Friday, April 11, 2025

2025-April: New yoga shorts (with unicorns!)

My new yoga shorts! (with pockets of course!)

I've made many shorts for myself from the same pattern (Peekaboo Summer Lovin' Shorts). It's a nested pattern that I first printed out in 2018. As it happens, over the years I've gradually cut down the well-loved paper pattern to the next smallest size, since I've sloooowly gotten slimmer! (This is a good, intentional thing!)

These have become my standard yoga shorts, made from lovely cotton interlock knit from Birch fabrics.* Recently I noticed all my yoga shorts feeling big, so I cut down the pattern once again, and made these unicorn shorts from that same interlock knit (that I bought ages ago).

Here are the front panels with pockets constructed!
 
A view of the finished pocket. Yes, I know I don't need pockets during yoga class, but they're mandatory for all other summer shorts wearing! :)

*Sadly, Birch/Fabricworm seems to have stopped making ANY PRINTED KNITS WHATSOEVER, and their prices for solids have skyrocketed. I don't shop at Fabricworm anymore, because it seems all they care about are Charlie Harper prints, and while those are cool for, you know, a little while, I don't think they merit turning your entire shop into Charlie Harper Land. Do you hear me, Fabricworm?!? Seriously, they used to be my go-to for interlock knits, cool Japanese prints, and other fun fabrics, but they've cut down their old offerings to basically nothing (except Charlie Harper). What the heck? It's disappointing to say the least. Oh well, there are plenty of places on the internet to buy fabric!

I already have some french terry prints (from elsewhere) to make my next couple pairs of shorts. :)

2025-April: I finally finished my long sleeve dolman top!

This top has been in the works for months. I cut out the pieces first, and they sat around for a while.

Then I clipped them together to sew. Put this work-in-progress off to the side, where it sat for a lot longer. So much longer, that I began to wonder where the bulk of my clips had gotten to!

Then I pieced the colorblocked sleeves, front, and back. More sitting. But not for as long!

Then, in a great burst of energy, I sewed it all together and finished it in one day!

Behold, my "cozy critters" dolman top! For me!


I used the Oaklynn pattern from Made For Mermaids. It's VERY COMFY! :)

2025-April: Waterproof Insulated Lunch Bag with Drawstring!

C's insulated cloth lunchbox was getting really worn and gross (there are only so many times you can wash those before they have perma-stink) so I made her a new one! I was so happy to find the free pattern on this website, CraftPassion, and I modified the dimensions based on some comments in the post.

Read on to see how I made it!

The finished bag! Made with video game themed woven quilting cotton outer, and waterproof PUL (polyurethane laminate) inner. Finally, another good use for PUL besides all those cloth diapers I made long ago!

My fabric print was (mostly) one-directional (starring Mario, Sonic, Kirby, Zelda, and lots of pixellated friends), and the pattern has you fold the outer fabric to form the bag. So that one side of the print would not be upside-down on the final bag, my first step was to prep the outer piece. I cut it in half, turning one half upside down, and sewed the halves back together. That way, both sides of the bag would show the print right side up!

On the right is the finished PUL inner. That was more straightforward to sew, but I still had to run it through the machine under parchment paper, since the seam was PUL touching PUL: a recipe for sticking and messing up! If you have parchment paper under the presser foot, PUL won't stick!

I bought some insulation batting just for this project. I've never used Insul-Bright, but it was fine to sew with and does work well in the finished bag, keeping food cold all day! I clipped it to the video game fabric and treated it as part of the outer.

The pattern has you fold up the base of the folded-in-half outer just a few inches, then sew up the sides (over that fold). This will make the base of the bag. So you can see, folding up 3" will give you a 6" wide base. You'll see!

Closeup of my little outer sandwich

Ta-da! We've made an actual bag with a flat base!

How cool is that? (The inner, handles, and top drawstring fabric come next.)

Showing off the base. You can see my initial seam to make everything right side up. Also, this base folds flat when the bag is empty!

I didn't photograph the inner, handles, and drawstring top clipped up, but here they are sewn in! I also sewed the casing ("tunnel") for the drawstring to go through.

I bought my first roll of cotton webbing strap material for handles, just for this project, and I LOVE it. I didn't feel like going through the process of cutting out and sewing up quilting cotton for (ultimately flimsy) handles, and the webbing is an amazing, sturdy shortcut!

After all these bags I've made, why haven't I bought webbing before?! Well, I have a roll now . . . so I'll be "on a roll" with handle making. :D

You sew 4 rows around the top to hold everything in place. This is a good idea, so the top and inner don't pull out and flop around. 

Here are my humble drawstrings: a spare shoelace cut in half! ;D I tied knots on the cut ends and took a torch to them to melt the plastic so it wouldn't fray.

I threaded the drawstrings through the top casing. I always tend to forget how drawstrings work (ha!) but you have to thread them so each string starts and stops at the same opening, leaving a U shape across the opposite opening. Hope that makes sense!

Next time I would do two things differently with the drawstring: 1) use longer strings; 2) Make the casing bigger. PUL is thick and doesn't cinch all that easily.

On the plus side, once cinched, it's very snug, so the bag isn't really going to open. So you don't necessarily have to tie the strings.

And it's done!

At first I wasn't sure what to make the drawstring top out of, but C. reminded me that it needed to be PUL so the whole inside is waterproof. Smart kid!

The finished bag!

C. has gotten some compliments on her lunch bag, and people are surprised to learn that her mom made it. ;) It was a satisfying sew!

How about you? Would you like to sew your own lunchbox? Or would you order a cool one from Dorybird instead? :)