Showing posts with label fyi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fyi. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 1, 2015

FYI: Introducing The Sew What Club

Have you heard about The Sew What Club? It's a site, shop and program dreamed up by Kelly of Sewing in No Man's Land to get deliver brand new, exclusive sewing patterns from your favorite designers every month. And I am excited to be a part of it! Along with many of your favorite designers/bloggers. In addition to designing exclusive patterns for Sew What Club members I'm also an affiliate, which means this post contains affiliate links, and if you click on one and subscribe I'll receive a small compensation.


The program launches today and Kelly has two fantastic children's patterns and one women's pattern ready for July. I sewed three dresses for my girls using her darling Lyon pattern. (The dress in jersey from Girl Charlee, the middle in a knit from Denver Fabrics, and the bottom in a heavy weight knit found on Etsy.) In two days! It's so quick! And especially comfy in jersey. I've got another in the works already.



There are 2 options for joining The Sew What Club. You can join the women's patterns or the children's patterns program. Or, of course, you can do both! Every month with the children's patterns option you will be sent two downloadable PDF patterns, one on the first of the month and one on the fifteenth. They will be from Kelly Crawford of Sewing In No Mans Land and from a featured guest designer--which is where I come in at least once in the next year, along with all these fantastic women. 


Take a look at the two July children's patterns, Annecy and Lyon, available exclusively through The Sew What Club


And then there is the women's pattern for July, Lille. Isn't it beautiful? I can't wait to make one. Casual or dressy, that's the question. It looks like such a flattering style.


If you have a goal to sew more for yourself this year (as I do), you may want to choose the women's subscription for The Sew What Club. Each month you will be sent an exclusive women's pattern created by Kelly or one of the guest designers.

To join you have two options: a low monthly price or a discounted annual price. You can find all the details on the new website.

Along with the monthly patterns, members will receive additional sewing project patterns in the monthly member newsletter. Members will also be able to participate in monthly social media events with prizes from fabric, pattern and crafting companies, all just for sewing up the month's pattern and sharing it on social media sites.

You can find all the detailed information on the The Sew What Club website. To celebrate the launch of the club membership rates will be discounted this week!

I don't know about you, bu I love have something fun and creative to look forward to every month. 

Sunday, May 10, 2015

FYI: My Motherhood and Identity, 2015


Before I was your mother, Loves, I had a mother. You would have adored her. She would have eaten you up! We would have had to say, “Stop!  Please! You love us too much!” But we wouldn’t have, of course. We would have enjoyed it—there’s no such thing as too much.

She would have been a grandmother like none other. Well, like her grandmother, actually, from what she told me. I knew this about her. It’s just that, it wasn’t until I lost her that I realized how completely she was a mother. By this I mean a mother was what she aspired to be. All she aspired to be. It was the sum of her hopes and dreams. It was her dream come true.

I can tell by your wide eyes that you find this interesting, but also, curious. Why am I telling you this? I know, this description wouldn't have been all that interesting to me either while my mother was still organizing our family gatherings, kicking off yet another tradition, and calling to check on me when I was too busy to talk. But, now that she is gone I realize what it meant.

My mother wasn’t conflicted about her role. My mother was educated, she worked part of the time and she even successfully launched a new career in her fifties. A fifty-something drug rep, with silver white hair, competing with all those twenty-something blondes and beating her sales goals. She was something! She was good at whatever she did away from home, but her passion was being a mother. And more importantly, she didn’t care to be defined differently. If she enjoyed recognition from her colleagues or friends or community she was happiest if it had to do with her homemaking.

I remember when I was nine following her shyly through our house as she gave a tour to friends who had asked to see it. They were impressed by the hardwood floors she had refinished with my father, and the curtains she had sewn, and they oooed and ahhhed at my younger sisters’ bedroom. It was a Raggedy Ann and Andy theme. She made life-sized dolls, and a ceiling swing for the dolls to sit in, matching twin bedspreads and pillows. She was a good cook too--the best cook in their dinner group they would say. And she was the kind of grandmother who would get down on the floor to play with her grandchildren. I remember her about six weeks before she died, laughing and barking under the table. On all fours under the table! And she was on oxygen. When we were finally brave enough to talk about what was coming, she told me she had one regret: that she’d only been a grandmother for eight years. It was too short.



