Showing posts with label photo props. Show all posts
Showing posts with label photo props. Show all posts
Friday, 15 November 2013
top hat
So I made a top hat. Not the kind of thing you hear everyday. It was another prop for my friend's baby photo business (which you can see here if you're interested), but it's the last one for the time being before you fall asleep.
Made from black felt, it was a bit of a feat of engineering. I didn't even look to see if I could fnd a tutorial as I knew I wouldn't! The brim is interfaced, as is the crown, but the tubey-bit isn't. It does seem to stand up OK though.
I called Mr Hefalump into service again. He didn't mind modelling for me whilst he sorted my pins into colour groups. I think the hat makes him look more dignified than the bonnets I usually make him model.
I made it to fit my friend's daughter, I took it over to her and it's slightly too large, but that actually makes it even more adorable!
Here's the inside view. It's not the neatest stitching on earth (I challenge you to make a neatly-stitched top hat!), but it looks fine from the outside.
Job done!
Sunday, 10 November 2013
More bum coverings.
Still on a newborn photo prop kick! I have seen really cute ruffle bum nappy covers around, but no tutorials other than those using a special ruffle fabric. I decided to wing it. I started off with this tutorial at Made which is fabulous. I thought I knew what I was doing with the ruffles but it all ended up a tangled mess with ruffles stuck in leg seams and stitches everywhere. I started again, first with a simple cover, no ruffles.
Perfect for a little boy. Then, with a better idea of how it all worked, I moved on to the ruffle one.
This is the front, it looks very odd! The fabric was from a craft fair, perhaps at the NEC and was a very bad choice as those little white flowers melt when you iron them. Lesson learned.
Here is the back, showing the three rows of ruffles. You can't really make it out, can you? I need a model... Mr Hefalump!
Poor Mr Hefalump, no wonder he looks so sad. This does show the finished effect better though!
And it co-ordinates with his blanket! I'm sorry Mr Hefalump. I won't ask you to model baby stuff again (I will).
Oh, and I won an award! I came second in Homecrafts Blog Awards. Go check me out and the other winners.
Perfect for a little boy. Then, with a better idea of how it all worked, I moved on to the ruffle one.
This is the front, it looks very odd! The fabric was from a craft fair, perhaps at the NEC and was a very bad choice as those little white flowers melt when you iron them. Lesson learned.
Here is the back, showing the three rows of ruffles. You can't really make it out, can you? I need a model... Mr Hefalump!
Poor Mr Hefalump, no wonder he looks so sad. This does show the finished effect better though!
And it co-ordinates with his blanket! I'm sorry Mr Hefalump. I won't ask you to model baby stuff again (I will).
Oh, and I won an award! I came second in Homecrafts Blog Awards. Go check me out and the other winners.
handmade by
Wendy
at
08:30
11
crafty devils said ...
Categories:
babystuff,
nappy cover,
photo props,
sewing
Thursday, 7 November 2013
santa hat and nappy cover
I've still got more newborn photo props for you I'm afraid! I just hope my friend remembers all this when she's a rich and famous photographer (she will). She'd asked for a Santa hat to take photos of her little one. Although she's now almost 8 months, she's a tiny little thing who wears clothes for 1-3 month olds, so this would probably fit some newborns anyway!
In case you can't guess, this is a Santa hat and a nappy cover. A nappy is a diaper to you North Americans. I used this free Santa hat pattern, but I used a chunky yarn and didn't add the rows in white, instead I sewed on a maribou trim. It was a nightmare. Not only did the feathers get everywhere, the thread didn't like it and got caught up with most stitches.
You can imagine how much I enjoyed sewing it to the nappy cover, for which I used this free nappy cover pattern. The front tabs fold in to encircle the baby's waist and are fixed with buttons through the rows of trebles (US - so UK double trebles).
I think I prefer the back view!
I was rummaging through my button jar for the perfect white buttons, but couldn't find any big enough, then I remembered my self-cover buttons.
