How much explaining would he need to do every time he gave his
    name? How would it look on a resume?

    ImriBerniceWedding300eI
    didn't feel particularly passionate about any of the other names that
    remained on our short list. It was either go hog-wild and name him
    something creatively strong like Imri (I liked Wilder too)—and let him
    figure out how to wield such a name, or keep to the classics and name
    him Henry, James, Evan or Graham. Isaac and I are artists. A larger part
    of us wanted to indulge in a creative name, but part of us didn't want
    to presume this would work for our little baby's destined personality.

    Of those classic names, Henry was my favorite. But the guidance
    counselor from my high school's name was Henry Bailey and I knew my
    siblings and mom would have a hard time with that. (My mom worked at our
    high school.) If I had given Elijah the name Henry back in 1997, it
    would have been more comfortably unsusual for me. In the meanwhile,
    Henry has become quite popular. So that was two gentle dings against
    Henry.

    Evan_Bath

    So what other classic names could we add to the list? Not many. You see, Isaac is one of ten children. His siblings mostly
    have boys and they have employed many of the strong, classic boy names that I like: Thomas, William, Luke, etc. But—Isaac
    wouldn't allow us to consider any names that have been used in his
    family already. Even when the naming situation grew more desperate.

    Evan_SleepingBy the time we were at the hospital, holding our sweet new baby,
    all that our list included was Imri, Levi, Evan and Graham. I liked Imri and I
    felt that Levi, Evan and Graham were okay, safe names. Evan being more
    romantic; Levi and Graham being more interesting. But, I wasn't attached to
    them. You would think this would land me on Imri, but I couldn't pull
    the trigger without a test run.

    We went home from the hospital unsure. We thought we would resolve it
    that week at home, but we had company and a new baby to take care of.
    We didn't figure it out, so we had to file his name as Unnamed.

    This gave us several more months to figure things out, months we
    never wanted to take, but we took nonetheless. Most people don't know
    this, but you have quite a long time to officially pronounce a name. We
    began calling our baby Graham, Evan and Imri interchangeably in order to
    resolve our feelings, sure we would keep Imri Joseph as the middle name
    if we didn't use Imri as the first name. Graham made it's way off the
    list pretty soon, once I started hearing "Grumbly" when I would say
    "Graham Bailey." I know. That was silly. I was tired.

    Blog_EvanCollage

    The names Evan and Imri stuck around. We called him both. If a
    stranger asked his name, we would say that it's Evan—in order to avoid
    the explanation. If we had more time for a conversation, we would test
    out Imri. We never felt sure what to do. We gradually became comfortable
    with the idea of giving him both names and letting it work itself out
    over time. His name would be Evan Imri Joseph Bailey.
    If we ended up calling him Evan, then he would have two middle names
    just like my other children. And if we only ever called him Imri, then
    he could choose to either keep Evan for sport or we'd take him down to
    the court and let him remove it officially.

    This is where we landed. When we introduced the baby to his
    babysitter, Marilyn, we told her she could call him either name. She
    chose to call him Evan. He was on the verge of walking at the time and
    this was a big event at Marilyn's. Marilyn would stand the baby at the
    center of the room and the children would form a circle around him, clap
    and chant, "Evan! Evan! Evan!" trying to get him to walk.

    When Marilyn told us this story, we tried it at home that night with
    our older kids. And when we chanted his name, "Evan! Evan! Evan!" he lit
    up like a light bulb. He not only was the center of our enthusiastic
    attention, but we were calling his name! The name he was hearing at
    Marilyn's all day. That twinkle in his eyes brought me some peace. He
    could be Evan and that was okay. It isn't a name I would have ever
    predicted my using. I would have thought we would arrive at something
    more unique. But it is lovely to say and he is a lovely boy.  

    "What's in a name? That which we call a rose by any other name would smell as sweet."

    Blog_VintagePearl_HeatherBailey2VP

    And he is still Imri too. And if he ever decides that Imri is the
    name he wants to go by, then I'm cool with that. For now, Imri serves as
    a nickname. (Apple is his other, self-elected nickname—from
    his first attempts to say Evan. He called himself Apple for months.) We
    call him Evan for the most part. I have never had clarity about it, but
    I'm moving on. I have never had an easy time naming my children. It's an
    honor I don't feel equal to. I always wish that I could consult them on
    it and give them the name they want, let them be who they will be.

     

    The Punchline

    The short version is that we really weren't sure what to name him so
    we
    had to test a few names out. And when it came to choosing from the final
    two names, we had disected our options to the bone and I just wasn't
    sure I liked either name any more. Our baby went around with two
    different names for a year. I didn't announce this because I didn't want
    to hear more opinions. I just kept hoping I would feel inspired about
    it. Clear inspiration never came. In the end, we gave him both names and
    figured it would sort itself out over time. Our baby's official name is Evan Imri Joseph Bailey.
    Evan, simply because it stayed on the list and Imri Joseph after my
    grandfather. He goes by Evan. Though I still call him Imri at times.

    Blog_VintagePearl_HeatherBailey3

    My new "Evan" charm from The Vintage Pearl
    arrived this week and my mama necklace is now finally complete. I
    thought about ordering a silver charm with Evan on one side and Imri on
    the other, but I resisted. I'm going to wear just one name around for a
    while, one name officially stamped in silver.

    Comment to enter today's contest. Be sure to include your email address
    so we can contact you if you win. It took me a while to get this story all written out! Therefore, today's giveaway will extend into tomorrow and end at noon PST on Friday 8/9/13. Watch for the winner to be announced within a day or
    two at the bottom
    of the post. Follow The Vintage Pearl on their blog and on Facebook. For more info on my August giveaway madness, click here. Please
    share the word. Check back every day.

