sewing

  • |

    Re-Entry

    I'm back from Market and restoring sanity at home — and
    cleanliness. My kids kissed me awake yesterday like two little pecking
    chicks. It was a contest.

    Market photos are still on the road
    with Isaac, so I'll save the reporting till he rolls in later today.
    I'm excited to be home and thrilled that my long-awaited
    bicycle-weather has arrived in AZ at last. It's gorgeous out today.
    We're packing a picnic to the park, for sure.

    DooHicky

    Also, here are a couple of discount codes for you, to shake things up and keep it interesting at The Heather Bailey Store.

    • 20% off of all Trash Ties™ with code "TwitTies" (posted on twitter first)
    • 25% off of Freshcut™ fabric with code "FreshOut" (Freshcut is no longer in production, so get it while you can.)

    Discounts available through Monday, October 19th. Both codes can be used on the same order.

    It has been a wild few weeks — since Creative Escape,
    really. I'm ready to move forward, with lots of design work up next (my
    favorite!) — after filling these kids up with love and attention,
    picnics and parks, movies and popcorn, haircuts, and a few home-cooked
    meals.

    Now to resolve my hopelessly-clogged kitchen sink. Next
    time I'm tossing the old spaghetti in the trash and not down the
    garbage disposal.

  • |

    Swoon

    NiceyJanePicnic
    I'm
    off to Houston for Quilt Market.  The stars have aligned.  As such, I
    am thrilled to debut a new feature fabric collection, a palette of
    cotton solids and an assortment of delicious, laminated prints (my
    samples arrived at the studio just yesterday).  I also have several
    fun, new sewing patterns to share (Henrietta is one of six new patterns).

    If you're heading to Market
    this weekend, stop on by booth #s 1957,59 for a hello — and a first
    peek at my upcoming collection, Nicey Jane™.

    Bring smelling salts.  These fabrics may cause fainting — they're stinkin' gorgeous.

  • Suture-Free Future

    Here it is, my live interview on NBC's Studio 5 in Salt Lake City. Catch a glimpse of my next mini pattern. Try not to glimpse the ribbon dangling from my shirt sleeve though.


    Written instructions for the Pop Garden scrap flowers featured on the video can be found here. I had an incredible time in Utah this weekend. I met many fun entrepreneurs & was showered with some amazing presents — necklaces, notecards, homemade games, tee-shirts, chocolate. The Sweet Tooth Fairy's Double Fudge Cake Bites made my night on Thursday. Imagine oreo-cookie-flavored cake with a truffle-chocolate shell. Yeah. Holy happiness, Batman.

  • Plumpness

    Have I mentioned it's
    great to be back home?  With an expanding roster of help around the
    studio, we're starting to get caught up, even ahead, on some projects. 
    Rachel and Lindsay spent a day or two just putting together a plump
    stock of Strawberry Pincushion Kits, after finishing up the Flutterby Flip-Book Kits.  Emily has kept everything else plugging along.  Being ahead is great.  I highly recommend it. 

    StrawKit

    So, back to The Giveaway.  What a variety of first sewing projects!  I've been reading comments all day. 

    1.  Congratulations Lindsay BrownRandom picked you for the big giveaway.  Lindsay won a Freshcut scrap bag, a HB sewing pattern of her choice, and a Flutterby Flip-Book Kit.  Here's what Lindsay wrote.

       
    "Hi Heather!!! Let me start out by saying I am an ENORMOUS fan!!  I
    just completed 2 projects for my girls.  I made a pillowcase dress with
    the Lime Paisley and I made my youngest daughter the matching capris. 
    I LOVE LOVE LOVE all of your fabrics!!  Thanks for posting this!!"

    Kits2.  Random also picked the lucky Shannon / lilyhaven who wrote,

       
    "Holy cow! 975 comments already! … My first sewing project was a
    tiered skirt for my then 3-year-old daughter.  I was so proud of
    myself!  I wanted to sew for years and years and finally broke down and
    tried.  I've been addicted ever since.  I can't wait to see your new
    fabrics!!!" 

    I'll be sending Shannon a Freshcut scrap bag, along with a pack of HB ribbons.

     3.  Then, for AndieBee, who apparently barely survived her first sewing experience, I'm sending a Strawberry Pincushion Kit, along with a copy of my Fresh Picked Pincushions sewing pattern.  AndieBee wins just for surviving — and for calling me "cupcake."  Here's what AndieBee wrote.

       
    "Hi cupcake! My very first sewing project EVER in life: I was three and
    hangin' out with my Momma while she was making something-probably a
    dress or short set for me. She got up from her incredibly snazzy Singer
    machine in the wood cabinet to do "something", so I climbed up on her
    chair for a better view. Momma always held the pretty colorful straight
    pins in her mouth as she took them out to sew. I decided to help take
    them out while she was away…of COURSE I put them in my mouth just
    like her. And OF COURSE I swallowed one of those bad boys!! LOL

       
    "All I remember of the rest of that day was having to drink something
    icky and Momma monitoring my potties! Apparently it all came out okay,
    since I don't remember having to go to the hospital. ;O)  I picked
    sewing back up again when I was about 8 or 9, when Momma got tired of
    making Barbie clothes, and I've been sewing since."

