Saturday, January 28, 2012

Learn to Sew Patterns

Have you decided to learn to sew? Do you already sew but want to brush up on a few things and don’t have time to go to a class? Looking for some beginner, easy to sew patterns? A few things to think about when you are pattern shopping for easy to sew patterns.

Look for are patterns that have “Learn to Sew” or “How to Sew” written on the envelope.

The less pattern pieces, the less complicated the pattern usually is.

Fast and easy patterns are usually that, fast cutting, fast layout, and easy sewing.

Here’s a few patterns to help you hone your skills while creating some wonderful items.

Sewing Pattern Simplicity 9476 Vest Learn to Sew  Size 6 to 12 Bust 30 to 34 Complete

 Simplicity 9476 Vest Learn to Sew Size 6 to 12 Bust 30 to 34 Complete

Vintage 60s Sewing Pattern Butterick 3001 Women's A-line Dress Size 38 Bust 42  Inches Uncut Complete

Vintage 60s Butterick 3001 Personal A-line Fitting

Sewing pattern Simplicity 5546 Craft Apron Complete

Simplicity 5546 Craft Apron

Sewing Pattern Vintage 60's Simplicity 8060 Dress Size 16 Bust 38 How to Sew Complete

Vintage Simplicity 8060 How to Sew Sheath Dress

Vintage 1970s Butterick 4291 Misses Fast and Easy Tops Size Medium Bust 34-36

Vintage 70s Butterick 4291 Fast and Easy Tops

Happy sewing to all. Keep those machines humming!

Post by Eileen aka GoofingOff

MissEileen vintage

Goofingoff Etsy Judaic fabrics, sewing patterns

GoofingOff Artfire Sewing patterns, plus size patterns

Metal Woods N Water unusual stuff and  metal work

Friday, January 27, 2012

Miss Eileen’s Etsy Picks: Red for Women’s Heart Health 1.27.12

Roses are red, violets are blue, red is for Valentine’s, and Women’s Heart Health, too!

Didn’t know I was a poet? Me either, but I am a nurse and women’s health is important. Very important. Did you know that heart disease is the number one killer of women? Yup, it is. It is important to be heart smart, especially as we age. As we age the risk of being afflicted with heart disease rises dramatically. Eating healthy, exercising, watching your weight can reduce that risk (makes you look good in those jeans you were checking out, too). During the month of February, wear something red on Fridays to support Women’s heart health. Learn about the signs of heart attacks and strokes because they don’t only happen to men. Be heart smart.

Here’s some wonderful red ideas from Etsy to show support for women’s heart health.

Red Heart Earrings, Valentine Enamel Earrings, Enamel Jewelry                          Valentine Red Heart Enamel Earrings by Jechory Designs

ON SALE - Red Chunky Loop Scarf - Ready to Ship -    Red Chunky Loop Scarf by MoonSun

The cutest 80s red and white heels size 7 1/2 leather polka dots Caressa ankle straps       Red & White Polka Dot Leather Heels size 7 1/2 leather by MelsVanity

Crochet Rose Necklace Red Black Bib Valentine  Valentine Crochet Rose Bib Necklace by Paleodeux

Vintage Leather 70's Bright Red Little Bag Crossbody On Shoulder Long Strap Great Vintage Condition READY TO SHIP From Cvetinka

Vintage Leather 70's Bright Red Little Bag by Cvetinka

Vintage 1950s Red & Blue Brocade Full Circle Party Dress // The Regency, Treasury Item  Vintage 1950s Red & Blue Brocade Full Circle Dress by Wear Are They Now

ON SALE NEW Crocheted Flower Scarf  Crochet Flower Scarf by Knitting Fashion

Big Red Cuff Turquoise Magnesite Red Riverstone Silver   Beads Big Red Cuff Turquoise Magnesite Red Riverstone Cuff Bracelet by Ropes of Pearls

Well, those are my picks. What do you think? Beautiful ways to show support for women’s heart health. The poll is up for voting. Winner gets an interview. Good luck to all.

To learn more about the signs of heart attacks and strokes, click HERE.

