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To contact me, please email tiffanykaydesigns(at)yahoo(dot)com
Thursday, August 16, 2012
Better Pictures
Her sweet mother sent me better pictures and permission to show this cute girls face. These do it so much more justice. Sometimes I look at it and am in awe that I actually made this dress and that it was created in part from her blessing dress. As I was cutting into the other dress I was having major anxiety, but a deep breath and a quick, not-able-to-take-it-back snip with the scissors and I knew it was move forward, or else. Whew! I love it.
Sunday, August 12, 2012
Baby Decor
One of the ladies that I work with in the Young Women organization at church is having a baby in a few weeks. For our weekly activity with the girls we threw her a surprise baby shower. My job was the decorations. They aren't finding out what they are having so the decorations were supposed to be gender neutral. When this is the case, I tend to err on the side of boyish rather than adding pink into the mix I stuck with blue, green, orange, and yellow. I whipped together these 3x3 3D baby blocks. They are completely made out of paper using 9"x9" square paper from SEI.
All the letters for the blocks and the banner were made by using the LPF. The Banner was also cut out using the LPF and strung with jute. When the onesies are cut out by the LPF it automatically cuts the slits by the neckline. This made it easy to attach the string to hang it.
All the letters for the blocks and the banner were made by using the LPF. The Banner was also cut out using the LPF and strung with jute. When the onesies are cut out by the LPF it automatically cuts the slits by the neckline. This made it easy to attach the string to hang it.
Linking up with Family Ever After and DIY Showoff Project Parade
Sunday, August 5, 2012
T-H-E Dress is finally done
Back in April, one of my previous customers made a special request that I was happy to oblige. She wanted to take the material from her daughter's blessing dress and use it on her baptism dress. (In our LDS faith your blessing dress is one you wear as a baby when your name is added to the records of the church, and the baptism dress is one you wear at age 8). The trick is that no 8 year old I know of is still the same size they were when they were an infant. After several months of designing and planning and sample dress making. This is what we came up with. She absolutely loved it. Since this is not my daughter, and out of respect for her mother, I have not included her face in these pictures. It was just finished this week.
The bodice and sleeves were cut out using Simplicity pattern 5704. With a slight variation on the sleeves. She loved the elastic band and gathered look of the cap sleeve and it made it easier on me not having to guess how wide around this little gals arms were. The only measurement I had was her waist size, and she was 200 miles away so there was no way we could have regular fittings. But it fits like a glove and I am so proud of it. The top layer of sheer fabric is from the blessing dress, and the mother's hope is to one day use that same section of fabric as part of her wedding veil, so I had to be extra careful with it so it can be used again sometime in the next 15 or so years. The bodice was cut out based on the 51" of tricot fabric that was usable from the blessing dress and then I had to remember my mad geometry skills to figure out where to put the split so you could see the layers underneath.
The little spots you see on the dress are little glass beads I hand-stitched to the bodice. The flower I melted by cutting out circles in satin in 4", 3", 2", and 1" increments and melting with a lighter. I wish the pictures were a better quality, but it was late at night in a kitchen, and the flash on my camera did not want to play nice.
The bodice and sleeves were cut out using Simplicity pattern 5704. With a slight variation on the sleeves. She loved the elastic band and gathered look of the cap sleeve and it made it easier on me not having to guess how wide around this little gals arms were. The only measurement I had was her waist size, and she was 200 miles away so there was no way we could have regular fittings. But it fits like a glove and I am so proud of it. The top layer of sheer fabric is from the blessing dress, and the mother's hope is to one day use that same section of fabric as part of her wedding veil, so I had to be extra careful with it so it can be used again sometime in the next 15 or so years. The bodice was cut out based on the 51" of tricot fabric that was usable from the blessing dress and then I had to remember my mad geometry skills to figure out where to put the split so you could see the layers underneath.
The little spots you see on the dress are little glass beads I hand-stitched to the bodice. The flower I melted by cutting out circles in satin in 4", 3", 2", and 1" increments and melting with a lighter. I wish the pictures were a better quality, but it was late at night in a kitchen, and the flash on my camera did not want to play nice.
Linking up to this week's link party over at Family Ever After
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