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Friday 28 February 2014

I Pad Cover

Make an Ipad Cover without a pattern

I had some fabric that I bought in mandors from their offcuts that they often have on sale beside the till.The decission then was what to make with it and as it was coming up to Christmas I decided to make my mum and Ipad cover as the one she had was a bit chewed by the dog. I thought it was a really fitting fabric as it had lots of magazine covers on it, so more fitting for an ipad cover than a piece of clothing, which is what I usually make.

I searched the internet for ideas and patterns but in the end I measured and cut the fabric to my own sizes. It's a first generation Ipad I was making it for and a lot of the patterns out there are for the more recent ones and the ipad mini. I got the dimensions for it from this website and set about working out my sizes.

With the Ipad sizes of 9.56 x 7.47 x 0.5inches, I converted it into metric sizes (I work in metric on a daily basis and just find myself getting confused if I go between the two) so this gave me dimensions on 243 x 190 x 13mm for the Ipad. I decided to make an envelope style cover and worked out I needed the following;
  • Fabric - approx 600mm x 550mm
  • wadding to pad the cover out 
  • 250x192mm card to provide a structured back 
  • ribbon 
  • a button

This sketch shows my thinking behind what material I would need to cut. There were two lengths of 260x516mm to be stitched together and filled with wadding and card. These would then be sewn at set distance to create the folds to give the envelope effect.
The small squares of fabric would be folded into triangles and sewn onto the right side of the fabric to create holds for the ipad.

Tuesday 18 February 2014

Upcycled furniture - Queen Anne Footstool!

Upcycled Queen Anne Footstool


When we moved into our house we were had nothing. Don't get me wrong, I'm well aware that a footstool is not a necessity, but it was something we wanted and so to get the things we needed and wanted within our budget we had to start bargain hunting.

I was sitting telling my gran how I'd been searching the charity shops, gumtree and ebay for a Queen Anne footstool to repair and reupholster and how I couldn't found one when, low and behold she had one in her garage! I instantly remembered it when she showed me it and was excited to start the task of covering it!

I had looked online for tutorials since I had never done this before and found this really useful..

When I had stripped off the three layers of fabric on the old stool (my grandparents had been recovering it for a while, one time stapling on the fabric and another time using nails. F.Y.Y. don't use nails they're a nightmare to get out and look really untidy.) I discovered the inside of my stool was nothing like the one in the instructable, infact the cushion was pretty much crumbling away. 

Queen Anne Footstool Upcycle Re-upholster