April 4, 2016
The Great Canadian Craftsy Bag Tour
Welcome to the beautiful city of Montreal. Bienvenue à Montréal, la plus belle ville du monde, in my opinion. (I didn’t need a translator to write that, in case you were wondering.)
We’re kicking off a whirlwind road trip across our great country, and if you hang with us all the way to the end, there will be rewards. I promise you, there will be some lovely rewards up for grabs. But you can’t bail on us partway. Go to the bathroom before we leave because we’ve got a long distance to cover in only 7 days and we’re not stopping at every Tim Horton’s we see!
So this happened and, as usual, halfway through I was asking, “What the hell did I just get myself into??” A couple of months ago, I got an email email from Craftsy, my favourite online place for learning cool stuff. In fact, I have nicknamed them “Cracksy” because the classes are so ridiculously addictive. The email was a call to affiliate bloggers to write reviews, among other things.
Now, before I go any further, I want to be sure you understand that this post has some links that are affiliate links, and others that are not. Craftsy provided the classes to us free of charge in exchange for our reviews, but they placed no restrictions on what we can or cannot say. That means all of the opinions I express — good or bad — are my own. (Not that I’d listen if they tried to tell me what to say, anyway.) Back to my story…
Right around that same time as the email, I had come to the decision that my blog was going to focus on Canadian content as much as possible, and Canadian Designer and Instructor Janelle MacKay‘s class Mix & Match: Clutch Bag Techniques had just released to rave reviews… Ding, Ding! How about a blog tour with all Canadian bloggers and featuring our hottest new celebrity? Yes, Please! I was off and running with mainly only my left brain doing the running. Yes! I ran in a few circles…
…
I finally managed to not make up my mind and ended up watching and reviewing not one, but 2, Craftsy classes — a free class taught by Kristin Link of Sew Mama Sew, and a paid class taught by Nicole Vasbinder of Stitch Craft. Both classes were designed around sewing a tote bag and a zipper pouch, so why not do my own comparison and mix & match?
Let’s step back a little and get clear on what Craftsy is and how it works. According to their official corporate wording, “Craftsy equips you with the tangible skills, quality materials, access to inspiring… [ … ZZZZZzzzz-zzzz…] … Yep! it’s that exciting. And I find it doesn’t do the reality of the experience any justice. The Craftsy I know is a learner’s wonderland of classes that, once you buy (or win), you can access for life and watch as many times as you please.
With everything from scrapbooking to woodworking, photography to metalsmithing, sewing to gardening, it’s a crafters dream and crafter spouse’s nightmare. Oooooh, ooh, oooh! I very nearly forgot! They sell fabric and notions and project kits and patterns… and they have a ton of free patterns, and crafting guides on their blog, and they support indie pattern-makers … and, and, … and … [pant, pant, pant] I need a paper bag! (and a crafter spouse with a fan.)
Whew! that was intense…
I signed up for an account in the early days when the company’s little feet were still wet, so I’ve watched them grow. I’ve seen them make some mistakes — little ones and some doozies — but they’ve come a very, very long way since then. From some of the worst editing ever (well, besides me trying to use Windows MovieMaker to make films of my cats) to what has become one of my favourite features: the high quality of video production. Like I said, they’ve come a long way from those early days.
But my absolute fay-vorr-eet thing about Craftsy is their dealer customer service. I don’t know how they can manage to solve problems so fast and keep so many people happy and coming back. It feels good, it really does, almost like a fix of Cracksy. Pause here. Take a moment, contemplate your cuticles, and decide if you want to continue reading. I’m about to introduce you to the gateway drug and if you start down that slippery Craftsy slope, don’t say I didn’t warn you. At least your hand-basket will be well made.
Bag-Making Basics: Reversible Tote & Zipper Pouch
Right up front, I’ll say I like the instructor, Kristen Link. She has a calm, soothing tone and she’s really easy to watch.
This was one of the first classes I ever took on Craftsy, because it was free and I wanted to try it out before committing. (That and I was broke and learning from all the free resources I could.) It’s not often you come across an instructor who understands and is willing to adapt her teaching methods to the multiple ways that people learn. The learning style is what has to be honoured in any teacher/student relationship and the teacher has to be flexible enough to adapt. Kristin aced that! Especially considering that there are only so many ways you can change things up when you’re dealing with a recorded video format.
