GUEST POST by KARIN....take it away Karin
THANK YOU KARIN!
(The funniest thing is that I'm in love with the purple kitchen towels and of course I have them in my kitchen.....and here my girlfriend is saying they are "way out there" LOL....another something to smile about today)
Smiles,
Kelly
Lucky me, I was gifted a stack of 6 Dunroven dish towels, and
being the generous soul I am, I figured I’d share my thoughts with y’all. My very first thought was, “How pretty! What
a lovely shade of purple.” My very next
thought was, “This is really pretty, but, my goodness, how very purple. Who in the world decorates their kitchen with
purple?”
So I put ‘em in the closet and there they sat for the next 3 6
months, while I pondered what I could do with them. (pondered – that word rolls around in my
mouth the way those towels were rolling around in my head!) And they sat, and they sat, and they sat some
more.
Finally, I got an idea! Halloween fabrics often include purple, and Halloween is coming up fast! So I found this cute little door-hanger from Embroidery Library and decided I could use one of the towels for my background fabric! Yeah, that’d be just perfect!
So I get ‘em out of the closet and take one out. Wow, it really has a nice hand to it…surprisingly
so. It was evenly woven and weighty (for
a towel, that is), but it still had a nice drape to it. Then I unfolded it, and that sucker is
H.U.G.E! A full 20 by 28 inches!
And it had a nice little cotton twill loop for easy hanging,
too.
Hmmm….but it’s still very purple. Now, my little door hanger probably wouldn’t
get washed much, so shrinkage and even some fading was probably not gonna be an
issue, but since I was gonna share with y’all,
I’d share everything, the good, the bad and the laundry, so I threw the
whole bundle in the washer to see what would happen. They seemed to fade just a wee bit, and the
purple lightened up a little. Not much. After a tumble in the dryer (set on
med/high), they came out a bit smaller than they went in and a little wrinkled.
They now measure about 19 by 27 inches, so they shrank about
an inch all around. If you’d embroidered
on them prior to washing, you’d surely be upset with that much shrinkage, so, for best results,
just be sure to launder these prior to spending hours on a machine embroidery
project. Nothing like
surprise shrinkage to spoil your fun!
But, let’s get back to the project! A quick touch-up with a hot iron and they
were good as new, but about an inch smaller.
When you purchase an in-the-hoop embroidery design like this, it usually
comes in two parts – a outline and the embroidery itself. The first thing I did pull out my roll of
Floriani Double Sided Fusible Stitch N Shape and cut a piece off. Ummm…now what?
I
knew I’d never get that roll back into its cellophane wrapper, so I grabbed my
roll of Hugo’s Amazing Tape! And for
those of you that have never used it, you just don’t know what you’re
missing. There’s about a million uses
for that tape, and it truly IS Amazing.
I use the blue tape because it’s easier to find when you accidentally
lay it down for a second, but it also comes in clear, for the people that
need to see true colors.
But, I digress. Next,
I cut the end off of one of those beautifully purple towels to use as the base
fabric of my in-the-hoop door hanger. I fused
my Stitch N Shape to the fabric with a hot iron. And for future knowledge, when they say
double-sided, they MEAN double-sided.
When I tried to pick that puppy it, it was fused to my ironing
board! In hindsight, I should have used
a pressing sheet *or something* (maybe even a ONE-sided fusible??) to protect
my ironing board!
So, anyway, I took my fabric/stabilizer fusion and laid it
onto a piece of Floriani Perfect Stick that had already been hooped.
I slipped the whole thing into the embroidery module and l
was all set to start stitching once I selected my thread colors. I decided on lime green, orange, and white,
and this would have been the perfect chance to try out some of that
glow-in-the-dark thread, but I didn’t have any!
L I used some iridescent white instead. It won’t glow in the dark, but then, there’s
hardly anyone walking around in the dark at my house, so it really doesn’t
matter.
When you get an in-the-hoop embroidery design, you usually
get two files. The first is the outline,
that gives you just the outline of the project, and the other file is all your
color stops that provide the details of your project. You can see how I’ve stitched the outline
here (try to use a complimentary color in your stitching, just in case the
final satin stitch coverage is less than perfect).
I used a contrast color just so you could see the
outline. You can also see that
unexpected color change – I didn’t know I was using a bobbin as my top thread,
and I ran out not long after I started stitching!
I pulled that hoop out and removed the fabric fusion from
the Perfect Stick. I literally cut on
the dotted line to get the top layer for my door hanger. Remember, this is fabric fused to Stitch N Shape, so it’s nice and thick, and easy to manage. Stitch N Shape doesn’t gum up or snag your
needles, but it holds its shape nicely.
It’s just right for making fabric bowls and boxes or giving body to
purse inserts.
Next, I had to get the backing fabric cut to the same shape. So I hooped another hunk of purple toweling (it’s
a lovely shade of purple, but I *still* don’t see it as a kitchen accent!!),
only this time, I just laid a scrap of generic paper tearaway on top of my
Perfect Stick and then the fabric on top of that (hence the pins), and stitched
the outline a second time.
What you have to remember
here, is that this piece is going to be the BACK of your project. That means, you’ll need to reverse your fabric
OR reverse your design. Oopsies! Luckily, the toweling is the same on both
sides, so it didn’t matter.
Here’s another shot of that
Hugo's Amazing Tape – I tell ya, there’s a million uses for it!
So, how did everything turn
out? Well, thanks for asking!
Obviously, I need to trim the edges a bit more, but,
overall, it’s kinda cute. It’s probably
not exactly what Dunroven had in mind when they made that towel, but it sure fit
the bill for me! And I still have half a
towel left that I could turn into appliqued grapes or an eggplant on something
else!
THANK YOU KARIN!
(The funniest thing is that I'm in love with the purple kitchen towels and of course I have them in my kitchen.....and here my girlfriend is saying they are "way out there" LOL....another something to smile about today)
Smiles,
Kelly