Woke up this morning to great reviews of my princess hat and recycling symbol bodysuit on Familylicious.
That's a great first-ever Cyber Monday for Teesies! Best of all: there's a giveaway involved, so click on over there and enter!
(What are you still doing here? Go visit Familylicious already!)
Monday, November 30, 2009
Thursday, November 19, 2009
Guess what?
...I'm being featured on a review blog!
Check out Familylicious Reviews on Monday, November 30th for a review of my baby bodysuits and princess hats. There's also a GIVEAWAY, so make sure you enter to win a cute gift for someone pint-sized on your Christmas list!
Check out Familylicious Reviews on Monday, November 30th for a review of my baby bodysuits and princess hats. There's also a GIVEAWAY, so make sure you enter to win a cute gift for someone pint-sized on your Christmas list!
Friday, November 13, 2009
Pink + sparkly = birthday present
One of my daughter's friends turned 5 this week, and the what-do-you-think-she'd-like-as-a-present discussion was short and sweet. "Angela likes princesses. I think she wants a princess hat."
Done and done! All I needed to buy was some good medium-weight fusible interfacing, since we already had scads of sparkly fabric lying about around here. (Those remnant bins at the fabric store? They're like heroin.) And thanks to coaching my teenage babysitter on SAT math over the last few weeks, figuring out the pattern for the conical hat was pretty simple:
1. Measure child's head, c
2. Determine height of hat, h
3. Calculate the diameter, d, of a circle with radius h.
4. Set up an equation: c/d = a/360. Cross-multiply, solve for a.
5. Draw a wide wedge of pie with interior angle a and radius h. This is your basic pattern piece to make into the hat. Cut one of these in interfacing, then add seam allowances around all sides and cut this piece in fabric. Cut a rectangular piece of sheer fabric with length h and width about 2h.
6. Hem, iron, sew two seams. I think the whole process took about half an hour, and we ended up with this:
(Oh, wow, I'm such a nerd. Does Omnigrid make a slide rule?)
Done and done! All I needed to buy was some good medium-weight fusible interfacing, since we already had scads of sparkly fabric lying about around here. (Those remnant bins at the fabric store? They're like heroin.) And thanks to coaching my teenage babysitter on SAT math over the last few weeks, figuring out the pattern for the conical hat was pretty simple:
1. Measure child's head, c
2. Determine height of hat, h
3. Calculate the diameter, d, of a circle with radius h.
4. Set up an equation: c/d = a/360. Cross-multiply, solve for a.
5. Draw a wide wedge of pie with interior angle a and radius h. This is your basic pattern piece to make into the hat. Cut one of these in interfacing, then add seam allowances around all sides and cut this piece in fabric. Cut a rectangular piece of sheer fabric with length h and width about 2h.
6. Hem, iron, sew two seams. I think the whole process took about half an hour, and we ended up with this:
(Oh, wow, I'm such a nerd. Does Omnigrid make a slide rule?)
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