bookbinding, embroidery and textiles, projects, stuff i've made

A couple of small projects done

Bijou Books: The Biscuit 2.0

biscuit books v.2.0

Version 2.0 of the biscuit book is a great improvement on my first attempt at the thing. Coptic binding turned out to be the best binding for these, allowing the biscuit to retain its boxy profile and keeping the biscuit covers nearly flush with the text block.

The covers are double thickness, made of two thin pieces of board. Two boards were covered in a pink polka-dot paper (with the design facing the text block), and were attached to the text block during the coptic binding process. The second pair of boards were covered in felt, stitched into biscuits, and then glued over the first boards, concealing the coptic board attachment stitches.

WIP (biscuit books)

biscuit books v.2.0

The double-layer covers also allowed me to conceal the ends of two lengths of ribbon, used to tie the book closed.

biscuit books v.2.0

I was asked to make these as Christmas presents for the four granddaughters of an elderly lady I work with in the mall. “That’s what they’re getting from Nana this Chrissy: your little cookies, and a packet of sour plums each.”

Hmm…sweet and sour…there’s a secret message for you from Gran in there somewhere, girls.

Miri’s Journal

miri's journal

And, of course, there’s Miri’s journal, which I put together yesterday. By no means perfect, though it came out looking okay, as a book. I am not unhappy with it, anymore, and I hope Miri will like it, too. There’s always the next tagebuch, and the chance to make something different and better, in a few years’ time. She really uses them, Miri, which is why I delight in making them for her. It is the touch of a person’s hands, and a lifetime of being lovingly used, that burnishes and enriches the existence of a piece of craftsmanship.

miri's journal

miri's journal

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embroidery and textiles

Bakin’ the Biscuits: part 1 of ice-cream sandwich tutorial

Felt ice-cream sandwiches tutorial: part I

As promised, Part 1 is up, over on from Hell to Breakfast. Apologies all around for the yellow cast in the photos, and the rough instructions, and the nail polish (ye gods, I will never be able to atone for the nail polish…)

Part 2 tomorrow, in proper light (my eyes are killing me! Aren’t laptop screens shocking?!) G’night!

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embroidery and textiles

Ice cream sandwiches

felt ice cream sandwiches

More kawaii felt goodies for breakfast…little roundels of fantasy ice-cream, sandwiched between puffy biscuits. The how-to for these came from a Japanese craft magazine that I purchased here. The diagrams are simple enough to understand, if you have some sewing experience, that it doesn’t seem to matter that the text is in Japanese.

The one with blue sequins (the Dance Fever ice-cream sandwich) was a bit of craziness that I added because the color of the sequin braid exactly matched that of the felt; but what a strange thing to have on something that’s supposed to look like food! Personally, I prefer the pink one, with just a sprinkling of french knots and some shading.

One of the best ideas to come from Japanese felt craft magazines is the way they color the felt. I love working with felt, but the limited color palette has always been the one drawback of the material. In these craft magazines they use wax crayons, oil pastels, soft colored pencils, creamy makeup (for rosy cheeks on dolls) applied with cotton buds, to give an object shading, texture, depth. On the felt pastries and things, a golden brown edge makes them look like they’ve just come out of the oven. It’s such a simple trick—certainly easier than applying bits of felt roving with a felting needle (materials and tools I don’t have) or embroidering them—but perfectly effective. It can make a felt object pop into realism…or at least it might have if I hadn’t put blue sequins on the poor thing!

As I made these I also took photographs for a tutorial, which I’ll be posting on From Hell to Breakfast later (so don’t rush over there just yet, give me a day!) after I’ve cropped and fixed the photos, written up instructions, and drawn a diagram or two. (Tutorials. They seem so simple, but wow, how the hours fly when you’re tweaking and putting one together!)

miniature Ice Cream sandwiches

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