The instructors for free mini classes like this one aren’t required to participate in the class discussions and answer questions, so I wasn’t surprised that Kristin rarely showed up in the conversation threads, but the other learners were just so helpful that it’s ok to give the instructor a break. In the paid classes, you would have instructors answering questions and participating in the discussions.
As much as I liked her and loved the class, I did take issue with her pinning style. I’m not a big fan of sticking those pins in willy-nilly, just because you happen to be facing that way. Pinning could be a whole other blog topic, if I get started. Everything else was well done, extremely clear and easy to follow. She paced herself nicely and didn’t go into too many details, which would be great for a confident sewist who is just trying out bag-making. For the new sewist who just got their learner’s permit, it would be a challenge to piece together how some of the steps were completed, so keep that in mind.
I know that review sounds lukewarm and bland, kinda like leftover unsweetened porridge. (It’s good for you but it doesn’t inspire you to take a picture and post it on Instagram.) Then suddenly, you lift out your spoon from the bowl and find the tastiest morsel of crispy bacon with cheese … Kristin is the only instructor I have ever seen/heard teach sewing inside corners the way she does and it was one of the best tips ever in my sewing. I stored that yummy bit away in my brain when I watched the class eons ago, and started using it on every corner including the corner store. Yet, for the life of me, I could not remember where I learned the technique. I even spent a day doing Google searches to see if I could find where I first came across this ingenious piece of information, but nothin’! That is, until I watched it again for this review post. Lightbulb! and a smack to the forehead! (So now I’m blinded and concussed. Not the best condition for sewing or writing.) I won’t tell you what her technique is. You’ll just have to go watch the class and see for yourself. (What are you grumbling about?? It’s a free class, for Pete’s sake!) My corners have never been the same. If only she could do that for all the drivers in Montreal…
In most free classes that you can watch (yes, I’m looking you, YouTube addicts!), you won’t get as many valuable take-aways as you will with this class. If you have to start somewhere free, this is the place to do it. And lookee! You get to make little prezzies for your friends and they’ll say, “Wow! I didn’t know you could sew!” and you’ll blush, and they’ll get all uncomfortable watching you turn red, and you’ll shuffle your feet and… Ok! nevermind. Nicole is waiting…
Learn to Sew: Simple Bags
Unless you think you know everything there is to know about sewing (Seriously??), rush right over to Craftsy and get this class right now! It is worth every single penny, even if you pay full price. (Which you won’t have to if you click… right… here! Go on, click it. I dare ya!)
Nicole Vasbinder is the kind of teacher I want to be when I grow up. She’s got a charming way of delivering the material starting at the very beginning and covering every step in detail. For years, I’ve used driving analogies to teach dance, and now I use them to teach sewing. Picture my delight when I found Nicole doing it too! She’s thorough, and she knows what she’s doing. No kidding! Fan Girl crush happening here. I just love this woman! She’s like a great big platter of Singapore Pepper Crab. (Put that on your bucket list.)
One of the (rare) sensible reasons I chose this class to review was because I wanted to compare what you get in a free class with what you get in a paid class. Both Kristin’s lessons and Nicole’s take you through the construction of a tote bag and a zipper pouch, so I figured that would be a level field for a fair comparison. While the difficulty of the actual sewing skills needed for the two classes were at par, there were a few key differences other than porridge and crab.
Kristin’s class assumes you have the necessary sewing skills and vocabulary to follow a pattern, but Nicole’s class starts you off with all the basics you need if you have just taken your first-ever sewing machine out of the box. (Well, she did skip over the part where you plug it into the wall socket and flick the power switch, but come on! You can handle that if you’re on the internet.) This is not so much a bag-making class as it is an introduction to sewing, with the bonus of having made some pretty cool bags at the end of it.
From start to finish, this is one of the best investments a beginner sewist can make (along with buying good quality thread and a decent iron, but don’t get me started!). I’m convinced a lot of people don’t like sewing because they never learned the right way. This, my fellow travellers, is. the. right. way!
I have to stop gushing like a schoolgirl and confess I did have a couple of issues with the class. (Of course I would!) The pattern for the pouch is unnecessarily complicated with cutting out the corner notch before sewing. There are two ways I know of to “box” your bag corners. (If there are more, I’d love to hear about them in the comments.) There’s this way that Nicole shows in her pouch lessons, and there’s the other way that Kristin shows in her tote bag lessons. Kristin’s way is much easier. But (yes, there’s another “but”. What did you expect?), there is method to Nicole’s madness. Because this class is geared toward teaching you all the introductory skills you need to start making prezzies on your new toy, she wanted her students to practise using a printed pattern. It would have been very silly to give you a pattern that consists of a rectangle. (She already told you how to cut a rectangle in her fold-over tote lesson.)