Post by Eileen aka GoofingOff

MissEileen vintage

Goofingoff Etsy Judaic fabrics, sewing patterns

GoofingOff Artfire Sewing patterns, plus size patterns

Metal Woods N Water unusual stuff and  metal work

Monday, January 23, 2012

Flower Power at Miss Eileen’s

Vintage Pyrex 1.5 Pint Casserole Dish Spring Blossom Green Pattern

Late January is as far into winter as you can get. Whether or not you have snow and ice, the sky is gray and drab, days are short, and it is so easy to get bummed. Here’s a little pick me up from the Miss Eileen’s vintage shop.

Vintage Flower Power Glass Cannister Green Flowers

Vintage Leather Shoulder Bag  Flower Power Hand Painted

Vintage Hand Embroidered Linen Tea Towel

I love the handbag. I think I had one like it when I was in school. The towel is hand embroidered….and the Pyrex, what more can I say.

Posted by Miss Eileen aka Goofing Off

Sunday, January 22, 2012

Post Holiday Sales Slump

Well, it had to happen. The holidays are over and sales slow down. It doesn’t just happen to Macy’s and JC Penny’s, it happens to most businesses after the holiday frenzy. So now the question is, “What do you do?” Since I am among the forever disorganized people of the planet, I always (really, always) plan to organize some part of my life. I usually get one drawer sorted out and I am spent. Pitiful! Should be ashamed of myself. I end up working on other projects, some new, some unfinished, just trying to stay busy.

One of my projects I am finishing up (finally, hooray) is a driftwood mezuzah case. I love driftwood and the rustic look that goes with it. Seemed like a natural. I have sanded, routed, whittled, and drilled and I am finally to the sealing stage. Only 5 or 6 more stages to go. Ugh! The ideas come much faster than the item.

Another project I am working on is with vintage jewelry. Little rose bobbies. Very cute. Very spring and summer.

Sometimes the slump is good. Not much money coming in but the slow down allows me to get things done and look at everything in a new light. Traveling is no fun if you can’t enjoy the journey.

Happy trails, y’all!

Post by Eileen aka GoofingOff

MissEileen vintage

Goofingoff Etsy Judaic fabrics, sewing patterns

GoofingOff Artfire Sewing patterns, plus size patterns

Metal Woods N Water unusual stuff and  metal work

Saturday, January 21, 2012

Local club stitches together friendships | SeacoastOnline.com

Local club stitches together friendships | SeacoastOnline.com

This post is from SeacoastOnline.com

In November of 1913, a group of 12 Exeter girls — all between the ages of 7 and 9 — got together to form a sewing club. A copy of their record book, written in clumsy school-girl script, was donated to the Exeter Historical Society in 1991 by the family of Faith Kenniston, one of the girls in the group. In a very grown-up way, they elected officers, decided on the purpose of the club (to learn to sew), set meeting dates as Saturdays at 3 p.m. and collected dues of 1 cent per meeting. Faith's mother, Inez, would serve as their adult advisor. It was all very business-like until the final entry: "After the business was over, the members danced for half an hour. Helen E. Redman, Secretary."

In 1913 clubs of all kinds were popular with all ages. It was an era with little outside entertainment. Men joined fraternal organizations like the Masons, Odd-Fellows, Foresters or Improved Order of Red Men. Women sometimes joined the auxiliary branches of the men's groups or they formed their own reading clubs, church organizations, social welfare groups or current event clubs. The girls of Exeter had plenty of examples of how to run a proper club.

They named their group after a character in Charles Dickens' "Our Mutual Friend." Jenny Wren was a sympathetic care-taker of her alcoholic father, who supported herself by making doll clothes.

The girls may have heard of this character, but it was more likely that they had not. "Our Mutual Friend" was not one of Dickens best known or easiest novels — certainly not the choice reading material for girls barely out of second grade. The Jenny Wren Club of Exeter was part of a larger program to encourage home sewing by one of the nation's largest makers of sewing patterns — the Butterick Corporation.

Butterick sales were lagging due to the expansion of ready-made clothes. It was simply no longer necessary for women to spend hours and hours hand sewing clothing for the family. It was just as easy (and sometimes just as inexpensive) to purchase clothes off the rack. To keep their sewing patterns selling, Butterick had to figure out a way to convince women that homemade clothes were somehow better than their more convenient store-bought counterparts.

