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Friday, March 15, 2013

Sew & Tell Saturday

Welcome To Sew & Tell Saturday.
I'm so glad you stopped by!
Photobucket

I decided after last week that I am going back to the weekly format.
Here are some lovely projects from the last party:

Veronica from Sew Very made a very handsome outfit for her son.

This pretty yellow version of Simplicity 1877 can be seen at The Lost Apron


Cindy from Cation Designs finished her Made Men dress

Elephant Jacket from Ajaire at Call Ajaire

The Maggie Mae dress from Sew Love It

 So let's see what you SEWED this week!
Every stitch counts toward becoming a more creative person.

If you would like to see more sewing and craft related posts consider adding Sew Country Chick to your rss feed reader. Or follow with Facebook, Twitter, or Friend Connect!

Easter Egg Yarn Garland

 I didn't get a chance to post about this Easter project I made for the Mod Podge Rocks Blog on Wednesday because I had the Jasmine Giveaway scheduled, but I wanted to show it to you. It's a super easy Easter project you can make with your kids. All you need is some yarn, which I bought at Wal -Mart for under two dollars, some balloons from the dollar store, and some Mod Podge.
To see my tutorial head on over to the Mod Podge Rocks Blog.
If you have little ones they will love getting their hands dirty making these and also popping the balloons the next day after the Mod Podge has tried.
Over the past few months I have been contributing projects over there and it is so exciting for me to be recognized by what I consider one of the big bloggers. When I e mailed Amy to suggest an idea I was surprised when she got back to me to tell me that she would like me to contribute a project every month. 
Anyway I am excited about doing this gig because it sort of seems like this old blog I have here is more of a sewing blog, and I love doing crafts too, but I'm not sure if my readers are really into it.
So I get to post on a site that gets a lot of craft fans which is great!

If you are reader of this blog, what are your favorite types of posts?
Sewing? Crafts? DIY? Tutorials?
Just curious!

If you would like to see more sewing and craft related posts consider adding Sew Country Chick to your rss feed reader. Or follow with Facebook, Twitter, or Friend Connect!

Wednesday, March 13, 2013

The Jasmine: Peek A Boo Spring Tour & Giveaway

girls one shoulder dress
Welcome to my stop on the Peek A Boo Pattern tour and pattern giveaway!!
Introducing my version of The Jasmine.
jasmine sewing pattern peek a boo patterns one shoulder dress
A one shoulder dress with a clever tie to keep the dress on securely. Very important for 10 year olds by the way !
A simple and perfect style for summer.
Plus, it's a one bobbin dress. From start to finish this dress took me less than three hours. So it's perfect for a beginner....
I sewed this up in a cotton chambray in size 8. I bought a lot of chambray last season and love the casual but elegant feel it gives a garment.
Lily wears a size 10 or 12 in ready to wear clothing so this pattern is quite generous in sizing, similar to big 4 sizes. If I make another for Lily, I will narrow the pattern a bit. It's a wee bit voluminous for her.

Amy who also blogs about sewing and crafting at Naptime Crafters is the designer and creator of Peek A Boo Patterns. She has a knack for explaining the sewing process in an easy , simple, and understandable way. I enjoy her patterns. That's probably why this is the third I have tried.

jasmine sewing pattern peek a boo patterns one shoulder dress
This is also a good style for an older girl as it's stylish and not too babyish.
Here are two more of her patterns I've made from Peek A Boo.
Ruffled bikini
The Santa Monica Tankini
Stop by and check out the other blogs on the tour listed above and don't forget to enter Amy's pattern giveaway! She's giving away two sets of each pattern on the tour.
And while I still have tour attention, after the giveaway stop by The Train To Crazy where I am posting about sewing trends and making this high low galaxy dress:

Good luck!
a Rafflecopter giveaway



Disclosure: I was given this pattern to review but my opinions are my own.

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Monday, March 11, 2013

Galaxy Painted Cutoffs: Jeans Cutoffs DIY

Spring is here and Isabelle will be making a new pair of DIY cutoffs every week to share here on Sew Country Chick .
 We want to inspire you to get creative with jeans from the thrift shop!
 Or maybe you have some in your storage shed ? To get the look right they need to be high waisted, of course.
Low waisted jean shorts are so 2010!

Our first pair of shorts we are showing are these GALAXY PAINTED shorts below.
Isabelle made these awhile ago and I didn't photograph the process but they turned out so cute!
 You will need some fabric paint to make galaxy shorts in these colors:
White
Blue
Purple
Silver
If I was you I would practice on a piece of paper before I start on the shorts.
You only have one chance to get it right here....
Just sort of splotch the colors on with your brush on in cloud like forms and then use a small detail paint brush to paint little dots on the shorts to look like stars...


Far Out .
I would say these shorts classify as GROOVY........