Sometimes I hear her voice in mine when I am singing. I remember my mother saying once when my sisters and I sang with her, that we all the same voice. She was teary about it because she thought it was beautiful and I think I rolled my eyes. But the realization keeps coming, as I decorate your bedrooms, and cook for your aunts and uncles and cousins, and sew your Easter dresses, and cry easily, and feel this overwhelming compulsive need to nurture our family. I am in most ways my mother’s daughter. And you are my daughters, which is why I am telling you this. Because you will push against what makes me me and her her, or you will embody it. Or maybe you will find something in-between. You are so young; it is too early to tell. But I want you to know and try to remember what has made me the happiest. Because for you--for women, and mothers especially--value and identity seem to keep getting trickier.

While your little sister napped this afternoon I asked you two what you thought I did before I was your mother. “I don’t know. Sewed… typed on the computer… Kissed daddy.…” You are right. I did all of that. But I did more. It’s so funny that you have no idea of my life before I was your mother, but it is perfect too. That’s how it should be. But you will learn that, unlike my mother, who left college to marry my father and had me when she was barely past twenty, I graduated and had a career before I even dated your father. I was an overachiever, a teacher’s pet. If there were honors to be handed out I usually received one. I went to an East Coast women’s college where the environment was designed to help me become a woman who could change the world. Many of the graduates have. But I never wanted to change the world. Somebody needs to. But I can’t think on that scale. I just want to focus on you three little people and your father. And so all that education didn’t necessarily help me become what I truly wanted to be.

I fell into advertising and was able to earn a lot of money working on technologies that might change the world, even if I didn’t. I presented marketing recommendations to rooms full of executives. It was fun. I felt valued. I might have run the office, but I switched to part time work when I had you. I remember sitting in my office after a great client meeting, feeling competent, successful, and seeing a picture of you, and thinking, “That was great, but I choose you. I choose you!”

I decided to stay home full-time when your little sister was born. Years before I became a mother I had been learning to knit and crochet baby hats, and was buying matching sweaters in three sizes and making detailed activity plans for family home evenings we would have once you arrived. At book club I had been envious of all the stay-at-home mothers—their days sounded much better than mine, even if I did get to travel and eat at nice restaurants. I wanted to drive in a preschool carpool too.
Maybe I love this so much because I had to wait for it for so long. But I was still a little bit embarrassed when I told some people I was quitting. I know generations of women fought so that you and I could be educated and have careers. And sometimes I thought my identity as “working-professional-turned-mom” might precede me as I dropped you off at preschool, and showed up for the first grade Halloween parade, and took my turn hosting a playdate. That those work accomplishments would somehow lend me more legitimacy, more value, than that of being a stay-at-home-mom. But people know me now as your mother, and surprisingly, being your mother is enough. It doesn’t need to be more than that. There are all sorts of left-brained justifications for staying home with you, but I want you to know that being your mother is also what inspires me. You are my muses. Everything I love to do, I can do for you, or with you, and teach you to do too!

I used to have a fantasy about driving home a fancy convertible for your father as birthday surprise. I thought it would be so great to be able to afford that gift. But then I rode a bike with him on a Sun Valley trail with two of you in tow and I realized that was the better dream, and it was real! Sure, some days I wonder what I’m accomplishing and so I have to detail my activities to your father in case he wonders too: “I unloaded the dishwasher, and then I took Scarlett to preschool, and then I went to Costco, and picked up Scarlett, put Tess down for a nap, and by the time I had things put away it was time for Audrey to come home…” And I still get frustrated, because I didn’t become a different person when I decided to do this full time. I am still overcommitted with homemaking and housekeeping things, and task oriented, and deadline driven—always trying to pull off the impossible by squeezing in one more project before we leave town. And it’s true, I am a “bloggy” as you and your father call it, because I fell the need to record what I am sewing or knitting, or cooking, and, yes, it’s nice if someone else gives me a pat on my back. 

