Showing posts with label Biglittle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Biglittle. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 11, 2016

Welcome to Twig and Tale blog tour



You know I love blog tours. Today, I am participating again in one. This is not any blog tour though, it is a blog tour that I actually organized! I picked and contacted most of the 25 bloggers, and I was super excited that almost all of my picks wanted and could make time for the "Welcome to Twig + Tale" blog tourTwig + Tale (formerly known as BigLittle), recently changed her name, and we would like the world to know. We therefore picked a very international selection of bloggers. All these bloggers sewed at least one lovely Twig + Tale garment. As cherry on the pie, Art Gallery Fabrics was willing to sponsor the tour! We could all pick any fabric  from the Art Gallery website. Of course, there is also a give away. At the end of this post you can enter a Rafflecopter with the chance to win two yards of Art Gallery fabrics and five Twig + Tale patterns.



At the beginning of the year, I sewed all my kids some outwear from Twig + Tale. With the season change now upon us, most of those now need a warmer replacement. I picked a lovely combination of Line drawings in canvas for the outside of the coat and Moon stories spark for the lining. To make the coat really winter proof, I added an extra layer (from thick fleece) between the main and lining, this way she will stay warm for sure.



I used the updated Pixie Pea coat pattern for my coat. The updated version now contains two different hoods and a collar. I had seen several coat in the Twig + Tale Facebook group, combining hood and collar, and I wanted the same. I really love the look. When the hood is down, the collar is a great eye catcher. When the hood is up, the collar almost disappears and does not bother the wearer at all. If anything, it is an extra protection against the wind. To protect some more, I also added ribbing to the sleeves. The pattern is intended to have extra long sleeves. By folding them, your kids can use the coat one year longer. I loved the idea, and placed the ribbing such that I kept the extra length fold.




I of course, had to play with the pattern a bit. I added a zipper and an alternative kind of pocket. Another blogger on the tour added a zipper through a slightly different method, and wrote a tutorial about it. Seeing this will be a mid-winter coat, I wanted the front flap as extra protection. I therefore added one part of the zipper in the seam between the front flap and right front. The easiest way to sew in the other half is like another blogger on the tour did. She widened the left front piece a bit, such that the other half of the zipper could be sewn between lining and main fabric. I took a small detour by adding an extra piece of fabric to the left side (that is what you get if you start cutting without a clear plan in mind). I wanted the flap to stay closed, so I added snaps next to the zipper, but still hidden by the flap.



The inspiration for the pocket came from a retail bought coat from my husband. It is a double function pocket. You can either but something in the pocket from the top, or you can use the (open) side. This combination is really perfect for both storing gloves (or stones and twigs if you are my daughter), and just keeping your hands warm in your pockets. I had been planning to write a small tutorial, but I was not satisfied with the method I had chosen. The corners are so thick, that I had to hand sew them to coat. There was no way my machine would do it, I broke a needle trying, which of course did not stop me from trying some more. I like the concept so much though, I will add these to more coats to come. I will keep you posted.


Art Gallery Fabrics is kindly sponsoring 2 yards of Art Gallery fabric of your choice. To make the prize extra sweet, we are also adding a collection of 5 Twig + Tale patterns of your choice.
International entries are very welcome. Our bloggers come from every corner of the world to celebrate the global nature of Twig +Tale too.

Enter using the rafflecopter below. (The winning entry will be checked to ensure all criteria are met).

a Rafflecopter giveaway



Monday, July 11, 2016

Pathfinder Vest



Although we, in Europe are moving towards summer, the other half round is gearing up for winter. Today, Big Little has released a lovely way to keep you kid warm on cold days, the Pathfinder vest. My kids love vests because they can move their arms freely, and still stay warm. For the release I made a summer vest, just two layers without batting, and all my girls love it.



Because I made a summer version, one that will not be worn over a jumper, I sized down. The advantage of having many kids, is that you strongly increase the likelihood that a garment will perfectly fit (someone). The vest fits my middle ones best, but also my eldest and youngest helped me out with the shoot. The sizing of the vest for fall/winter versions is spot on, so you normally will not have to guess of course



Lisa, the designer behind Big Little shares my love for upcycling, she has a enviously huge pile of pretty woolen blankets. No woolen blankets here, but I did have an itchy pair of woolen trousers. I truly hated wearing them (when they still fitted), but they had been rather expensive, so I felt I needed to. These itchy trousers were perfect for this vest though. The seam at the back is the original leg seam, but all the other pieces I could cut without extra seams.