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Sunday, March 10, 2013

A California Mission Model: San Juan Capistrano

Growing up in California, as a part of the fourth grade curriculum school children learn of the history of the Catholic Missions established by the Padres who were sent to California from Spain in the 1700's. Lily made this mission for her class history fair last week. It's a model of Mission San Juan Capistrano near San Diego. 
She made the whole thing by herself and I was amazed at the beautiful job she did. I will explain some of the techniques she used at the end of the post....
 We live in an old farming valley along a river called the Santa Clara. It empties out in the Pacific Ocean, near the San Buenaventura Mission, not too far away. Our home is between two missions, the Mission San Buenaventura in Ventura and The Mission San Fernando in the North San Fernando Valley. 
Along this river the Padres once walked before this state was ever claimed by the US. When it was a neglected backwater of the Spanish Empire.
The name of the path they walked was the Camino Real. The missions were supposed to be distanced so priests and other visitors could get to each one in a day's journey. But the road along the Santa Clara  River between the Buenaventura Misssion and the San Fernando Mission was very far. So visitors would often stop for the evening at Rancho Camulos, not far from here. It's an old hacienda which is still an operating ranch and was once owned by a very wealthy Spanish family. 
The priests would say mass in the small chapel which is still there and the famous novel Ramona, written in the 1920's, is supposed to have taken place there. 
I love the history of the missions. 
 This particular mission Lily built is of the Mission San Juan Capistrano near San Diego. It was one of the most beautiful missions built by Father Serra in 1776. But it was destroyed in an earthquake in 1812, only to lie in ruins for one hundred years. It was finally restored in 1910.
 It's famous for the swallows that come and visit every year in the spring from Central America. The bells are rung every year on Saint Joseph's Day, March 17, to welcome the swallows who still come today.
Lily used a Styrofoam model from Micheal's craft store for the main structure, and cut the rest of the structures from cardboard. She mixed craft paint with sand to give the walls the look of old plaster.
For the flowered bushes she cut up scrubbing pads from the 99 cent store and painted the tips with nail polish. The grass is colored sandpaper and the people, trees,bells, and fountain were bought at the hobby store.
She glued down florist's moss around the gravestones and tiny pebbles and brown sandpaper for the paths around the fountain.
We are so proud of her hard work!


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Friday, March 8, 2013

Sew & Tell Saturday

Welcome to the March edition of Sew & Tell Saturday.
I was just wondering what you think about this format?
Do you prefer having the weekly format or this new one?
So let's see what you made!
I'll add my sewing project for the week as well...
If you would like to see more sewing and craft related posts consider adding Sew Country Chick to your rss feed reader. Or follow with Facebook, Twitter, or Friend Connect!

Thursday, March 7, 2013

My Farmhouse Kitchen

I was feeling a little down today.
 I remembered a wise piece of wisdom my Italian Grandmother once told my father.
"Whenever you are feeling depressed clean out a closet or a room."
So I cleaned my kitchen.
And like any self respecting DIY blogger I took pictures to share with you.

 It took about seven years to get it right but I can now say I love almost everything about it.
Except cleaning it .
It's an open plan with only one wall of cabinets so most everything is exposed.
Hence the need to keep things tidy!          
Because there are so many windows there isn't any space for wall cabinets anyway.
When I researched historic farmhouse kitchens one thing most of them had in common is the lack of cabinets and the use of furniture pieces in the kitchen for storage.
The stainless steel pot hanger is very conveniently placed near the stove and I have two butcher block work spaces.
The stove is from France and the maker is Morice, a company known for restaurant stoves.
There is no one on the West Coast trained to fix it.
And the manual is in French.
It was a floor model and the only one at the shop in LA where we bought it. We fell in love with the color and bought it on impulse. 
It took four guys to carry it in the house.

I love this stained glass window.
This Sub Zero refrigerator is really great and you can see inside so it looks a little messy most of the time.
I painted some old chicken nesting boxes red and use them to store canned goods, cookbooks, and whatever junk ends up there including the turtle tank.
That white wrought iron produce stand was black but I spray painted it.
I also made the chalkboard.
The farmhouse sink is a Shaw Original and the faucets are by Rohl. This sink is so big that my 31/2 year old still bathes in it.
And on the windowsill is Elsie sent to me by the Lovely Louise at Lou Loves This. When Gigi saw her up there she insisted on having her back but I was only trying to save poor Elsie from being loved to death by a 3 year old.
I have a small collection of old French enamel ware I bought in the south of France in a little town called L'isle Sur La Sorgue on a special trip I took there with one of my babies.
It was just the two of us.
This is my favorite thing about the kitchen.
It's bright and fun to hang out with my kids in.
Although I love my home and feel blessed to live here, living outside of the city in a semi rural area has been a big adjustment, even now, eight years later.
I love the city and all of the cultural attractions it has to offer, plus it's where I grew up.
It's been hard making friends and although I have made some since moving here eight years ago, because I live so far from the nearest town in an isolated spot, it's been hard to maintain those friendships.

Plus, I think I'm just sort of weird!
Blogging has been a solace for me because I haven't made a friend in my local community who shares my passion for sewing and making things.
When you read creative blogs it's seems like EVERYONE is into making stuff but I guess that's not really true. is it?

The creative impulse is like any muscle . The more often you use it, the stronger it gets.
Seeing all of the beautiful creations of my blog friends has inspired me to reach farther into my own creative resources than I thought I could, these past two and a half years.
I've heard people say that the blog world isn't the "real" world.
And that the blogs you visit don't really represent the people behind them.
But I don't believe that really. We are all trying to put our best foot forward on our blogs, but we do the same in real life.
When a friend comes for a visit don't you spend time tidying up your home?
I do!
It shows the visitor that you cared enough about them to make things nice and pleasant for them.


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