Tag Archive | kids

Make a Cute Felt Pillow

I love working with felt especially with little ones.  It is soft and smooth to the touch, doesn’t fray and comes in sooooooooo many lovely colors and is very reasonably priced!!  What else could you ask for.

If you get the chance, let me know your reasons why you like to use felt for your own special projects.

Anyways, here is a cute and pretty simple project you can do using felt, yarn, a little batting, a small handheld punch and whatever you may have around the house to give it some pizzaz!!  This is great for any left over felt you might have stashed away or just buy some felt squares at your local fabric store.  Be creative and use two different colors!!

First, let everyone decide upon their own design.  Remember to keep it simple especially if working with young children.  A heart, a square, a ruffled circle are good choices to think about.  Again, pull out some cookie cutters to use to trace around on the felt.  Think about keeping your design no bigger than 5″ by 5″.  Any bigger, it gets to be too big for little hands to work with.

Once you have decided upon your design, trace it onto one side of the felt which will now become the wrong side.  Cut out two matching designs so you have a front and back.  Holding both your front and back pieces together, use a small handheld punch to make tiny holes along the outer edge, about 1/4″ in from the edge of your design and spacing your holes about 1/4″ apart.  Don’t get too hung up on this part trying to make it exact.  You just want to make sure that your hole openings on the front match up with the hole openings on the back.

The type of punch I used was a small heart shape design style similar to those you might find among the scrapbooking tools.  You just want to have an opening large enough for a piece of 4 ply worsted weight yarn to pull through easily.

Now get a piece of yarn (4 ply worsted weight is easy to work with) and cut it to about an 18″ length.  Use whatever color you might have available.  Remember little ones like lots of bright colors!  Using a plastic needle, thread it with your yarn and begin sewing your two felt pieces together.   Hide your knot by pulling through only the front piece so it is sandwiched between the two felt pieces.

Your stitching can be whatever works for you and your child.  You could do a back-stitch or a whip stitch  to secure your pillow front and back together.  Continue doing your sewing stitch around your pillow leaving a small opening to insert your batting.  Don’t remove the needle and thread, just secure it into the edge of your felt pillow while you stuff it.

Once you have your pillow lightly stuffed, continue sewing the last few holes together to close everything.  Knot it off on the back side.

Now decorate the front of your pillow with cute buttons, sequins, little pompoms by gluing them onto your felt.   You could use those small adhesive backed foam shapes too.  If you are up to it, glitter glue and/or decorative fabric paints are fun items to use for getting some neat pizzaz.

Most of all have fun with this activity.  Just another way to teach little ones to use their hands and to be creative as well as some special one-on-one time together making memories!

  • TIP:  Use a button shank remover to cut off the sewing loop on the back of a decorative button to make it very easy to glue in place.

HAPPY CREATING!!

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Creative Recycling

Taking items that have outlived their usefulness and putting them to work for you in another fashion is always fun, creative and beneficial at the same time.   Children can have a lot of fun too with updating those recycling items to make them attractive for their new purpose.

Shoe boxes are one of my favorite things to reuse and they always have to be updated to look fashionable in my sewing/craft room.   Letting a child cut out fabric squares and glue them onto the outside of the box and then trim with some rickrack is so cute and so much fun.  Or if they are learning crochet, let them create some square motifs and glue them onto the outside of the shoe box and add buttons to give it a festive look.  I love to use these boxes to store packages of bias tape, ribbons, hem tape, etc.  Also, a great storage item to organize my crochet threads by colors and thread size.

Reuse the cardboard tube from a roll of paper towels.  I like to cut them in half and glue several together.  Then you or your child can crochet just chain stitches to make a nice decorative trim to tie around the tubes.   Crochet maybe three different colored chain ties and secure them around the tubes close to the top, middle and bottom for a fun look.   These are a good way to store crochet hooks by sizes.  Or some of those sewing items, like turning tools, pencils and/or markers, rulers, etc.

Also, plastic butter tubs or sour cream like containers and their lids are great ways to store pins, beads, machine needle packages or to use with some of your small to go type projects.  You can cut a small opening in the lid, place a ball of yarn inside, pull your yarn through the opening in the lid, close it up and off you go to dance practice, little league practice, etc.   Now you can crochet away and not lose your skein of yarn or have it fall on the floor and get dirty.

Have a recycling party and discover new and fun ways to reuse everyday items!!

HAPPY CREATING!!

Disclaimer:  This post contains affiliate links – “small commission earned”