I used a scrap of Christmas fabric, not that you can tell! I think white might have been a better choice, but then everyone will be looking at the cute baby, not the method of closure!
Right, I'm off to lint roll myself, the sofa and floor. Again.
In case you can't guess, this is a Santa hat and a nappy cover. A nappy is a diaper to you North Americans. I used this free Santa hat pattern, but I used a chunky yarn and didn't add the rows in white, instead I sewed on a maribou trim. It was a nightmare. Not only did the feathers get everywhere, the thread didn't like it and got caught up with most stitches.
You can imagine how much I enjoyed sewing it to the nappy cover, for which I used this free nappy cover pattern. The front tabs fold in to encircle the baby's waist and are fixed with buttons through the rows of trebles (US - so UK double trebles).
I think I prefer the back view!
I was rummaging through my button jar for the perfect white buttons, but couldn't find any big enough, then I remembered my self-cover buttons.
I used a scrap of Christmas fabric, not that you can tell! I think white might have been a better choice, but then everyone will be looking at the cute baby, not the method of closure!
Right, I'm off to lint roll myself, the sofa and floor. Again.
handmade by
Wendy
at
10:00
12
crafty devils said ...
Categories:
babystuff,
christmas stuff,
crochet,
hat,
photo props
Friday, 1 November 2013
more bonnets
Yep, I'm still living in 1800s England... I bet my mum wished bonnets were in fashion in the 70s when I was a baby. I was bald until I was 2. I can just imagine the looks I got.
I used this tutorial at Mousse Mouse Creations again, but this time used a pink yarn. It was Sirdar Snuggly baby yarn again, but I can't remember what the next bit was. It has little white slubs in which look nice but are an absolute *%$&*$ to sew in at the end.
This is a back view, the back is quite flat. I think newborns have quite flat heads at the back, though I don't really know as NOT ONE OF YOU volunteered to lend me a newborn. Yeah, thanks ladies.
A matching nappy cover was in order. A nappy is what those across the pond call a diaper. I do prefer the word nappy so I'm not going to Americanise it! I made this from this free pattern and used both the white and pink yarns. It looks impossibly small. Now I also need a baby bum to add to my baby head...
The nappy cover goes with all the bonnets. I don't know why these pictures are this way up. I rotated them in the folder before I uploaded to photobucket. They were still this way up in photobucket so I rotated them there. Blogger didn't like that. Blogger has decided you all have to look at it sideways on, so do as Blogger tells you.
I think I'm done with bonnets for a while (until my friend tells me they're too small and I have to start again...), on to something else. Something else to put on baby's heads and bums so if anyone does want to lend me their newborn... I'll only borrow it for a few days and I promise not to call it "it".
handmade by
Wendy
at
07:00
6
crafty devils said ...
Categories:
babystuff,
bonnet,
crochet,
nappy cover,
photo props
Wednesday, 30 October 2013
head bands
The imaginative titles are just coming thick and fast this week! Yep, you guessed it, more baby-photo props. My friend always has her little girl (who is the cutest little baby ever) in a headband, so I thought head bands would go down well. After flicking through Pinterest, I came up with an idea.
A dusky-pink piece of wool felt, with some cotton lace sewn to the front and finished with three rolled roses and 2 leaves.
I only had enough of the dusky pink felt to make one rose, the others were from another shade, but I think they look OK. All the tutorials I found on these little buds were for gluing them which I didn't want to do, so I wung it and stitched them. The top one is definitely the best! Leaves and roses were attached by hand with embroidery floss.
Still not having a newborn head (or indeed the attached baby, I'm not some kind of baby-head collecting sicko) to hand, I had a bit of a guess at the size and added some elastic - I made a casing from the pink felt. I don't think it looks too bad, but this will be at the back, out of shot.