But I think what I am learning as your mother, as we try to keep improving our rhythm of school, and picking up, and playing and eating, and loving, while things keep changing, is a lot more important than what I was learning while developing new marketing messaging or earning a raise. And even if every day doesn't involve a spontaneous field trip, or end with a creative art project, I am so glad I am the one who gets to argue with you about what you are wearing every morning, and make your lunches, and pick you up from school, and read to you from Little House on the Prairie. I’ve realized being there for all the ordinary things adds up to being there. And that means a lot. I would hate to miss any of it. I am not waiting for you to be a bit older so I can get back to what I really enjoy doing. I am happy, doing this.

When I asked, “What do you want to be when you grow up?” you answered, “a vet” and “a marshmallow.” A marshmallow? But, who wants to be a mom? “Ummm, kind of.”  I hope you will get to be whatever you dream of being. Go to school as long as you can, and work in an interesting job. Travel. Be brave. Be interesting. Be you. Maybe one of you will change the world. But whatever you do, I hope you will make time to be at home with your children, too. And I hope you will feel passionate about things you can do from home so that when you make the choice to be mothers there will be plenty to keep you interested, and busy and happy. Bring enough experience home that you don’t feel like you are leaving your true self somewhere else. Because whatever you become as women you can be as mothers too. If you are detail-oriented, or creative, or handy, or funny, or a great researcher, that will make you a better mother too. I can’t wait to see it.

But what do you think I’ll do when you grow up? “Help us with our kids,” you say. I sure hope so. I choose that!


****


This essay was written a few years ago for an ebook compilation on motherhood and identity. The ebook wasn't published so I am free to share it here. As I re-read it I think about what I would say now about the way I view being a mother, since different things take a front seat at different times. And I feel the need to add a disclaimer about this being my individual view and experience and not an admonition. But rather than "update" this, or offer a bunch of caveats, I think I'll leave it for what it is, and wish you all a Happy Mother's Day. 

In church somebody commented that Eve was called The Mother of All Living before she even conceived children. All women have motherhood in our makeup. It is our potential and our destiny, whether we are birth mothers or not. I am so grateful to all the women who have mothered me and my children. Their wisdom, encouragement and love have made all the difference!


Thursday, April 9, 2015

FYI: Spain Itinerary and Highlights (Traveling without Kids)


A couple of years ago in April this was my view! Fields of poppies streaming past my window as we drove between cities in southern Spain. It seems like a dream. It was dreamy, in fact. I never shared a report here but when I threw a Spanish-inspired brunch a few weeks ago I couldn't stop thinking about this beautiful trip and thought I'd share it with you. 

When my husband and I were planning our ten-day itinerary I looked online for stops along the way that would inspire the sewist/pattern designer/knitter/mother/foodie in me but it was difficult to find a write up, so perhaps the highlights I share here will help you when you have the opportunity to visit Spain.

Click to read all the details.

Tuesday, March 24, 2015

FYI: I'm in the New Fat Quarters Book (Giveaway)



Hi Friends. It was a very happy mail day when this book arrived in my box. Fat Quarters: Small Fabrics, More Than 50 Big Ideas is a fantastic book, which lives up to it's title. There are so many great project ideas in here! And I'm giving one away so be sure to scroll down and enter.


Not only was I thrilled to have a copy of this book for my own sewing scheming, but it's the second book to which I've contributed a project! It's so exciting to see my work in print. I have two projects in the Babies & Kids section: My Child's Fat Quarter Reversible Apron


And a little baby dress made entirely of fat quarters.



I had so much fun developing these projects (over a year ago) and I hope others will enjoy sewing them too.


This sweet dress has a vintage vibe, which I love for babies, but it could be modern colorblock too. 



The apron lends itself to all sorts of creative possibilites, especially given the pom pom trim. I love giving these as birthday gifts.


And just wait until you see all the other projects! This book will spur a whole new fat quarter binge.


Would you like a copy of Fat Quarters: Small Fabrics, More Than 50 Big Ideas for your very own? You can enter in the widget below.





a Rafflecopter giveaway

Tuesday, January 6, 2015

FYI: Happy New Year! (and some thoughts on Christmas)


With school out for the girls and family in town, the past two weeks have felt like a much longer time between 2014 and 2015. It was endless Saturdays with lots of hosting and playing and some intense deadlines to finish presents and get things ready for January. It's kind of nice to get back into the routine. I had a couple hours to myself yesterday to sit down and start a list of things to do this month and this year now that the holidays are fading.