The second problem was that she didn’t top stitch around her zipper. I’m sure that lining will eventually give up on its sharp crease and end up stuck in the zipper teeth, kinda like how you gotta make sure you have a toothpick if you’re going to eat a mango. I went ahead and top stitched mine because I just don’t want any lining (or mango) in my teeth.
Despite those two nitpicky points, I’m still geeking out over her teaching style and how much information she packed into those classes. But you know what nearly made me swoon? It’s that Nicole is so accessible and helpful on the discussion board. She gets some of those questions that might seem obvious to anyone who sews, but in every one of her responses, she’s respectful and answers in the simplest terms. She’s the kind of teacher I want to be when I grow up. (I swear I just had a deja-vu moment.)
I can totally hear some of you saying, “I’m not buying a class if I can YouTube it!” Ahem! You start messing around with free videos when you have zero clue, there are plenty of wannabes out there ready to steer you wrong. Invest in this one class, like you invest in your sewing machine, and at least you will have enough know-how to choose your free videos wisely and actually enjoy sewing. There’s nothing sadder than a sewing machine collecting dust in a corner because its owner got frustrated and quit. By the way, if that’s your sewing machine stuffed behind the TV console, I’ll give you my address and you can send it over here. I welcome free sewing machines … Wait! come to think of it, yes, you go on over to YouTube and let me know when I can expect my new machine…
Seriously though, I think these classes are great but there’s one important thing I would change about both of them. It’s that the tote bags came out too floppy for my liking. I couldn’t even get them to hang for a decent photo without crumpling. Quilting cotton just doesn’t hold up well on its own so I would suggest either using home decor fabric or adding stabilizer to them. I can’t stand a bag that can’t stand on its own!
As for the final product, I much preferred Nicole’s tote bag because it had more style to it. It is just as practical as Kristin’s but the design is something I find more aesthetically pleasing. Kristin’s tote has a utilitarian look that makes me want to shove it in the pocket of my coat for those unplanned stops at the fabric store. (I like to go green with reusable bags.) On the other hand, Kristin’s pouch wins hands down for me. It has a neat compact look to it. And with the zipper on the face instead of the top, if I drop it while it’s open — I’m not saying I drop things often — but if I were to drop it, all the contents wouldn’t roll across the floor and pick up cat fluff and then become a hockey puck for the critters’ entertainment. You know what I mean, right? Or maybe I just don’t like boxy pouches.
Let me add one more thing here: it was the biggest challenge for me to just follow directions as is, no hacking, no tweaking, no changes. But if I were going to play fair on this review, I had to do it. (Um, except for that itty bitty topstitching cheat, but let’s not dwell on that.) Now that it’s over, I can do all the hacks and mashups I want. (Maybe another post in the future?)
So just to wrap this up with a confusing driving analogy… If you like to offroad with a Toyota Prius and risk life and limb to learn sewing, by all means, YouTube away to your heart’s content. (Don’t forget to send me your sewing machine.) If you like to hit the highway and use “the force” with your internal navigation to get you there, start your engine and go visit Kristin for a quick gas up. If you have yet to pass your driving test, get Nicole’s class before you hit the road.
Or more simply, Nicole teaches the absolute beginner to use their sewing machine and she follows up with enough detailed sewing instruction for them to easily complete a project they can be proud to show off. Kristin‘s class teaches the steps to assemble a bag and a pouch, along with the best cornering tip ever!
Get the free class here: Bag-Making Basics: Reversible Tote & Zipper Pouch
Get the beginner sewing class 50% discount until Apr 11, 2016: Learn to Sew: Simple Bags
Thanks!
Before I give you the links to visit the upcoming stops on your tour across Canada, I have to thank Craftsy for the free classes that we reviewed. And our superstar Craftsy instructor, Janelle at Emmaline Bags for being our anchor in this adventure and for donating one of the prizes in the giveaway. We’re also very grateful to Celine at Blue Calla Patterns for graciously donating a prize even though she’s not participating in the tour.
