So my confidence level was back up where it belonged J I
did really well on the drawstring dress… all 3 seams of it, ha ha. And you
remember I told you that I had purchased some Liberty Jane Patterns? Well
apparently when you sign up for her newsletter, she sends you a coupon for buy
3 get one free after a few, so you got to read the newsletters when they come
in.
The newsletters are actually pretty cool: they talk about
new patterns available and provide links to stuff real people like you and me
(well okay not me because these people actually know what they are doing…)
So I decided to redeem my coupon – I picked out the patterns
I wanted – but I have to tell you it was a struggle – I wanted ALL of them. I
knew I wanted shoes. I just had to
figure out how they made all these cute cute shoes. I have the Simplicity,
McCall’s and Vogue patterns that all have shoes, but none of them had soles…
I knew they used craft foam, but I wasn’t sure how to attach
it properly to make a sole. SO I bit the bullet and got the shoes pattern. I
picked out the cute slip-on one.
Now before this project, I had never used a glue gun before.
(I know, some of you craft gurus are shocked!) But my husband showed me how
(don’t ask why he knows – he grew up with women, maybe that’s why – or maybe
he’s just awesome like that? Who knows?)
So I started my shoe project: the sewing was relatively
simple. The only thing that made it difficult was how small the pieces were,
but then all doll clothes are, so what evs, same ole same ole. There were a lot
of parts and pieces to this, but the instructions are so well written, and so
concise that I was able to follow them to the letter. Nope, no confusing parts
for me J
Then came time to attach the soles. The sole calls for 6mm
foam – I didn’t have 6mm, so I glued 3 pieces of 2mm together. Just a heads up
guys: this doesn’t work… use the 6mm it asks for… My 2mm pieces did not want to
stay together – one 6mm piece would have been better. The 2mm gets wrapped
around the whole shoe and BAM! Awesome doll shoe!!
Check it out!! How great is this??? Thank you Liberty Jane!!
I don’t think the pictures really do the shoes justice – I’m
going to try to take some better ones.
PART 2 – I know you love my part 2’s J
I was so stoked to be making shoes (and convinced my calling
in life was now to be a doll shoemaker – ha ha ha) that I decided to test out
something I saw on the internet (Pinterest of course J)
I had seen a lovely lavender ribbon sandal on pinterest and
wanted to emulate it. I had some great black ribbon from the ballet outfit, so I used that.
I cut out a sole – one from 6mm and one from 2mm and placed
the ribbon between them (so you wouldn’t see the ribbon on the bottom) I
crossed them one over another near the toe, glued them (see pic) and then added
a loop on the back and cut a small piece to go around the ankle (that goes in
the loop) and then instead of wrapping the sole in foam, I wrapped it in the
satin ribbon.
Now I was pleased with how this shoe turned out as far as construction
– meaning, I was satisfied that I figured out how to make a great sandal. However,
the actual shoe itself was only double-sided taped together because I was only
testing the construction, plus the 6mm foam apparently needs to be cut in a
special way because mine sucked!!
It was slanted – I tried to cut it straight but for some
reason, it kept cutting slanty. L boooo
So because this was only a test piece (and only taped
together, not hot glued) I only made one. Because I was so satisfied with it, I
will definitely come back and make a set – but probably only after I figure out
how to cut my 6mm foam straight.
I also decided, while gazing at its loveliness J that
I wanted to embellish it. I picked a tiny white ribbon and cinched in the
crossed ribbons. I actually prefer it without the white, but I tied it so tight,
I couldn’t get it undone… eh… it looks okay J
Thennnnn…if that weren’t enough… you know what happens when I
get my confidence all up = I’m like “look at me I’m super seamstress!!” ha ha
ha
So I decided to do a simple slip-on ballerina style (with no
ribbons though) and added a sole. The pattern I used was from the original shoe
pattern I used (remember the ballet outfit? The shoe that didn’t go with it? That
one J)
merged with the sole of the Liberty Jane pattern.
I am pretty satisfied with how it turned out, but to be
perfectly honest, I think the sewing is kind of cruddy. L You can’t really tell because
the shoe is black, the sewing is all erratic. All in all, I think it turned out
okay, but this last shoe definitely taught me that maybe I should go back to
clothes for a while and maybe a career in shoemaking is not in my future J