    Good luck!

    xo—Heather


    Read More “Giveaway Day 8 — How the Babysitter Named Our Baby”

  • Watch Me on PBS

    I am guest-hosting an episode of Sew It All on PBS
    this spring. Every PBS affiliate has a different schedule, so I can't
    give you an exact date. BUT, the episode should be airing very, very
    soon. So, visit PBS.org to
    check the schedule in your local area. Sew It All slated this as
    Episode 4, but from what I hear, the episodes can be shuffled around by
    the PBS program directors. And different areas will carry different
    shows. Very interesting stuff.

    SewItAll_HeatherBaileyBW_BabyBib

    Anyhow, we're making baby bibs. Here are Sew It All host, Ellen March,
    and I holding up a baby bib together—it must have been very
    heavy—weighted down with cuteness. I'll post about the free pattern next
    week, along with a little monster you can applique on the bibs—or on a
    kid's tee shirt or bag, etc.

    The fabrics shown above are laminates from my Nicey Jane collection—I LOVE them. They are so fun to work with!

    Chances are, you'll see the episode before I do. Stop back by and let
    me know if you have any questions afterward. We filmed the show in one
    take. One, long 30-minute take. Can you believe it? No pressure, right?

    It was a blast.

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    Monster Bash

    MonsterBibApplique_HeatherBailey

    I'm heading to Denver tomorrow to tape an episode of Sew It All for PBS. We're making baby bibs. I don't know when the episode airs, but I'll keep you posted. Should be fun!

    If the fates allow, there will be time left to bake cookies with my
    kiddos tonight before I go. And time for sleep—that's always nice. I'm
    terrible at sleeping before a trip. Even a quick little one-day
    appearance.

  • Teensy Little Bird

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    When the hospital called on August 17th to schedule a C-section for September 3rd, I got off my computer, and walked and walked and walked. Every day, for days. My best shot at avoiding surgery was to go into labor naturally. (My oldest was born by C-section, so the doctor didn’t want me to go full-term at the risk of uterine rupture.) It was over 110º each of those days, so I would head out at 8pm after the sun went down and make laps around the neighborhood in my fluorescent-orange shirt — the Great Pumpkin.

    110927_BabyBoyBailey_02b

    I did it! With four blisters on my left foot and three on my right, our new little bub was born at 1:59pm on Thursday, August 25th. No C-section required — phew. My feet only stopped aching this week.

    I had never gone into labor before on my own, so I stayed in bed that morning longer than some might have, timing my contractions on my iPhone (standard clock app, lap function – awesome). Once I could no longer sleep, I started posting my progress on Twitter; it was a fantastic distraction. We got the kids ready for school and called in my mom to make the rounds, then headed out to the hospital. Of course, we had to make a stop at the store for an SD card for our camera. (I wanted photos!) At that point, my contractions were a minute long and three minutes apart, from start to start.

    110927_BabyBoyBailey_03b

    At the hospital, when I walked from triage to the delivery room, my doctor announced that I was at a 7 or 8 and everyone at the nursing station stood and clapped, saying “Wow, you’re still walking!?” I wonder if that’s such a big deal or if they stand and clap for everyone. “You’re dilated to a 1? And you’re still walking!?” “You’re dilated to a 3? And you’re still walking!?” Might be a good protocol.

    I had a big, goofy smile on my face — between contractions. The staff was baffled by me. Sure, it hurt. Of course! I was just ecstatic that I beat the scheduled surgery and that I’d get to meet my new kiddo. Good thing I was in an excited stupor too, because my doctor had to attend to three emergency situations in the course of my labor. She held off on me a little bit so she could help the other mothers get through their ordeals. After she broke my water, everything went very quickly and the baby was born within the hour.

    110927_BabyBoyBailey_04b

    And here he is! The inventory is complete. He’s all here, with all his teensy parts. And everything appears to work as it should: cooing, gooing, squeaking, squawking, spitting, squirting, grinning, grunting. He’s so new and tiny that all of these functions still have us mesmerized.

    I’m saving his name for another post — as that’s it’s own story. When it comes to names, I’m a waffler. Why can’t we all go by three for four different names — that would be so much easier! (Well, maybe not.)

    Two days after the baby was born, Isaac and our talented friend, Jared Platt, met up to take pictures. These lovely shots were snapped by Jared. Jared is a professional photographer who travels the U.S. teaching photography workflow and file management to other professionals.

    110927_BabyBoyBailey_05

    Isaac has typed up his thoughts on little bub’s birthday as well — more revealing perhaps than my polite assessment. Here’s his take…


    Read More “Teensy Little Bird”

  • Have you Herd?

    Make a new friend in Henrietta turtle (or skip the flower corsage and
    make a Henry turtle). Henrietta will gladly house your pins &
    needles or entertain your baby or pet — but not at the same time. She's funny that way.

    HenriettaCvr

    You may have glimpsed my pokey new sewing buddy in my recent interview
    on NBC. This sewing pattern is hot off the press and ready to ship. I'm
    in love. Sitting by my sewing machine, Henrietta reminds me to take my
    time and enjoy the process.

    Fresh from Bingo night, come Edna, Matilda, Eloise, Harriet, Penelope and Gladys. "Shush, dearie. Did that nice young man call B-15?" Six different materials kits available herepattern sold separately.

    A herd of turtles. Or as my dad likes to say, "A terd of hurtles."

    TurtleKits