Thursday, 10 December 2015

Wool Tweed ChrisMoose Present

Here's a sneaky look at one of my Christmas makes, which may or may not (ahem!) be a present for somebody.  At the moment I'm wobbling about giving it away, as it's extremely cute and my children will snaffle it if they catch sight of him.  The pattern for "Chris Moose" was inside Sew magazine recently (October edition that featured the Christmas 2015 templates) and although I don't often sew craft items or soft toys, as my house could honestly be filled to the rafters with them, the tweedy combinations of this toy appealed to me, as well as the opportunity to use up some stash fabric.  


Also with Christmas approaching I am definitely much more inclined to indulge my urge to enjoy make crafty things and cute stuff, and then I can give it away.



This festive fellow is actually made out of some fabric from yet another charity shop find that made its way into my stash a few weeks ago, when the winter apparel started to appear on the rails.  It was a pure wool tweed, full length skirt from Laura Ashley.  Sadly a size or two too big for me and as it was supposed to be a fairly slim fitting style, it was very obviously baggy around the waist and hips even when wearing a longer top to cover the top few inches.  I could have adjusted it of course, taking the waist band off, taking the seams in and perhaps adding some darts for shape.  But to be honest that's not why I bought the skirt.  It was purely for the beautiful dark brown herringbone wool.  



The refashion/remake pile is a stash I try not to let get too big because I could end up with just a big pile of unwearable clothes that are going nowhere fast.  I dislike having to alter clothes generally, I do find that unless I really see the potential for altering that will reveal a fantastic result, it tends to be dull, faffy and fiddly sewing and lowest on the priority list for me. I have been known to apply myself to altering things, if it's a piece I love and I absolutely know it will be worth doing, like the grey leather skirt I took up recently, but I normally defer to making something completely from scratch.  However picking up interesting garments that are made of lovely fabric, from charity and thrift shops or table top sales, is irresistible to me.  Something of quality will always come in useful to me.

Working with pure wool is a real treat I think, and just as much with little novelties like this as with a garment to wear.  It is easy to work and shape, has great colour and is soft, warm and durable.  Chris is sporting several different types of wool here with his red check antlers, forest-green herringbone hooves, cream check belly and toffee coloured ears all being made up of contrasting little pieces and offcuts.  He has definitely got the cuddle factor, but also looks nice hanging out on the sofa in a seasonally appropriate kind of way.



His eye is tricky to see here as the enormous moosey antlers are casting a shadow over his smiley face!  The weather has been so awful here lately, the dark days have made taking photographs a bit of a challenge, hence the bright kitchen lights making deep shadows inevitable. Anyway you can just make out that I've used some black silk embroidery thread in satin stitch to make his peepers, although I could just as well have used buttons, which would have been a cute addition.  I've used beige thread for his mouth (slightly wonky sewing evident here, but adds character, no?) and two nostrils.  



His body needs the stuffing packing pretty tight in order to stay upright and so the legs don't buckle (I used washable, polyester stuffing that is specially for soft toys but you could also used material scraps if you wanted).  He holds up very sturdily then on his four legs, albeit with a rather John Wayne stance about the rear end!  You need to interface the antlers so they stay rigid and don't flop around too much, but as you can see here they stay up quite well.  The pattern recommends you sew the tail onto the body after stuffing and sewing up, however I chose to insert his tail into the seams between the body and gusset before sewing, as I think it looks neater.


I've finished him off with a ribbon round his neck and a little spotty bell.  This is a pattern that could, with a little alteration easily become a reindeer, using grey brown colours and the changing the shape of his antlers from rounded to pointy.  There's plenty more wool in the stash for a few more friends to join him!




8 comments:

  1. Thank you Josie! He is a bit sweet, I'm going to have a tough job parting with him. He will go to a good home though. Sarah x

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  2. What a sweetie! Lovely way to use small offcuts of fabric.

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  3. Yes AWR it's a great stash buster. Even the smallest snippets can be used up. Sarah X

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  4. I love him, brilliant gift - if you can bare to part with him!

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  5. He looks great. Love it. Like the fabric choice!

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  6. Thank you Sonja, yes I've got quite a bit more tweedy fabric and have cut out another one already. Glad you like him!

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