birthday bag
i decided to go overboard on the theme thing: i bought a couple of sticker/activity book versions of the two stories to go in it, hence the size of the bag, which is quite big for a kid’s bag, but i made the straps long enough for her to carry it over her shoulder, so hopefully it won’t be dragging on the ground!
then i thought of her little red riding hood finger puppets that are a great toy, especially for travel, but so small that they’re prone to getting lost. M was recently given a set of wooden blocks in the shape of paris (classi think the fact that i’ve never made a tote bag before and worked it out from scratch meant i chose prolly not the most efficient way of putting it together. it was the cutting and - most of all - fusing that seemed to take forever. i pieced each side of the outer bag and lining and then fused everything onto a stiff interfacing (so there are 2 layers of interfacing throughout). i like the fact that it’s sturdy enough to stand up on its own, although i’d expect it to soften gradually with use and eventual inevitable washing. if i ever made a bag like this again i’d without doubt use a sew-in interfacing to save time. the handles were made with a bias tape maker (prym beats hemline hands down, this one flattens the fabric sufficiently to actually work!), again outer fabric and lining both interfaced (slightly narrower than the tape) then topstitched together.
inspired by pink chalk studio’s fabulous pencil rolls i decided to include pencil pockets inside the bag. i interfaced one layer of the spotty lining fabric, then stitched the long edges right sides together with another layer, turned and topstitched one long edge (the top of the pocket). then topstitched the bottom edge onto the main lining piece and stitched in the pencil channels (1″ wide, marked with masking tape, which is conveniently 1″ wide). this was all done before the lining pieces were assembled.the sewing everything together was nice and quick, but if there’s a trick to sewing the bottoms neatly - and if there is please someone tell me! - i didn’t get it. it probably doesn’t involve trying to sew a rectangular piece in for the base, which is what i did, and although i fudged the corners a bit it turned out a lot better than it could have done
now i just have to figure out how to wrap it…
posted: April 1st, 2007 under bags, kidstuff, sewing.
comments: 6
comments
comment from Brooke
time: 1/4/2007, 6:24 pm
I am so in love with your bag. I wish that I could sew! I am sure that it will become a very popular carry all very soon! Great Job!!
comment from Biscuitbear
time: 1/4/2007, 8:36 pm
Oh wow. What an incredible gift. M sure is one lucky little girl! As a matter of fact even big girls would be thrilled with this. Looks like it was a lot of work. I shudder to think how long it would take me.
comment from crumpet
time: 3/4/2007, 12:05 am
That’s adorable, and you did such a wonderful job for making something from scratch that you’ve never made before (and with pencil pockets!)
pingback from Five Gallon Bucket
time: 6/4/2007, 11:47 pm
[…] reading this post on soph’s blog, I decided to improve the way I go about lining bags. and because I like […]
comment from Sarah
time: 12/4/2007, 3:50 pm
This is a wonderful bag! Looks like you did a great job! I love the idea of having pencil slots inside a tote.
For the bottom, you could have an oval bottom, or box the corners to make it square without having a separate bottom piece.
comment from soph
time: 12/4/2007, 9:13 pm
thanks for the tips sarah. yep, since i made it i’ve seen both the oval base idea and the one where you sew across the bottom corners, both of which look *miles* easier than my way ![]()

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