Sunday, March 21, 2010

Another butterfly cake for Thomas

Last year, when he turned 5, Thomas wanted a cake with butterflies on it. This year he didn't specify what he wanted, so I did! And it's another butterfly cake, but not like the last one.


The chocolate butterflies were piped onto oven paper, then set in the freezer. After spreading chocolate ganache on the cake, the butterflies were simply arranged on top.

In terms of effort versus outcome, this is a winner.  

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

A pettiskirt for Ayesha

Anneliese is a very dear friend from my mothers' group, who has now moved a long way away. Anneliese does a lot for other people but rarely has time for herself or anything as fripperous as making a pettiskirt for her daughter, Ayesha, so I thought I'd step in.
As nylon chiffon is next to impossible to get in Australia, this was an experiment using a stretch tulle. It wasn't as "pouffy" as chiffon, but it swings beautifully, as illustrated by eldest son here.

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Austin's counting book

When my first son, Thomas, was little, I made him a bedtime book as a Kindermusik exercise. One day I'll post some pictures of it - it was a cloth book, sewn of pages with photos and text, printed on fabric. Friends warned me that I was setting myself up for more work - whatever I did for my first I'd have to do for any subsequent children!

Fortunately by the time Austin came along I'd found out you can buy blank board books, and adhesive paper to feed through your printer, and hence this book was born!

It was designed using PhotoShop, then the pages printed on adhesive paper, cut to fit the pages, and stuck on the book.  I did set up some of the shots specifically for the book, but others were ones I had already taken.

First, a few pages in the book:
And here are all the pages:

Friday, January 29, 2010

A pettiskirt - or What I did on my summer holidays! (With pattern diagram!)

So I joined the craze and embarked on a pettiskirt project, assisted by my Mum. The skirt is for Alice, daughter of Michelle. Alice is about to become a big sister so we thought it would be nice for her to have something new and special when the baby arrives.

But there are a lot of people making pettiskirts out there - what's my point of difference? Well, one thing - apart from the fact I had my toddler son model the skirt for the photos, as the recipient wasn't available (and anyway it's a surprise) - if you scroll down, you'll find a PATTERN LAYOUT DIAGRAM for how it's constructed, plus photos of how it came together, to assist anyone else who'd like to make one.
I am indebted to two sites - http://www.sewmamasew.com/forum/index.php?topic=242.0 - and
http://sewingmamas.com/b/downloads.php?do=file&id=414 for their helpful explanations. How does the saying go? "If I have sewn further it is by standing on the sewing machines of others"? Something like that!

And Kerri (@sewmamasew) is absolutely right about polyester chiffon - it frays and it will drive you mad. Remember this when you are at the fabric store. BUY THE NYLON! We forgot and had to overlock most of the skirt....

But it was Sandrahd (@sewingmamas) whose photos made it all make sense. I think I have a visual learning style. For anyone else who needs to see a pattern or a diagram, here goes:

The waist piece (in a satiny fabric) will be, in the finished skirt, one third its length. As you are making a double skirt (with inside layers and outside layers), the waist will be twice one third (ie two thirds) times twice your skirt wearer's waist measurement. Most preschoolers will have about a 20" waist, and twice this is just less than the roll width of most cheap satins (105cm*), so to make your life easy, just cut a piece selvedge to selvidge. Similarly with the layers - you will need at least 18 pieces one third the length of the finished skirt, and the same width as the waist piece - and the ONE GOOD THING about polyester chiffon is that it is easy to tear in a straight line selvedge to selvedge, so it was easy to create the 18 pieces.

This is what it looks like laid out - in diagram, and real life:

The more pieces you add, the more full your skirt. Or, you can add more to the bottom layer for more "pouffiness".
Here's the 18 pieces laid out on the floor. The bottom tier is bunched up to fit in the photo.

The best way to work is to cut all your pieces first, then work from the bottom up. It is much easer to sew each layer onto an ungathered layer, above it, than to sew it togther when all gathered.

First, gather your "fluff", or the frill for the bottom. You will need two or three times the length of your bottom layer, cut into 5cm or 2 inch wide strips (or buy pre cut strips in rolls).  Stitch along the middle of the strip with a gathering foot on your machine, or a long stitch if using an ordinary foot (but try turning the tension up and it may gather for you). Pull the threads to gather, but don't gather too tightly or it will be difficult to sew onto the skirt.

When you have a mountain of gathered fluff, stitch it onto the bottom of the bottom layer of the skirt. Don't cut the fluff if it is longer than your bottom pieces - just keep feeding new pieces in until they are all joined by the fluff.

Next, run a gathering stitch along the top of your bottom layer (or use a gathering foot) to gather. Now you'll need to remember your maths. Gather it tightly enough so that the gathered tops fit the (ungathered) bottom of the layer above. So if you are sewing two pieces onto one piece in the layer above, gather each of the bottom layer to half its length.

Sew the bottom layer to the top (ungathered) layer.