The flower for this one was based on this tutorial. It is made of a couple of strips of grey linen, artfully frayed, a short piece of lace and then I stitched some artificial pearls in the middle.
I made a headband from grey linen and attached the flower off centre.
A dusky-pink piece of wool felt, with some cotton lace sewn to the front and finished with three rolled roses and 2 leaves.
I only had enough of the dusky pink felt to make one rose, the others were from another shade, but I think they look OK. All the tutorials I found on these little buds were for gluing them which I didn't want to do, so I wung it and stitched them. The top one is definitely the best! Leaves and roses were attached by hand with embroidery floss.
Still not having a newborn head (or indeed the attached baby, I'm not some kind of baby-head collecting sicko) to hand, I had a bit of a guess at the size and added some elastic - I made a casing from the pink felt. I don't think it looks too bad, but this will be at the back, out of shot.
The flower for this one was based on this tutorial. It is made of a couple of strips of grey linen, artfully frayed, a short piece of lace and then I stitched some artificial pearls in the middle.
I made a headband from grey linen and attached the flower off centre.
Again with the newborn head size guessing, I added some elastic. I don't like the way I've done this one, but again, it will be at the back, out of shot.
Does anyone have a newborn they can lend me for a couple of days?
handmade by
Wendy
at
08:00
13
crafty devils said ...
Categories:
babystuff,
flowers,
hand sewing,
photo props,
sewing
Monday, 28 October 2013
bonnets
You may think that you've travelled back in time about a hundred years with this post! Remember the baby-photographing friend? I've been making more props for her. She's a big fan of vintage, despite my misgivings on the subject, and so vintage it is. What could be more vintage than a bonnet?
I crocheted this one from this free pattern at Moose Mouse Creations. I used Sirdar Snuggly Tiny Tots which has a lovely shimmer in it, but doesn't feel rough. I threaded a wide pink satin ribbon through the holes at the front.
Poor Mr Hefalump was pressed into service to model it. Doesn't he look cute?
I crocheted this one from this free pattern at Moose Mouse Creations. I used Sirdar Snuggly Tiny Tots which has a lovely shimmer in it, but doesn't feel rough. I threaded a wide pink satin ribbon through the holes at the front.
Poor Mr Hefalump was pressed into service to model it. Doesn't he look cute?
It was so quick to crochet (an evening's tv-viewing time), so before I knew it, I found myself crocheting another, using this free pattern at Crochet Latte. I was pretty sure the first one was far too small. It was comforting that this one came out the exact same size. Still, they might be too small. It's kind of hard to imagine a newborn's head when you don't have one to hand...
Got to go, I feel another bonnet coming on!
handmade by
Wendy
at
07:30
10
crafty devils said ...
Categories:
babystuff,
bonnet,
crochet,
photo props
Saturday, 26 October 2013
wee willie winky
A friend of mine is a newborn photographer. She started out when she had her children and is really talented. She's now gone beyond the friends and family stage and is photographing babies of people she doesn't know. She told me she'd been looking for photo props but they were so expensive. Enter Wendy.
I absolutely love this free pattern at Oodles for Noodles for an elf hat (it also makes me think of Wee Willie Winky, hence the title). I crocheted it in chunky yarn - Sirdar Click. It used most of both balls which was a shame as I wanted to do a purple and beige striped one too. I may go back for more. It was from Hobbycraft on their 3 for 2 offer.
I made a chunky pom pom with my Prym pompom maker. I know you can make pompoms with a circle of card, but that little gadget makes life much easier and it wasn't expensive.
I had about 6 false starts with this pattern. I couldn't get the colour changes right on the stripes without cutting the yarn after each round, that would have made for a monster number of ends to weave in so I persevered and finally got it.
You'd be right if you thought you'd seen this hat on my blog before, click the link if you want to see my previous version.
Expect more baby props soon...
handmade by
Wendy
at
10:30
12
crafty devils said ...
Categories:
babystuff,
crochet,
hat,
photo props
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