The company began by publishing a fashion magazine called The Delineator — so named for the master dressmaker patterns that professional tailors and seamstresses used to individually fit a garment to a customer. The Delineator became wildly popular, setting fashion standards in a way that earlier women's magazines, such as Godey's Ladies Book, had done in the mid-19th century. But rather than encouraging women to purchase the new styles in the magazine, The Delineator reminded them that home sewing patterns, particularly those made by Butterick, were fully adaptable and would produce a garment that would conform better to any size woman. And, it would be better made, because you made it yourself. Home sewing was no longer seen as a necessity, it was a question of quality and womanhood.

But what about the new generation of girls who would not necessarily have to be taught to sew by overworked mothers? How could home sewing skills be encouraged in the next generation? To tackle these problems The Delineator created a national movement of girls' sewing groups called Jenny Wren Clubs. The Exeter girls were part of a much larger movement.

It was probably Mrs. Kenniston who suggested to the girls that they form a club, and they met at the Kenniston home for most of the first meetings. The club was duly registered with The Delineator and received a club certificate, membership pins and frequent letters of encouragement.

Even with the help of a national magazine, Mrs. Kenniston had her work cut out for her. School-aged girls 100 years ago were no more demure than girls of the same age today. And anyone who presumes that girls are quiet and happy to sit still sewing for an hour hasn't hung around with any of them. Once the girls met, took attendance, collected dues and settled into their project of the day, Mrs. Kenniston kept them amused by reading or telling stories — she once spent nearly the entire hour telling them about the girlhood of Helen Keller. The club eventually rotated meetings between the member's homes, inviting one another's mothers to host the group.

They would sew for a while, have a snack and then do something more active before the meeting adjourned. Sometimes they danced, ("with the phonograph for music, and Mrs. Kenniston for teacher, the members danced the Virginia Reel") or played in the snow or "played at magic writing." Who knows how much actual sewing the girls learned, but the club certainly provided them with companionship and an initiation into the world of club life.

And Butterick still makes home sewing patterns today, so the experiment proved to be a success for all involved.

Barbara Rimkunas is the curator of the Exeter Historical Society. Her column appears every other Friday and she can be reached at info@exeterhistory.org.

Friday, January 20, 2012

A Tree Grows on Etsy…Miss Eileen’s Etsy Picks 1.20.12

 

While most of the north shivers from the cold, this is the right time to plant trees in the south. Check out these trees on Etsy!

Wooden Cupcake Tree                          Wooden Cupcake Tree by Joshua Butler

Welded Metal Tree Sculpture                       Welded Metal Tree Sculpture by Stevens Garage

Handmade Wooden Cabinet - Wood Cabinet With Carved Oak Tree Doors                     Handmade Wooden Cabinet with Carved Oak Tree Doors by Honeys Treasures

Elm Leaf Mobile from Reclaimed Amber Beer Bottle Glass                               Elm Leaf Mobile from Reclaimed Amber Beer Bottle Glass by Western Art Glass

Tree Branch Candle Holders Rustic Candle Sticks Log Candles Repurposed Wood                  Tree Branch Candle Holders by Worleys

Aquamarine and Sterling Silver Tree of Life Pendant          Aquamarine and Sterling Silver Tree of Life Pendant by Evolutionary Beauty

 

Wire Tree Of Life Spirit sculpture on natural clear Quartz Crystal cluster with Green Brazil Agate slice base, original art             Wire Tree of Life Spirit Sculpture by Crows Feathers

Nature Photography -- Tree Rings Black and White 11x14 Fine Art Photograph                               Nature Photography Tree Rings Black and White 11x14 Fine Art Photograph

Aren’t these wonderful trees? Voting starts now.

Post by Eileen aka GoofingOff

MissEileen vintage

Goofingoff Etsy Judaic fabrics, sewing patterns

GoofingOff Artfire Sewing patterns, plus size patterns

Metal Woods N Water unusual stuff and  metal work

Thursday, January 19, 2012

We' Have A Winner!

Congrats to Yafit Glass the winner of last week’s Etsy Picks. Here’s another look at the winning item.

Love for ever home blessing, can be personalized

Love Forever Home Blessing by Yafit Glass

Can’t wait for the interview!