In this photo, I've gathered the bottom tier and attached it to the top tier of chiffon. As you can see, I gathered each piece seperately. As I was gathering by hand, it was easier to keep it in manageable chunks, then sew it all together at the end. With the mountains of gathering you are creating, you wont see the joins. 

Next, gather the top of your first tier of chiffon. Again, once gathered, the lengths should add up to the length of your satin layer.

All the gathering is done, and the next stage is to join the ends of the satin, so you end up with satin tube with frills.

Then, fold it in half (as indicated by the pressed line, below). Create a casing for the elastic, add a bow, and it's made.

Other websites have a lot more information about the process and the amount of fabric required (at least 4m for a 12" long pettiskirt, I'd say), but I hope that this is helpful to someone.

* I'm in Australia, where we buy fabric by the metre, but most advice sites are in the US, where everything is in inches. Isn't this how the Mars Rover project came apart? Lucky we are only making pettiskirts!

Thursday, December 31, 2009

Personalised alphabet board book for Lily

Lily is the 18 month old (as at Christmas 2009) daughter of friends, Alphonse and Michelle, in London. Using photos of Lily posted online by her adoring parents, a blank board book, adhesive photographic paper and Photoshop, I (secretly) created this personalised alphabet book. (I have pixelated faces for privacy.)

When unwrapped on Christmas day, Alphonse wrote: "Lily’s gift from you is exceptional and drew gasps of admiration from us all. Perfect time for her to receive it too, as she is, of course, massively interested in herself and her immediate world and is becoming interested in letters. Would love to know how you did it." All I can say is thank goodness they had a cat named Viola!

Saturday, December 19, 2009

Christmas cards a five year old can make (with a bit of help)

Thomas wanted to make Christmas cards for some of his classmates and teachers, so we decided to make them together.

We've marbled paper before using the shaving foam and food dye method, so we decided to make marbled Christmas tree shapes on cards. This is how:

1. Marble your paper. Obviously for a Christmas tree, greens are going to dominate. This one had yellow swirls in the green, but red swirls were more seasonal (you just have to be careful not to swirl too much and end up with murk).



2. Grab a stencil - or a cookie cutter - in the appropriate shape, and trace around it.








3. Here's the cutter and the tree shape cut from the paper. Depending on how simple your shape and how dextrous your child, get them involved in cutting out.







4. Lots of Christmas trees.









5. Stick them to blank cards. We added a gold star at the top for a finishing touch.







6. Other uses for marbled paper, cookie cutters and blank cards. The dinosaur shapes are very useful for using up "murky" coloured marbelling, and make great boys' birthday cards.

Monday, October 26, 2009

A prize winning cake

For Austin's second birthday I made a Gromit doghouse cake, and, as you do, uploaded it to the Wallace and Gromit website (http://www.wallaceandgromit.com/forum/read/39817/1). I then received this email:

Subject: Wallace & Gromit Creation of the Month Top Bun Winner!

Hi there,

Congratulations on your cracking creation! You are the winner of the ‘Top Bun’ award in September's 'Creation of the Month' competition! Please send me your name and address and I will arrange for your Baking Kits to be sent out.

Kind regards,

Kirsten
Kirsten Williams
Web Production Assistant
T: +44 (0)117 984 8994

Cakes for Kim's Baby Shower

At last the $10 cup cake stand got a workout!

Less sewing, more baking

This cake was made for a parent at Greenwich Public school who successfully bid ($40!) for my cake making skills at the annual fundraising silent auction.

Frog Cakes

These were made for the final Kindermusik class of term 2. We'd been doing a frog song ("There once was a frog who lived in a bog who played a fiddle in the middle of a puddle...") so it seemed like the thing to do.

Friday, September 25, 2009

A witch's cape for Thomas

Thomas was invited to a fairy party by Sophie Allen, in his class. Surprisingly, he didn't want to go as a fairy, but wanted to go as a witch. Here's how it turned out:

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Greenwich Public School's Art Auction


Every second year the school has parents work with children so that each class creates an artwork to be auctioned to raise money for the school's Parents' and Citizens' Association.  I put my hand up to work with Thomas' class, KLM.  At the end of second term (July) a bunch of other Mothers and I helped the children marble paper. We achieved some remarkable pages of colour:
(I wasn't just looking for pink, but when more than half the class is girls, that's what predominates!)



I then scanned the marbled pages and reproduced the marbling on thicker card stock, and, inspired by Catherine Swan's work and emboldened by my earlier attempts at something similar, spent the July school holidays hand cutting butterfly shapes, until I had over 50!





Another Mum and I arranged them, mounting them on rice paper, before framing in a shadow box.












The finished picture was over 1m (3 feet) high by 50cm (one and a half feet wide).

This is the children's reaction when they saw it!









At the auction, it sold for $500!

The most amazing art was produced by other classes, too. These are the artworks from the other two Kindergarten classes:

A collage of wrapping paper torn into small pieces or cut into the shape of children's hands.


A colour blindness test made of painted wooden circles, some of them with children's hand drawings on them.
Greeting cards were also produced of the artworks.
This is the butterfly image from the card: