Sunday, 15 December 2024

Free Cute Dolly Bag Pattern for you - Merry Christmas

Free Cute Dolly Bag Pattern - Merry Christmas






I recently bought a couple half yards of beautiful German fabric at a local quilt show. I was inspired by some dolly bags on the stand so came home and drew up a pattern. It's quite simple, the bags can be made up all in one fabric but look even better with two contrasting fabrics. My bags are lined with the contrasting fabric. On my second attempt I realised that the lining bottom, which is a circle can be lined with a wadding sandwich to give a bit more structure and protection to the bag, but that is an optional extra.




Pattern Pieces

Patterned fabric
2 @ 10" x  6"
1@ 6.5" circle

Contrast/lining fabric
2 @ 10" x 4"
1 @ 6.5" circle
1 @ 19.5" x 9.5"

Ribbon, cord or turned fabric tubing for the draw strings

Optional extras
1 @ 6.5" circle lining fabric
1@ 6.5" wadding

All seam allowances are 1/4 inch



  1. Start by cutting out your fabric pieces, my patterned fabric has dogs heads, (hence the doggy bag reference), and my contrast fabric is white with a tone on tone crosshatch pattern. I used a 6" circle template and cut with a 1/4" seam allowance added.


2. All seam allowances are 1/4 inch. Start by sewing the patterned and contrast fabrics together along          the long edges. Press the seam allowance to the dark side.




3. Mark a sewing line, I used a frixion pen that can be erased with the heat of an iron. I marked a line          1.25" down from the top edge, leave a gap of 1" then continue the line down the edge to the bottom        edge of the pattern fabric. See the photo for a visual description. Sew this seam leaving the 1" gap.


4. Again on the lining fabric we will leave a 3" gap, this gap will be used to turn the bag inside out later. Sew this seam leaving the 3" gap.


5. Press the seams open.




6. If you are using wadding in the base make a sandwich


7. Stitch the sandwich together with a scant 1/4" seam allowance..


8. Sew the lining body to the lining sandwich base. Gently ease in the fabric no need to push or pull at         this stage, the wadding helps with this...


9. Join the stitching with a back tack


10. Sew the outer bag to the outer bag base, gently ease in the fabric, mine went in without puckers...


11. We now have two buckets, here you see the outer bag is inside out and the lining is right side out,            this is how you need your pieces for the next stage.  Put the lining inside the outer bag, so they are          rights sides together, match  the ling seam with one of the side seams, smooth the pieces into place          so the top edges are even.


12. Sew the bag outer and the lining together along the top edge with a 1/4 inch seam..
      Turn the bag right side out through the 3" hole that we left earlier.



13. I machine sewed the hole closed or you can slip stitch the seam closed by hand. Push the lining              inside the bag and press the top edge so the seam is on the edge or just very slightly on the inside            for neatness.


14. Mark a casing line for your draw strings. I used a frixion pen which can be iron off later or you              could use a purple disappearing marker...
      I marked a sewing line 1" down from the bag top, then another sewing line 3/4" lower.
     These lines should match up with the holes we left for the draw strings.


15. Turn your bag inside out for one last time. Machine sew the outer bag and lining on these two                marked lines.


16. I've used ribbon, corded cotton rope, turned fabric tubes and my own twisted cotton cords. 
      Each bag requires 2 lengths of cord threaded in on each side. Each cord comes out from the same          hole it was first threaded into, making a circle inside the casing. Tie the cord ends together on each         side and trim the ends neatly
      With a safety pin or threader, thread your draw strings through the casing and cut to size 3-4 inches        longer before the strings are pulled together.








     Congratulations, you've made a cute little dolly bag that has a variety of uses including Christmas           Gift bags if you have some sparkly Christmas fabrics...

    And now you know the process you can upsize or downsize, just remember to calculate the maths to      fit the base.... C = (D x 3.14), however, fabric does move so a little wiggle room might be needed.....


Merry Christmas Everyone

Sunday, 1 December 2024

Everyone likes a quickie...

Everyone likes a quickie...

Well, here's two...

The first is pieced in a simple slash and sew technique, very quick but quite effective....
Quilted quite densely with a design called Kumo and a circle/popeye border...



The second is made up form a bag of remnants (I found while having a 'rummage' around in my workroom a few weeks ago). The scraps are from one of my award winning quilts. 'Still Swooning' won Overall Champion at The Scottish Quilt Championships and can be seen by clicking on this link for my blog 

and by clicking on this link for my website

The scraps were already cut but not enough to do anything special with. I used lots of background fabric for negative space and quilted with a tight Baptist fan design. I love Baptist fan quilted tightly like that, it takes a bit of experience to get it all to line up but is vey effective.



I use these small quilts for 'arm caps' on my sofas to add a bit of protection, texture and colour, coz who doesn't like a bit of extra texture and colour






Friday, 4 October 2024

Lets try this again…


OK, lets try again and see if we can resurrect this blog and keep it going, can’t promise but we’ll see… 

English Paper Piecing, or EPP

I’ve been ‘raking’ through boxes of fabric and supplies that I haven’t seen in over five years. It was a bit like Christmas seeing stuff that I'd long forgotten about. 
I came across a box of various unfinished ‘fussy cut’ hexagon rosettes. I knew I was never going to make these hexagons into quilts. Being one of those people that doesn't really have many UFOs, (unfinished objects), I decided to use them in small projects now before starting on anything new.

So, I made the hexies into pieces of fabric big enough to make shopping bags or totes. Layered the “fabric” up with wadding and backing and quilted it on my longarm, just like a quilt…
I used the three spare hexagons on a huge pocket on the back of the black bag, I divided it into three sections that will be really handy coz they go right down to the bottom...









Because these are quilted with wadding inside they are really sturdy bags. At present I'm using them to deliver quilts when necessary, but later I'm sure they will be used for shopping totes...

Well, that was a simple blog post but it wasn't without a few 'incidents', it was a bit of a palaver, adding photos hasn't gotten any easier, in the end I had to email the photos from my phone to my laptop/PC. What good is a blog without photos??
If you have any good tips about resizing photos on your iphone and blogging directly from your iphone please feel free to share....