    Ladies, send me your addresses. 

    Thanks everyone for participating — and for the blogiversary hoopla.  I'm loving being back home and back to blogging, tweeting, etc.  Thanks for sticking around while I was away through May.

    …which reminds me, there's something special posted for @TrashTies followers over on Twitter : )

    And, speaking of plumpness, check out this blog, with it's cheeky background image.  Bacon-infused waffles?  I'll be taking my camera with me next we go out to the fair.

  • Dark Chocolate, Light Sewing

    MovingAlongS
    I'm
    back from a delicious weekend away.  After my collection shipped off to
    the mill, Isaac treated me to a stay at a local resort where I slept
    in, swam laps, ate out, and shopped all evening – both days.  It was
    bliss.

    Now, I'm onto the next wave of things, which involves some
    significant sewing – hallelujah.  I'm making 7 mystery projects for the
    cover of a upcoming pattern.

    Workin

    And,
    as we're mid-stream in setting up a new computer for me, I've got my
    sewing machine and current computer stacked on one table.  There are serious acrobatics involved
    in getting to my keyboard just now.  I can't be bothered to set up a
    separate table for my computer;  I'd rather stretch and hurdle.  This
    way I can sew, blog, sew, tweet, sew, and so on.

    I'm getting my sewjo back — and cuddling up to my kids, my dogs, my chocolate stash, & this here blog.  Feels good. 

    Confucius say:  Beware the clearance Easter candy row at Target.

  • Stuff for Stuffing Stuff

    March of the Tools 

    I'm
    in the home-stretch of a many-months' design project.  With a name
    chosen, a logo and some final print-outs, my next fabric collection
    will head off to the mill and my brain will be my own again.  I've been
    twittering as a welcome distraction.  Next I'll need a new phone plan
    so I can twitter from anywhere.  Then I can get input on whether to buy
    the yellow shirt or the blue one, have help choosing a dessert at the
    grocery store, or discuss any number of random ponderings while on the
    go.

    For instance, I've been thinking about Magic Shell
    a lot lately — well, more than usual, which is never — probably
    because ice cream consumption increases in direct proportion to an
    increase in workload.  Magic Shell can't be natural.  But, it sure
    tastes like chocolate and not as much like plastic as I'd expect.  I
    twitter-tweeted my love of Magic Shell and WhipUp twittered me right back a link to a make-your-own-Magic-Shell recipe here.

    Stuffing Forks!

    For my last 2009 MOT post, I'm singing praises for the Stuffing Fork by Barbara Willis — my favorite tool for stuffing stuff with stuffing : )

    — like pincushions, dolls, toys, etc.

    This
    simple tool is awesome.  You can use it to push stuffing into just the
    right spot.  And for teensy stuffed things, like doll fingers and
    noses, the small Stuffing Fork
    is great.  If you poke the fork into a small tuft of stuffing and give
    it a twist, you can maneuver your stuffing bit in place.  They really
    are great.

    We just stocked a handful of each size, large and small, in our store (10% discount here
    till April 5th).  I have an old-school, wooden-handled Stuffing Fork
    that's been well-used and well-loved for the last decade or more.  Now
    I've upgraded to these new ones which have a molded plastic handle and
    are even better — a necessary tool for your sewing arsenal.

    And
    because April is upon us, I'm going to bullet-list out a few more tools
    I love, then call it done for the year.  Totally random though.  No
    rules.

    • Color Munki.  New tool for us.  But you should hear Isaac's shouts of
      'whoa!' from the other room.  When you're in the design business, color
      calibration is big.
    • Great Lash Mascara.  Tackiest packaging, but good mascara.
    • Beeswax for thread
      For quilting or applique, if you run your thread through beeswax &
      press it before sewing, your thread will be stronger and will suffer
      less wear when pulled through the fabric stitch after stitch.  I'll
      blog about this one in more detail sometime.
    • ArtgumWater-soluble markers
      For marking match points or drawing tailoring adjustments in sewing. 
      Or for drawing out an embroidery design onto fabric.  Where were these
      when I learned to sew with chalky, messy, white tailoring pencils?
    • Art Gum erasers
      I have these erasers all over my studio.  When I only had one or two,
      I'd lose them, or the dogs would chew them up.  Isaac bought me 10 at
      once and now I'm all set.  Having an abundance of good erasers is a
      luxury anyone can attain.
    • Pentel Twist-Erase mechanical pencils
      My new favorite pencil, because the eraser actually lasts for a while
      and can be re-filled.  Of course, as a result, my art gum eraser
      collection hasn't been as important lately.  Dave says this pencil has it's own following.Twisterase3
    • Typepad.  I've used Typepad from the beginning and have always
      been impressed with their interface, customer service, customizability,
      upgrades, etc.  And I've never had a post go missing. This is the second or third time they've featured my blog on their sign-in page and I'm completely honored. 
    • Twitter.  I've always described blogging as a form of conversation, and micro-blogging is even more conversational (see tweets in my sidebar).  It's been less than a week since I started twitter-chatting, but what fun.

    Okay, so I'm off to polish up a logo for the fabric collection, then
    it's back to a more normal pace — and a movie & a milkshake.  Any
    movie recommendations?

    Featured on Typepad's Home page!