Needles and a Pen » Knitting, Sewing, and Nursing School

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  • Welcome to my blog!

    Hi! I'm Traci. I'm a Registered Nurse who loves quilting, knitting, cross stitch, and the great outdoors. In my pre-scrubs life, I owned Real Photography, and you can still see my old wedding and portrait photography site here .

    I've created a map that shows links to our camping/hiking/general family fun review posts that you can find here. It's pretty much the coolest thing on this site. Thanks, Google!

    I great big puffy heart *love* comments, so please let me know you visited! I try to always reply!

wrap skirt revisited

I made a shortened version of the yard sale wrap skirt from Heather Ross’s Weekend Sewing this weekend.  I love it!  This Nicey Jane print is one of my favorite fabrics ever, so adding it to a twirly skirt is a little magical.  I can’t wait to bust it out in Disneyland!  (I do need a better skirt sweater–we’re heading to the big mall in Denver tomorrow where I will work on the sweater situation!)  I shortened the skirt by about 5 inches and with some careful cutting managed to make the pattern out of 3 yards instead of 4–woot woot!

And since Nic was taking action pictures of my skirt I had him take a couple of my central park skirt, too:

Susie - Oh Traci! These are both so adorable and YOU are adorable in them. Well done, lady!

Melissa - It looks really cute! So flippy and flirty and springy and fun. Good luck finding twirly-skirt sweaters! 🙂

Beth Moore - I hate you because of your cuteness. And I love you for it too. =)

Bekah - Too cute! I’ve been looking for a cute wrap skirt like this!

sherbet pips quilt update

In spite of the clothing/apron/accessories posts around here, I swear that I still quilt!  Proof is right here….

The binding has been attached to the quilt and for the last two days I’ve been trucking away at handsewing it to the back (my least favorite part of the process).  Will loves to sit on the sofa with me and watch tv, so I’ve been using binding as an excuse to snuggle up to my sweetie for an hour or so every night.  I figure at this rate it should be done Monday or Tuesday.  I’m so excited to toss it in the wash and watch it wrinkle up!  The binding isn’t my first choice (my first choice would have been the striped scarf sherbet pips fabric–but it won’t be available until April, and my second choice would have been one of the blues) but the only fabric I had enough of for binding was this chartreuse, and it felt like a better choice to go with what I had instead of buying something new.  Now that it’s almost done, though, I’m regretting not just getting some more blue–I think blue binding would be sooo pretty on it and I’m worried I’ve not drawn too much attention to the chartreuse!

Here’s a peek at the back.  I really love the back:

Kristie at OCD - I love the chartreuse! And the back looks gorgeous. Can’t wait to see the finished product 🙂

Vickie - Ack! I love this, Traci!! You have a great eye! 🙂 Can’t wait to see the back ‘for real’. 🙂 Hugs!

Melissa - Oh no! It seems you always second-guess something on your quilt…but it always looks fabulous in the end! I think it’s awesome, and I love the green. 🙂

Raechel - If it helps, before I read your text and just looked at your pictures, I was feeling refreshed by your new take on the sherbet pips collection. I was making a mental note to incorporate that color in mine. It makes it a sherbet pips quilt without looking just like all the others!

Beautiful blog.

Our Disneyland guidebook came today and we’ve all been fighting over it.  I love that.  Will’s so excited talking about all the rides he wants to go on that he’s singing Christmas songs—always a clue that he’s incredibly blissed out.

I cried so much yesterday that Nic accused me of being pregnant.

tutorial: easy peasy shirred skirt with 1 yard of fabric

I am so excited about the skirt I made from the Central Park fabric line:

(Yes, it’s for me, not Ellie.  The 7 year old next door was over while I was making it and he said “Is that another dress for Ellie?” and I said “No it’s for me” and he said “Are you sure?”  Which is pretty much how Nic feels about the fabric, too.  BUT, once it was all done and I put it on and was checking it out in the mirror the neighbor boy was all about it.  He said “That looks so good on you” at least three times and the awe in his voice was totally genuine.  But then again, my winter wardrobe makes me look like a lesbian trucker, so a little skirt was bound to elicit a little awe.)