But before I launch into business as usual I wanted to wish you a happy new year! I hope your holiday celebrations in December were beautiful and warmed by love.  I found that the things that meant the most to me this Christmas were Advent Sundays singing Christmas carols as a family, listening to Handel's Messiah and the Nutcracker all day long, attending Christmas plays and concerts with our girls, having them help me decorate gift tags and wrap presents, and gathering as a family to eat and play. 



I'm finding that I enjoy the shopping and the buying and the gift lists less and less (unless it's a Sub for Santa activity). Less of that really is more. I loved finding inspiring ideas for incorporating the story of Christ throughout the month (such as these advent ornaments and this Christ Themed Advent) and had the girls help me paint our own wooden ornaments to use next year. Like many of you I'm sure, I tried to take stock during the hustle to determine which activities really add to the season and which detract. One of my goals for 2015 is to fine tune our Christmas celebration to make it reflect more the true story of Christmas. If there are gifts given I want them to be heartfelt and needed and given from the heart, ideally with a bit of sacrifice. This year I sewed little clothes to go with the Waldorf dolls I made for my girls last year, and they were the gifts I enjoyed giving the most because they were a labor of love and creativity. I wish every gift I gave felt that way. For most of us "needs" aren't very material, and material "wants" are pretty easily fulfilled, so they don't lend themselves to purchased gifts in very a fulfilling way.

The best gifts, especially at Christmas, aren't purchased. They are acts of unconditional love and kindness and selflessness. I was reminded of this when my husband shared something from a lesson he gave in our church the Sunday before Christmas. This encouragement from President Howard W. Hunter is such a beautiful reminder of how we can truly recognize the season:

"This Christmas, mend a quarrel. Seek out a forgotten friend. Dismiss suspicion and replace it with trust. Write a letter. Give a soft answer. Encourage youth. Manifest your loyalty in word and deed. Keep a promise. Forgo a grudge. Forgive an enemy. Apologize. Try to understand. Examine your demands on others. Think first of someone else. Be kind. Be gentle. Laugh a little more. Express your gratitude. Welcome a stranger. Gladden the heart of a child. Take pleasure in the beauty and wonder of the earth. Speak your love and then speak it again.
Christmas is a celebration, and there is no celebration that compares with the realization of its true meaning—with the sudden stirring of the heart that has extended itself unselfishly in the things that matter most." (“The Gifts of Christmas,” Ensign, December 2002).

In fact, "extending oneself unselfishly in the things that matter most" is a really great resolution for the year.

Best wishes in giving yourself to the things that matter most to you in 2015!


(This year's Christmas Card featured three of the people who matter most to me, in a photo from one of my favorite projects this past year.)

Monday, October 27, 2014

FYI: In the Top 10 and Could Use Your Vote!


I'm so excited to have my Day of the Dead Doll selected for the Cricut Design Space Start Top 10 for Round 4! Yippee! There were so many great projects created for this round of Holiday Decor. You can check them all out on the Cricut Design Space Star Pinterest Board.


Voting is open through Friday of this week (also known as Halloween!) and I would really appreciate your vote. There is prize money involved, which would be pretty fantastic for stocking up on creative supplies before the holidays!

Thursday, September 11, 2014

FYI: Contributor in the Jo-Ann 2014 Fall LookBook


I have been so excited about this project, and have been keeping it a secret since last Spring! I was asked to contribute to the Jo-Ann Fall Trends and Ideas LookBook 2014, which was unveiled this week! It's full of great sewing, knitting, crochet, and crafting ideas for the Fall based on four big trends for this next season.

I was working away this past summer on my projects, which was pretty interesting for me since I'm usually playing catch-up instead of thinking ahead a season. It's so nice to have some fun things ready to share this Fall.

I can't wait to wear this ribbed maxi scarf. Isn't that particular shade of lilac beautiful? Such a great color for the Fall Pastels trend. It's a very simple pattern to knit too.


I have been a fan of paper-covered composition books for some time and was so happy to find this fun, masculine paper at Jo-Ann. I added a leather cord too for a stronger Masculine Statement.