Giveaways
What’s all this about prizes? Nobody said anything about prizes? Of course not! If I’d told you about the prizes, you would have skipped to the end and not read all my painful painstakingly good writing. (I know coz that’s what I’d do!) Here we go…
We have some amazing prizes for you to win in two separate giveaways:
Giveaway 1:
First, the easy one. All you have to do is click to enter before April 11, 2016. The prize is an enhanced Rowan 3/4 Patch Tote Bag Kit, which includes the PDF pattern, Kaffe Fassett fabric and Pellon fusible interfacing.
Giveaway 2: Prize Packs
You gotta do a little something to be entered in the second giveaway. Sign up for my newsletter to get a wake-up call. Come back here on Sunday, April 10 for your chance to win one of 4 prize packs. Prizes include patterns, bag bling, a Craftsy class, more patterns… There are some extra special bonuses and discounts in the newsletter, but you don’t have to subscribe. You can always set your own alarm to come back and visit on Sunday.
Coming Up on the Tour…
Tuesday, April 5
Sprouting JubeJube — Sew Sturdy: Home Organizers with Annie Unrein
Lulu & Celeste — Sewing With Oilcloth: Bags & Baskets with Kathy McGee
Wednesday, April 6
Happy Okapi — Sew Sturdy: Travel Organizers with Annie Unrein
Thursday, April 7
Michelle’s Creations — Mix & Match: Clutch Bag Techniques (with the most famous Canadian besides Justin, Celine and Ted Cruz)
Friday, April 8
Shelaine’s Designs — Sew Better Bags: The Weekend Duffel with Betz White
Tangled Blossoms Design — 20 Essential Techniques for Better Bags with Lisa Lam
Saturday, April 9
Emmaline Bags — Recap/Roundup
Sunday, April 10
Sur “prizes”
Set your alarms to come bag here or sign up for the newsletter to get a reminder and other exclusive treats.
See you on Sunday!
Tags: Blue Calla, Canadian content, craftsy, Emmaline, Giveaway, handbag, tote bags, zipper pouch
April 3, 2016
Zipper pouch tutorial and Fabric Spark Giveaway
Reverse Applique Zipper Pouch
You’ll need:
- 8″ W x 6.5″ H accent fabric (exterior back)
- scrap piece accent fabric
- 8″ W x 6.5″ H solid fabric – cut 3 (2 lining and one exterior front)
- 8″ W x 6.5″ H fusible fleece or batting (optional) – cut 2
- 8″ W x 6.5″ H + scrap piece woven interfacing – I like Pellon Shapeflex 101 (optional) -cut 1
- 1/4″ wide sewable double sided tape or fusible webbing, such as Wondertape (optional)
- 7″ zipper
- hexagon template or ruler (about 3″)
Once you have the pieces cut, fuse the interfacing to one piece of the solid fabric. On the wrong side (the interfaced side) trace a hexagon where you’d like it, keeping at least 1/2″ away from the edges. Draw a second line about 1/2″ inside the hexagon; this inner line will be the one we’ll cut, so mark it as a dotted line or use a different colour so you don’t accidentally cut the wrong line. Now cut the inner hexagon, then make notches at each corner, meeting the outer line, but don’t cut through the main hexagon shape.
Construction of Zipper Pouch
Gathered Pouch
- 12″ W x 4.5″ H (or wider for more gathers) of bottom exterior fabric – cut 2
- 8″ W x 2.5″ H top band fabric – cut 2
- 8″ W x 6.5″ H lining fabric – cut 2
- 8″ W x 6.5″ H fusible interfacing – cut 2 (optional)
- 7″ zipper
Rounded Pouch
Now for the Giveaway!
March 25, 2016
Hey Mercedes Sew Along Round-Up
I thought it would be fun to share some of the bags that have been completed so far. If you’re still working on yours, or haven’t started yet, you still have a bit of time. Maybe these versions will inspire you to finish yours up. You can also refer to the sewalong after the contest is over.
Crystal of The Cloth Albatross showed me this fabric before she started and I wasn’t totally sold, but she did wonders with it. Her Hey Mercedes bag turned out beautifully. I love the pretty lining and antique brass hardware she chose.
|
March 18, 2016
Spring Sales
Mother’s Day Sale
|
SAVE 10% on ALL FLARE FABRICS GIFT CERTIFICATES! $22.50 not $25 USE COUPON CODE: *Coupon cannot be combined with any other sale. Coupon valid from Tuesday, May 3 to Sunday, May 8, 2016.
|
Fabric Spark is offering their Mystery Fat Quarter event this weekend. No code necessary, free fat quarter with every fabric order of 1 yard or more.
|
Fabric Please! is having a Mother’s Day Sale!You have 4 days to shop and save!