This is probably the easiest skirt in the world you could ever make.  Thanks to my serger, it has a rolled hem at the bottom and top, so it’s pretty much as cheater as you can get.  It also met my criteria for fabric usage:  I have a bunch of fabrics that I have 1 yard of.  I love the fabric and want to make a skirt out of it, but 1 yard skirt tutorials are hard to come by, and the ones out there are all A Line skirts.  I’m not a huge fan of basic A line skirts–if I’m going to use a fabric with a fun pattern (and I’m going to) I want it to be gathered and playful in style, too.

I think I mentioned that as I made Ellie’s “smocked” dress it dawned on me that it would be a great adult skirt.  The next day I saw that Anna Marie Horner had posted a tutorial for making a smocked waist skirt.  I thought her method would be the same as mine, but when I checked it out, it’s actually different.  So…here’s the skinny on my skirt in case you want something even easier and more cheater-y.

Materials: 1 yard of fabric, (1/4 yard of accent fabric – optional), 1 spool of elastic thread

1)  Fold your main fabric in half by bringing your selvedges together.  Cut the fabric in half using your fold line.  Now you have two pieces–each one is 36″x22.5″.

2) Optional: Cut your accent fabric into two 4″x36″ pieces.

3)  Optional: Using a serger or french seams, sew the accent fabric to the main fabric along the 36″ edges.  You now have two pieces–the front and back of your skirt.  (If you want your skirt a little shorter, you can trim your skirt panels down at this point.  My skirt has a main fabric that is 18″ tall and an accent strip that is 3″ tall.)

4)  Using the elastic thread and this tutorial, sew a row of the elastic-on-bottom, regular-thread-on-top straight stitches 1″ from the top edge of your front skirt piece.  Making your rows 1/2″ apart (I eyeballed it for my skirt), sew four more rows for a total of 5 rows of stitches.  Repeat with the back skirt piece.  You’ll now have two shirred pieces.

5)  With right sides together, sew one side seam.

6)  Now comes the part where you stand in front of a mirror with a pin and find the right spot for the other side seam.  Once you know how wide you want your skirt, turn the fabric rights sides together again and sew the other side seam.  Almost done!

7)  Using a serger and the rolled hem settings, hem the top and bottom raw edges.  (I like to use a contrasting color with my rolled hems.  Instead of looking like “okay–I cheated and am lazy and did a rolled hem” it’s all “hey!  look at me and all my cute pop of color over here!  I’m not lazy–I’m adorable!”)

In case you’re a visual person, I have some illustrations here.  (Even though I rock at stick figures, I suck a little at tutorials/patterns, so if you want to make this and have any questions, just let me know!)

If you make something with this tutorial, I’d love to see it!


Meagan - I always love your fabric choices when you make clothing for yourself. We have the same taste, and it’s fabulous! Even if our husbands don’t agree ( :
Thank you so much for the shirring tutorial, or link to it, I have looked for smocking/shirring tutorials before and they have all been either confusing or very complicated. I can’t wait to try it out!

Beth Moore - I just giggled out loud at illustration #6. LOVE IT!!! Oh, and the skirt is super cute too!!

Vickie - I am so inspired to make this skirt now! What a beautiful piece! What can I do to make my hems look as beautiful as yours without a special foot or serger?

Thanks!

Traci - Unfortunately sergers really are necessary for that sort of look. Without a serger you’re limited to either a hand sewn rolled hem or a folded hem.

Tia - I love this! I so wish I had a serger, but when I make this, I can find another way to hem.

The Happiest Place on Earth might not be where you think it is

We booked our trip to Disneyland last night. I was so excited that I literally couldn’t sleep, nor understand how Nic could go to bed 5 minutes after booking hotel and airfare. I couldn’t wait to share the news with Will this morning.
Nic (excitedly): Hey buddy? Guess where we’re going in two weeks?!
Will (excitedly): SEATTLE?!
Nic (still excited): No–even better.
Will (suspicious): Disneyland?
Nic (excited): YES!
Will (resigned): Oh. Bummers.