I have to admit that I am extremely pleased with the embroidery. I had seen many embroidered Big Little items, and always assumed it would be so much work. It was not actually. I had the birthday party of a friend, and I managed to embroider the whole thing in about two hours. My son really loved the effect as well, so I have to find a cool boy embroidery project, maybe dinosaur bones?



The vest pattern contains two different hoods, a collar, two necklines, two lengths and a flutter sleeve, so it is full of mix and match possibilities. If you subscribe to the newsletter you will receive the FREE Crossroads front that I used for my version. The neckline of the vest matches the neckline of the Wild Things Coat, so you can easily make a Wild Things Vest as well. The vest is on sale for three days (until Wedesday midnight PST) for $ 6.50  (normally $10) in the Big Little web shop.

Monday, March 7, 2016

Wild things capes and last Wild Things coat

A few weeks ago, I showed you two animal coats and promised showing your a third. I did not manage to keep that promise. Today, I will show you the third coat as a dessert. The main course is two animal capes. Big Little released her newest pattern today, the Wild Things Cape. She already had an unisex cape, and this cape is either an upgrade to that pattern, or a new reason to buy a cape pattern in the first place.



Like with the coat, there are 14 animals described, but the possibilities are endless. I started with a kitty cape for my youngest. I made it with leftovers from when I made my eldest her coat (see, why I now really have to show you the coat at the end). The lining is Soft Cactus, the same as in this skirt.  With permission I immediately hacked the cape pattern.




Instead of having pockets on the inside, I created an inverse kind a pocket (sorry, best description I could some up with). The little paws that hang on the front are a functioning pockets that you can be reached from the inside (where the hands are). I thought it would be a fun detail that she could put her hands in it like little paws as well. My daughter thought so too, instead of a fun option, she insists on wearing the coat with her hands in the pockets. She even tries to crawl in it like this. The main cape option is a button loop closure. I added two small tabs such that I could use snaps.





I made my four year old a horse cape. I became jealous seeing all the gorgeous manes on the Wild Things coat and wanted our own. I used three different yarns and went for a full mane, a very full mane, an eye catcher for sure (and a bit on the heavy side). I went for a different front closure, which is (shortly) mentioned in the instructions. This way the entire front overlaps making my girl better protected against the wind. I totally went crazy with my snap placement on this one. I love those flowers.




I made a horse cape because that animal was missing in the examples, but this horse will probably be turned into a unicorn. The coat pattern came with adorable draw-your-own-coat cut and coloring pages ( as does the cape pattern) and ever since both my girls cut and glued a set of unicorn coats, I have been wanting to sew that horn. No picture, but it succeeded beautifully, much easier than I expected. I just have to sew it on, but those last details...




The fabric is the same fabric as this coat, I am still not sure if I would call it red or raspberry. In combination with the pink manes which of the two is not important any more. My middle daughter also wanted claws, like her little sister, but I felt that a horse/unicorn hooves where not as suitable to be turned into reversed pockets. 


To make this picture heavy post even more packed, I now show you the bunny coat I sewed a few weeks ago. Both the shell and lining where bought at Textielstad. The store is relatively close by, so I actually went there to look at suitable coat fabrics (usually I buy all my fabrics on the web). I did not have plans to combine this jersey and wool, but when the nice store lady  stacked them on each other to put them in a bag, I saw how well they matched.



I again tried something else with the pockets. I went for bunny paws, and used the same method as the other two coats. I cut the jersey pattern pieces a bit smaller than the wool ones, to avoid a hanging lining. In the end it turned out I kind a cut the lining a bit too small. SO all pieces are a bit curved inwards. My daughter does not mind though, she loves the coat. It is a bit cold though still. The tail is detachable with a snap.


The cape comes in three lengths and with a huge size range. Teenagers and not too tall grown-ups can wear the biggest size. The pattern is on sale for two days for 7 USD excluding taxes. Check out the web shop here. If you already own the cape you can buy an upgrade for 5 USD. During the release only, it is possible to use the extension to extend the Wild Things Coat with the Wild Things cape.



I love to hear what you think of my creations. Feel free to leave a comment in the language you prefer (although Google translate might have to assist me if you choose something different than English, German, Dutch or Hungarian).