A few little things...
First up the tag toy. I think this is the best version I have made, this time in flannel. My felt version was probably a little simpler, but this one does look neater and a bit more 'finished'. The elephant is an old pattern from a Woman's Weekly, made mostly of felt, and a little bit of left over flannel for the ears.
Tag Toy
Basic Tutorial:
- cut 2x approx 7 inch squares of a flannel fabric
- cut 2x 6.75 inch squares of batting
- cut a 6.5 inch cello square
- cut ribbon of various lengths (between 4 - 12inches)
Fold over approx 1/2 inch along all four edges and iron to crease once square of flannel fabric. I spent a few moments hand stitching each of the four corners so they looked nice and neat. Trim the excess fabric at the corners before you do this if you need.
Tuck one piece of the batting the
'frame' that you have now created. Then repeat all of these steps for the
second piece of flannel and batting.
Place both squares together, batting on the inside and iron on a warm (not hot) setting to flatten and ensure their edges match pretty closely.
Take apart and place the piece of cello on one of the squares.
Close back up to form a sandwich - flannel, batting, cello, batting, flannel - and pin temporarily to hold edges neatly together with a few extra pins in the centre to keep the cello in place. Then start to insert the pieces of ribbon.
Fold most of the ribbon pieces in half and then slip in between each half of the flannel/batting sandwich, with a good inch or so within the sandwich and pin in place. This will ensure the ribbon is well picked up by your finishing edge stitches and less likely to unravel in time. I also doubled over the thinner (teal) ribbon in a few spots for a bit more interest. Make sure your corners and edges are still aligned before the next step.
- Using a straight stitch, machine stitch the fabric squares together about 1/4inch from the edge, removing pins as you go & ensuring you catch all the ribbons. Then stitch another line all the way around, close to the first.