As usual, when Elizabeth posted her pretty fabrics bowls here on Washing-Line Tales, I had to copy her and make a fabric bowl also. Monkey see=monkey do.
I had a bit of trouble envisioning how to start off the center part, but Link #6 below from Crafty Stylish gives a good picture of the beginning of the vortex of covering the laundry line.
Using up odd bits of fabric from the closet and discarding the rest, it was a good way to not only have fun seaming up a quick bowl, but it helped in de-cluttering pieces of fabric previously used in Liturgical Art projects.
These links will give you all you need to know about how to make a fabric bowl if it does not come to you intuitively. Links will also lead you to some very pretty bowls made by other bloggers.
1 here (Mrs. Tittlemouse)
2 here (Radiant Home Studio)
3 here (Pretty Prudent)
4 here (This Year's Dozen) explains continuous strips and a button decoration idea
5 here (Cynthiaf) her dog sports one of her bowls on his head, sweet!
6 here for Crafty Stylish
7 here for Craftsy coils at the end
8 here Wikihow shows the zig-zag stitch in detail
Besides reading and learning from the links above, my further suggestions include the following:
Cutting the strips of fabric about 1.25 inches wide on the bias makes twisting the fabric around the laundry line much easier and cleaner looking
Use a cording foot; my trust old Pfaff machine came with one in its box of attachments
use coordinating fabrics (I did not, so the resulting bowl looks like it was made out of Depression era materials)
Take your time and enjoy the process! It took me about two hours total to make a bowl out of half a package of $5 cotton laundry line purchased from True Value Hardware
Find a decorative piece of jewelry or crochet a flower to cover the ending tale of the bowl
Now go out and do as I say, not as I do!
Cool! Thank you for the "how to's" Nancy! 😊
ReplyDeleteWell done you Nancy! Your bowl looks great and I love the brooch to finish off the end of the coil. I'm going to see if my sewing machine has a cording foot! And yes, you're right cutting the strips on the bias gives a cleaner look. I tried this on my second effort and it looks a bit neater. Acquired some more sash cord yesterday and am itching to try a third big one! Unfortunately there's rather a lot of work this week! E x
ReplyDeleteThat is a handy result there. What a great way to have color around and reuse scraps.
ReplyDeleteThat's a. Pretty use of old fabric. I love your new header.
ReplyDeleteMy Niece purchased a fabric bowl on-line for my Birthday several years ago! I loved it then and still do! Beautiful creation dear Nancy, HUGS!
ReplyDeleteWhat a great idea! I'm always buying rope because I like how it looks-never would have thought of covering it with fabric to make a bowl....
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