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The Quilted Vest Is Finished!

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 Finished Vest! My new vest is finished! And I love the way it turned out.  After quilting the diagonal lines (and yes, I had to take out stitches and redo a few times), I quilted the vertical and horizontal straight lines.  Now the fabric looks a little like pieces were sewn together.   Quilting Finished  My old vest looks better on the inside than the outside!  I cut the shoulder seams apart and decided that I could use it as a pattern and not do side seams.  I made bias strips to finish all the raw edges.  I machine stitched them on the right side of the fabric and hand stitched them in place on the back side for a nice finish. The inside of the old vest used as a pattern This is the back of the vest.  I'm so pleased that the hemline is straight and the finished edges are good.  Back of finished vest  It has been years since I made buttonholes.  I have to admit that I used language that my mother would not have approved during the buttonhole section!  Then

Replacing My Favorite Vest

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Think about that one piece of clothing that is your absolute favorite.   What would you do if it were thread bare from wearing it and you could not find another even after combing the internet for days?   I have a vest that I love.   It is silky, lightly quilted, made of several colors and patterns, fits perfectly, looked good with denim or slacks.   Sounds perfect doesn’t it?   Well, I’ve worn it to shreds and want another.   I decided to make one.    First I bought a sack of silk sari strips and thought I would sew them together and then quilt them.   That sack sat and still sits in my closet.   I place the 1” to 3” strips on the table, looked at them and thought “Not in this lifetime”.    Thankfully I went to a fabric store in San Diego and found silky fabric that I love.   It is colorful and looks like blocks of different fabrics sewn together.   I bought it.   My friend, Luana, went with me to Joann’s to buy light weight iron-on pellon and light weight interfaci

Wild Violet Necklace

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Sometimes design just evolves.  I wanted to make a toggle set from polymer for a knitted green chain I made.  I started with Premo green, purple, light green, and translucent clay.  I was thinking:  floral - wild violets   http://www.garden.org/weedlibrary/?q=show&id=2397 green leaves tiny formed flowers green and purple I also had decorative copper head pins and I wondered if I could incorporate those and make them connect the toggle set to the chain.  I played with the circle and the cut out for the toggle.  As you can see I ended up with tiny purple flowers raised on translucent circles laying on green leaves.  And they reminded me of wild violets. The toggle needed to be another leaf with a violet that fit onto the round leaf. After getting the width and length of the leaf correct, I added the decorative head pin and bent it to a circle.  I placed a tiny purple ball of polymer on top of the head and cured it all.   Toggle set  When I placed it next to the kni