Project Idea:Mixed Media Cork Tiles
I finally finished a project I’ve been working on for a few weeks. E and I started this one Saturday morning. The idea was to make a cork tile wall where we could pin pictures and other stuff. Then I got the brilliant idea to make it an eclectic mess.
I wanted each tile to represent a craft medium or product in the store. E and I brainstormed some ideas and got to work. She made the paint palette and the button on the bottom row.
This one with the scissors and real fabric stitched to the background paper was my favorite one. It was also the first one I made. I learned a valuable lesson. Always paint on a coating of gesso first, even if you are covering the entire thing with paper. It keeps the cork from warping as the glue dries. This one ended up so buckled that it would stay on the wall and when I tried to flatten it out, I broke it!
E’s palette has the same problem, I’m attempting to remedy it by gluing another piece of paper on the back side to counteract the warp. I’ll know if it worked tomorrow.
Click on the above thumbnails to view a larger image of the details.
That black, silver and purple one? That is duct tape! It was the last ditch replacement for the paper and fabric scissor one that broke. I think it is really cool. I can see variations on a traditional log-cabin quilt squares done in duct tape.
The purse is made from Amy Butler fabric and is slightly stuffed with a layer of batting under the fabric and then machine stitched to the background polka-dot paper. The “beaded” handle is made with paper circles covered with Diamond Glaze to give them dimension and shine.
Filed under Classes, Free Patterns/Tutorials | Comment (1)Saturday is for sewing
My routine for the past few weeks has been to work on a project while at the store on Saturday mornings. Sometimes E comes with me and we do something together. Or like today, I decide to finish a project I’ve put aside far too long.
This chair has been sitting in our basement for too many years. It is yet another inheritance from a neighbor that gave it to me when they moved. I loved the lines of the Windsor styling and it is actually pretty comfortable. It swivels and rocks!
My dad repaired a broken leg on it when he was here in April. Now all it needed was a fresh new cushion and perhaps a pillow.
I knew when the Amy Butler ‘Nigella’ fabric came in that I would use one of them for the cushion.
Imperial Fans was it.
It needed a pillow so I took the leftovers of other Amy Butler fabrics from a couple other little store projects and made a simple pieced pillow.
Just to prove that even “experts” make mistakes…
The first time I sewed the pillow cover together, I goofed up and sewed it with one side wrong-side out. Doh! That’s why God invented the seam ripper.