My daughter, Scarlett, was the recipient of this plaid taffeta wrap skirt for Sewing with Style. I love the emerald green and sapphire blue hues in this fabric. She can't wait to wear it!


And, lastly, I've got a throw-on-and-go costume for myself for this Halloween! For Chic Halloween I created a satin opera collar cape and added extra embellishments to a sequined mask.

I'll be sharing tutorial for all these projects in the next few weeks, but in the meantime you can check them out in the Jo-Ann Fall Trends and Ideas LookBook 2014 and link to all the instructions by clicking on the project photos. You can see the amazing projects from the other contributors too: Delia Creates, Simple Simon and Company, Girl Loves Glam, and Brit+Co. Such a list of talent! I can't believe I'm sharing the pages with them!

Thursday, July 31, 2014

FYI: My Bernina 580 and WeAllSew Partnership


Hello Friends. If you follow me on Instagram you may have seen some big Bernina boxes arrive a few months ago. This Spring I was lucky to receive an incredible Bernina 580. I had been in the market for a new machine for a few years and have had such great feelings about Bernina since I learned to sew on my mother's Bernina Record. (I still love that machine and sewed with it for a bit while awaiting my new one--still stitches like a dream!)


Since unboxing it, I have attended classes to learn the bells and whistles of the Bernina 580. I have a feeling I've just scratched the surface and I'm saving up to start acquiring specialty feet. (Pintucking! Ruffling! Button sewing! oh my!) And I haven't even unboxed the embroidery attachment--can't wait to give that a try! Can you imagine...? Maybe an embroidered yoke is in my girls' future.


I have been giving this machine quite a workout this summer. Seems I've been sewing nonstop! I am really happy about the performance and stitch quality. It's nice to think that my projects will be as professional as possible--any limitation is my own, not the machine's. 

But I've been busy blogging too, including some exclusive content for Bernina's Blog, We All Sew. If this isn't one you follow, you need to get over there and check out all the great content! I'm so happy to be one of their new partners! You can see my profile here and here are links to my first two posts for We All Sew:


There is more to come so I'll be sure to keep you in the loop on the projects I create for Bernina and We All Sew.

Tuesday, July 15, 2014

FYI: Kid's Clothes Week and Shop Discounts

Are you planning to sew next week during the Kid's Clothes Week Challenge? It's July 21-28 and I'm in! It's a lovely continuation to my past weeks of kids' clothes sewing! I'm so hooked. Not that it's much of a new thing but I've been in a groove of sewing quick, casual summer clothes for them. Every day clothes rather than Sunday dresses. I'll be getting back to the Sunday dresses (my first love) but first there's the challenge next week.
You can sign up to sew along on the KCW website.


And to help you compile your to-sew list, I'm offering discounts in both my Etsy shops from now through the 27th. You can take 20% whatever you have your heart set on. All the sewing patterns in my Wee Muses Etsy shop, and all of the patterns and printables (why not?) in my Aesthetic Nest Etsy Shop.

Just use the code KCWSUMMER

One code. Two shops. All the stuff.


Enjoy!

Sunday, May 11, 2014

FYI: Mothers and Angels


"The errand of angels is given to women."

This is the first Mother's Day I haven't hosted a gathering of siblings to celebrate the mothers among us and the memories of the mothers who have gone before us. It's nice to not be so busy today but I also miss the gathering. Not to mention the distraction. It is such an amazing gift to be a mother myself. Nothing is better then the three smiling faces who greeted me this morning (even if it was a bit early for my taste). But there is still that twinge of missing my own mother. The one person who loved me the longest and most unconditionally, and who knew me the best. I miss her encouragement and honest advice and enthusiasm for all good things, especially her family.


I am awed today by the blessing of a good mother, and mother-in-law. I would have liked to have had them here longer but I had them. And I still have them. They are examples in so many large and small ways. I was thinking of my elegant mother-in-law yesterday when I was getting ready for a formal event. She was admired for her grace and style, but those weren't her best qualities. She was incredibly generous and smart and loving and a great sport! She raised an incredibly good son with whom I share my life. She was so thrilled to be a grandmother. Every child deserves a mother such as these and I hope I can emulate them in some way for my daughters. 

"One of the best ways to have a little bit of heaven in your home is to have someone you love in heaven."
My friend, Suzi, shared this anonymous quote with me today.