Starting Friday, May 6th until Monday, May 9th
Save 15% Storewide Use coupon code
MOM
March 9, 2016
Lost in Translation: Filet de Tissu and Others
In case you haven’t heard, my sewing room is currently overrun by orphaned cats waiting for their medical records and new homes. Until I can evict the cute little furries with a clear conscience there’s no sewing going on at my place. And that leaves me time… You’ve heard the expression, “Idle hands are the devil’s workshop” so you understand that I should not be left unsupervised.
Lots of time for Facebook!
I belong to a lot of sewing groups on Facebook, and one of my favourites is a group for Canadian bag makers. Several group members (including me) recently bought the pattern for the Creative Maker Supplies Case from Sew Sweetness. It requires mesh fabric for the inside pockets, and some sewing supplies are kinda hard to find North of the 49th Parallel.
—–Last night—–
Melissa posted in the group asking which suppliers carry the mesh for these cases. And at some point, the conversation thread veered off on this tangent:
Me (an “Anglo” living in Quebec): This question is making me look [mesh] up in French because I will have to go into my local store and ask for it. The store owner (and only employee) doesn’t speak any English so I use hand signals a lot. There are about a million different translations for “mesh” but I’ve narrowed it down to maille or filet. Does anyone know which it would be? Do you have a package handy with both languages on it? Please!
Joanne: The french translation is “filet de tissu”
Me: Thanks, Joanne! Off to visit my favourite shopkeeper and wave my arms around tomorrow.
Joanne: If you have a laundry bag or even something with some netting on it, take it with you. It might make it simpler to get them to understand.
Me: Great idea! Thanks. Although I suspect she’s secretly entertained by my flailing arms and pathetic attempt to remember my high school French. You shoulda seen me trying to ask her for low-loft fleece. There may or may not have been some baaaaa-ing going on. And wouldn’t you know it, I remembered the word for sheep after I walked through the entire store and found it myself. And for the record, the word for “sheep” and the word for “chin” are just too damned close!! You flip one flippin’ “u” upside down and lose the last shred of your dignity right there.
—– Today—–
Thanks to Melissa’s question (and armed with Joanne’s translation), I go to see Marie, my lovely French-speaking fabric store owner. I don’t make a complete fool of myself this time but I come close, because she has no idea what filet de tissu is, even after I spell it. (I don’t trust my pronunciation one bit, especially when people do that scrunchy face and ask, “What???” so I have to repeat myself 5 times before I give up and yell it in English.) She’s convinced I want tulle. I look at her tulle, and nope! that’s not it.
So, I go down the street to the dollar store, buy a laundry bag and come back to show it to her. After all that, she doesn’t have any such thing in her store. At least I have a new laundry bag, right? … but somewhere during all this, I fall in love with 3 different fabrics and they fall in love with me too because they hop in my bag…
I get to the cash to pay for the stowaways, and wouldn’t you know it! The system goes completely kafluey and starts giving random errors! I know my card works because I had just used it to buy all sorts of other unnecessary items at the dollar store. Marie says, “Just come back later with cash.” In French, that is.
I leave, drop off my purchases at home, feed the cats and since I need to go to my bank for other reasons, off I go! On the way back to Marie’s store with the money, I pass by an upholstery shop. I’d been eyeing the place since last year and didn’t have the nerve to go in and ask them about headliner fabric (used in car upholstery, and recently in handbags for that cushy stability we love so much). I’m stoked and feeling pretty brave today, so in I go! … Flailing arms, words that sound close but are ever so wrong, and a few other helpless gestures later, I finally explain what I’m looking for and the dude says, “I’ve never seen anything like that.” In frikkin English!! [deep sigh].
At least he’s nice enough that, after more chatting in English, he gives me a piece of scrap leather to play with because I want to try making a wallet out of leather. And Salvatore (the upholstery shop owner) says to me in parting, “See ya! And next time, speak English!”
[HEADDESK!!]
P.S. My card and Marie’s card reader both worked just fine after that.
Tags: cats, French, leather, lost in translation, mesh, tissu