Wednesday, 30 October 2013

Holiday buys from Dubrovnik

Dubrovnik's old town - you might know it better as King's Landing in Game of Thrones!

I recently returned from a great week's holiday in Dubrovnik, Croatia. As you can see it's a beautiful town and there is plenty to do, I would definitely recommend it as a holiday destination! Always on the look out for some crafty buys I spent some kuna in the local markets, here are my Croatian purchases.


This canvas picture is of Dubrovnik's old town at sunset, bought from a street seller for about £20. I took lots of photos of the sunset (we had a prefect view from our apartment) so I am planning to paint one myself - watch this space.


I bought this necklace from a small shop in one of the narrow streets for about £10. I love the colour and have a bracelet and earrings already in the same stone so I can mix and match.

Here are some more holiday snaps to make you jealous! I wish I could go back...

The view of the old town from our apartment


The port on a sunny day


The sun setting over Dubrovnik's old town


Me attempting to climb some of the many steps on the island of Lopud

Sunday, 6 October 2013

Customised maxi skirt

 

I am off on hols soon to sunny (hopefully) Dubrovnik in Croatia and in preparation I decided to give my maxi skirt a bit of a facelift. I enjoy customising my clothes, especially high street garments, so I have an individual piece that no one else will be wearing! The idea for this customisation came from skirts I've seen in the shops, but rather than buy a new one I decided to alter a maxi skirt I've already got - waste not, want not!


First I lay the skirt flat and marked out the curve I wanted. It took a few attempts to get a symmetrical shape that fell nicely when the skirt was on! I measured and marked the curve with tailor's chalk (remember to leave a hem) and then cut away the excess fabric.
 Turn the hem under and pin. Be careful to check the skirt still hangs nicely as the pleats at the waistband mean the fabric isn't straight.
 I decided to carry the curve on around the side seams because the skirt looked a bit strange if I didn't! Again, be careful to make the curve symmetrical.
 I then simply sewed the hem using a machine running stitch. The skirt originally had a double stitched hem so I decided to do the same. Finally, rub off the chalk and press the skirt.

Et voilà, an individual curved maxi skirt (modelled beautifully by moi!) that I can wear on holiday safe in the knowledge that no one else will have the same one!

Wednesday, 11 September 2013

Gromit hunt!

Bristol (and the surrounding area) has been home to 80 Gromits for the past few months, decorated in a variety of ways. Seeing as I live nearby and I haven't actually seen any of them yet I decided to go on a Gromit hunt before they disappeared, and managed to find 25! 

These are some of my favourites...

 Where's Wallace??

 Doodles!

 The King

 Gromit-o-matic (love the names for the different parts of his body!)

Gromit Lightyear

Wednesday, 28 August 2013

Make up brushes travel roll


Between visiting friends/boyfriend and trips across the Channel on press trips (one of the perks of working on a magazine about France!) it seems like I'm permanently packing a weekend bag for nights away from home. You'd think by now I'd be an expert at packing light but I always seem to be cramming things into my bag so I am a big fan of anything that makes travelling easier and this roll is an ideal way to carry all my make up brushes.

The idea for making this came from the blog Trends With Benefits which I discovered recently and is fill of great ideas and inspiration.





First you need to decide how many brushes and what size you need to fit in (as you can see I have a lot!) and measure the fabric accordingly to be large enough to fit in all of your brushes.








You need two pieces of fabric for the inside and outside of the roll, a contrasting fabric to form the pockets for the brushes and a piece of felt to sandwich between the two main pieces to stiffen the roll and ribbon to tie the roll.





I pinned the outside piece of fabric onto the felt and sewed along the edge to attach them together.

Then I folded the contrasting fabric in half (right sides together), sewed along the long edge and turned the right way round. Position on the inside piece of fabric and pin along three edges. 








Next you need to mark out the slots for the different brushes. I did this by placing each brush between the main fabric and the contrasting fabric and pinning enough space for each brush - the pins may need some tweaking to fit all the brushes in. Then sew neatly along the pin lines to create the brush slots.





Work out where the ribbon is going to attach and pin both ends onto the wrong side of the outside/felt fabric. Place the inside and outside fabrics together (right sides together) with the ribbon sandwiched in between. Then sew along three edges and along part of the final edge leaving enough space to turn the roll the right way round. Sew the gap up using an invisible stitch.



Et voilà a travel roll to keep all your make up brushes neat when you're on your travels! 








Saturday, 10 August 2013

Rejuvenated Ottoman



The inspiration for the rejuvenation of this ottoman came from the TV programme 'Kirstie's Vintage Home' which I absolutely loved! It gave me heaps of ideas to give old furniture a new lease of life and I've slowly been putting them into practice around my family home.



This was how the ottoman looked before I got my hands on it. Pretty bland and uninspiring!






The first step was to paint the ottoman inside and out. It is going into my parent's bedroom which is pale blue and red so I used this as my colour scheme. I used the same paint that was used to paint their walls so just ordinary emulsion paint. It needed 2 coats of paint to cover the wood completely but if you wanted to keep the wood effect you could use a watered down paint as a wash and the wood grain should still show through.




Once the paint had thoroughly dried I covered the top of the lid with wadding, bought quite cheaply from Hobbycraft. I trimmed the edges so the wadding fitted and stuck it down with double-sided tape.


Next step was to cover the lid with fabric. I chose this gorgeous patterned fabric - in red to match the colour scheme. First I unscrewed the hinges so the lid was separated from the box. Place the fabric with the pattern straight and centred and then flip the lid over. 

Now fold over the edges of the fabric to create a hem to hide the raw edges. This stage is a lot easier with two people so one can hold the fabric taut while the other hammers the tacks in. You can either use a staple gun or hammer tacks in to secure the fabric.

Secure the fabric in the centre of each edge to keep it in place and then work your way around the lid hammering in as many tacks as needed. I folded the corners like you would when wrapping a present, you may need to trim some of the fabric otherwise it will be too bulky.




Et voilà a super stylish ottoman to provide storage and look fantastic! I'm quite jealous this is going in my parent's room, I might have to find one for me!


Tuesday, 18 June 2013

Books and Buttons


These are my finds at a recent antiques fair and flea market in my local town hall. I feel I was very restrained! I have a huge love for the old penguin books and have started collecting some popular titles, they aren't worth much money but they look very pretty on a book shelf! This green Agatha Christie I picked up for £1 (bargain!) and has been added to the two I found in a second-hand book shop (Lady Chatterley's Lover and Wuthering Heights) on my shelf - three counts as a collection right?!

The buttons were £4 for the four large ones and £3 for the small ones, all mother of pearl, and will be added to my sewing basket - I haven't got a specific use in mind for them but buttons are always a useful thing to have!

Sunday, 2 June 2013

Vogue Wall Art



The idea for this design came from some art I saw at a local antiques fair. I love visiting antiques fairs, although most of the items are out of my price range you sometimes discover hidden bargains or, more often, find some inspiration for things to create at home for a fraction of the price. At this particular antiques fair I was struck by a stall selling wall art and particularly several pieces that were a framed film poster and a framed dressmaking pattern. 

Several days later I was browsing Waterstones on my lunch break (another favourite pastime) and found this selection of postcards that showed iconic Vogue covers spanning a century and decided they would be perfect to create my own wall art. I purchased a cheap large picture frame and set about choosing my favourite covers to put in it.
Et voilà a really simple but effective way of creating an individual frame to decorate your wall. The beauty of it is you can easily change the postcards around if you fancy a change and can use any poster or postcards to fill it. When I have some free wall space my next frame will be full of penguin book covers!