 

Post by Eileen aka GoofingOff

MissEileen vintage

Goofingoff Etsy Judaic fabrics, sewing patterns

GoofingOff Artfire Sewing patterns, plus size patterns

Metal Woods N Water unusual stuff and  metal work

Thursday, January 12, 2012

Words of Love: Miss Eileen’s Etsy Picks 1.13.12

The holidays are over and for those of us in the northern hemisphere winter has set in. This is the time for cuddling together, you know, staying warm. All that cuddling makes me think of Valentine’s Day and romance.

Inspirational Word LOVE Wall Hanging Home Decor Metal                   Inspirational Word LOVE Metal Wall Hanging by Schares Metal Works

                  Love for ever home blessing, can be personalized                    Love Forever Home Blessing by Yafit Glass

Concrete Decorative Word Stone "Love"                       Concrete Decorative Word Stone “Love” by Whimsical Details

4  turquoise ceramic tile coasters, crackle glaze with flashes of blue and pink glaze, birds and LOVE words backed with silicon rubber feet     4 Turquoise Ceramic Tile Coasters by Damson Tree Pottery

Love Chinese Writing Bamboo Bead Bracelet                            Love Chinese Writing Bamboo Bead Bracelet by My Studio 5150

ich liebe dich - hand stamped romantic necklace               Ich Liebe Dich Hand Stamped Hand Stamped Romantic Necklace by Janelley Beads

                Te Amo Necklace - Silver I Love You Quote Language Note Spanish Love letter         Te amo silver necklace by Sarah

Always Kiss Me Goodnight Embroidered Flour Sack Hand/DIsh Towel           Always Kiss Me Goodnight Embroidered Flour Sack Hand  Towel by Embroidery Everywhere

So, what do you think? Pretty ways to say “I love you” no matter what language you say it in. Remember, the shop with the most votes gets interviewed here.

Post by Eileen aka GoofingOff

MissEileen vintage

Goofingoff Etsy Judaic fabrics, sewing patterns

GoofingOff Artfire Sewing patterns, plus size patterns

Metal Woods N Water unusual stuff and  metal work

Don’t forget the children’s sewing pattern sale in the GoofingOff Shops. Get 40% off children’s sewing patterns. Sale starts at midnight 1/1 through the 15th.

Sunday, January 8, 2012

Creating Traditions




Well, the holidays are over and life starts to normalize, at least for me. The decorations get stashed, work gets back on schedule....you know, normal. This year, though, I did something I hadn't done in years. I had a dinner party. We invited friends and family over and celebrated. Everyone brought something, pies, cake, wine and I cooked, then I cooked some more. We even ran out of chairs. So much fun. I even made these cute little coasters to give out as gifts to everyone and they loved them.
The success of the holiday dinner got me thinking I need to make this a tradition. Now I know there are a lot of folks who have family get-togethers every week. When I was growing up we had them for all occasions. If Grandma wasn't cooking we were going out to eat.
Living far from family makes it hard to keep those traditions. You have to fight to keep them. The success of that one dinner inspired me to have another and it was successful, too.
As the older generation dies off, some of us have to push to keep these all important traditions alive. So here it is. Put down the cell phone. Come to the table and eat there, not in front of the TV. In fact, turn off the TV. Nothing on the tube or on the phone is more important than the family. Use your manners. Remember to say "Thank you" and "Wow, dinner's tastes great" and mean it.
Simple things but very important to do. After a while it will be a habit and soon it will be a tradition.
I'm already planning next year's Chanukkah party.

Monday, January 2, 2012

Traditions

During the holidays the traditions we hold dear are evident. Whether the tradition is baking cookies, creating handmade ornaments, or spending Christmas Day at Grandma’s, we remember the importance of the tradition. The cookies don’t have to be perfect, the ornaments might have a little too much glue (or lack stitch or two), and that grumpy uncle might show up at Grandma’s but that’s OK. It’s the jokes, laughs, and love we share that make these traditions special.

After a long period of not holding family get-togethers, this year I held one and it was wonderful. The dinner was perfect, the cranberry sauce jelled (home made), and the company was fun. I’m already planning next year’s Chanukkah party.

Post by Eileen aka GoofingOff

MissEileen vintage

Goofingoff Etsy Judaic fabrics, sewing patterns

GoofingOff Artfire Sewing patterns, plus size patterns

Metal Woods N Water unusual stuff and  metal work

Don’t forget the children’s sewing pattern sale in the GoofingOff Shops. Get 40% off children’s sewing patterns. Sale starts at midnight 1/1 through the 15th.