Another new project - not anticipated much before last week - was to make the new Nightingale Zipper Case, a new pattern by Kristina of Center Street Quilts @centerstreetquilts. It's a very unique bag, and I couldn't resist when there was a sew-along being offered. Again, I was happy to be able to pull fabrics from stash. I basically went with this colorway since the five(!) zippers you see below were the only ones I had enough of in one color.
The lining and main fabric are both from the Ruby Star Society Geometry line - Hump Day and Ladders, both in the Turmeric colorway; the bindings are Cotton + Steel Freckles in Acorn.
I was able to keep up for three days, then life intervened, and I missed the final two days of the sew-along.
Other than that, it was just follow the directions, one step at a time. Nothing about it was hard, I just needed to stay focused.
One of the things I like about my use of fabrics particularly, was with the inside design of the case, the lining fabric was shown off in some areas, and the exterior fabric in others. I didn't plan that! But I really love it.
One other tip that Kristina did mention and I totally confirm, is to use coordinating thread in your bobbin, if you plan to machine-stitch the binding on in the final construction step. You can see, here and there, that thread show through from the front, and since it matches the accent/binding fabric, it's not a big deal. If it had been contrasting, it certainly would have.
There was one other little thing - something with my new sewing machine, that I felt really contributed to the nice top-stitching I was able to do on so many of the components. I'll share about that another day, but I really felt that the partnership between Kristina's pattern, beautiful fabrics, my machine, and my own focus to detail that helped make this a successful project for me.











This is gorgeous! I appreciate how you share notes about what kinds of skills you needed (mostly the moving-forward skills, it sounds like, and most of the technical skills were ones that are already comfortable to you?) -- also it's so so gorgeous. As is your scrap basket, made of rope! Did you make that too? I do love a gorgeous scrap basket full of gorgeous scraps.
ReplyDeleteDo you know what you'll use it for? It seems very useful for EPP, hand stitching, or even for a person's letter-writing stuff -- like you could keep everything for sending birthday/thank-you/etc cards including colored pencils and stamps.
Thank you! Yes, most of the technical skills were comfortable for me, it was just the construction details were very specific. But it was a great pattern, and I found it very doable. I'm thinking I may use it for embroidery projects, but we'll see!
DeleteIt’s wonderful!
ReplyDeleteBeing able to see the different fabrics featured in the interior of the bag is delightful. Enjoy!!
ReplyDeleteYour bag is so good, and it looks so neat and professional. I saw the QAL and was a bit intimidated by the bag. Did you use your AcuFeed foot with the construction?
ReplyDeleteThe bag is beautiful. I look forward to reading your comments on topstitching with your Janome. I've had a similar model since just before the pandemic lockdown, and am still discovering its capabilities.
ReplyDeleteOh I'm glad you have the same machine. I feel like I'm still learning too! But the topstitching - that was a good find. I'll try to share more soon.
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