I know these women are parenting me still in ways I don't understand. I imagine them consulting with each other and cheering me on. I've felt them flanking me when I've felt lonely for them on my daughters' birthdays. I hope they will nudge and inspire me in the important things that lie ahead. (Please, oh please....) Parenting is the most challenging, rewarding and instructive thing I've done. Thank goodness for these influences.

"There are few things more powerful than the prayers of a righteous mother." 
source: Boyd K. Packer

My mother prayed me into my own motherhood. I know she did. And she promised me she would continue to pray for me after her death. Thank you, Mom. 



I love to think about the generations of women who preceded me. I wish I could chart the qualities, talents, personality traits and physical characteristics they passed on to their daughters and eventually to me. It's fascinating to think about how they've shaped me. 

My mother's mother, Verla, lost her own mother when she was eighteen. She was so capable and an incredible example of enduring to the end. What poise she had no matter her circumstance. She maintained high standards and was a woman of few words but we had some tender conversations in the years between my mother's death and hers. She was my confidante. I knew she loved me very much. And I owe her for the joy I find in sewing: she sewed for and taught my mother, who sewed for and taught me, and I cherish the handmade things she gave to me.


My father's mother, Lola, set a dinner table that was unparalleled. Food was a manifestation of her love. She made every sort of homemade relish and preserve and bread and cookies. I loved her sugar cookies with a slivered almond on top and her mustard pickles. She was a horsewoman in the mountain west and a dress model in San Francisco and after she was married went from a comfortable city life to the hard work of a farm. She raised a large family and never ceased taking care of them and worrying over them despite her own illnesses. She loved to read and watch basketball games and knitted sweaters for her grandchildren. I still have the monogrammed set she knit for me when I was a baby.

I envy the gathering of these women in a place I cannot visit. I envy too the gathering of mothers and daughters here. How amazing it is to be able to pick up the phone, or stop in and visit, to ask your mother for advice! 


Thank goodness for the other women who mother my children: My sisters and sisters-in-law who support me and all my funny ways, and love my family without judgement. My friend who watched Audrey from 3 months of age when I worked part time and has since cared for all my girls when I've worked or had an appointment or just needed some help. She is like a sister to me. My mother's best friend who remembers my girls' birthdays and lets them climb in her lap for teasing and hugs. A neighbor with an open pool for swimming and another who always has German candies for them. The woman who lives behind us and is teaching Audrey to quilt! The girls' great aunts who send emails and packages. Their teachers at school, church, swimming and music. I appreciate the individual ways they care for and nurture my girls. And I am so grateful for my friends who are raising children now too and teach me by their examples. They had wonderful mothers who helped them into the women they are.


Motherhood: It's the highest, holiest service assumed by humankind. It's the definition of selfless service. It's both a daunting responsibility and a glorious opportunity.

Happy Mother's Day to all the mothers and women who mother.

My "FYI" posts share news or a perspective about something that's been on my mind. You can read them all here.

Monday, December 30, 2013

FYI: Merry Christmas 2013


Merry Christmas, Friends! I hope you've all been enjoying some time making memories with friends and family. The best part about this holiday for me is gathering. We have spent a lot of time with family making the dishes we've enjoyed for years, eating meals together, singing, playing games--and a first for our girls this year, skiing! 

I was happy I managed to squeeze in some traditional cookie baking so we've had plates of them sitting around to nibble on. I also managed to sew some handmade gifts, which I'll share in a bit. Didn't manage to finish new Christmas dresses so I think they'll be New Year's dresses. (Thankfully they aren't red and green.) But the compromises were worth it for more time with people (a lesson I keep trying to learn when facing a long list of tasks for people!).

We mailed out a Christmas card again this year (one of my favorite traditions)--this time of my own design. You may recognize what the girls are wearing: a combination of Easter dresses and the pom-pom trimmed Bateau Neck Dress

It's a good time of year to reflect on our many gifts. The people who enrich our lives and the blessings we've received and the faith that sustains us. I'm thankful too for the opportunity to make things and share them with you.

Best wishes this holiday season for the things you are celebrating, and happy new year!


Monday, September 30, 2013

FYI: Posting for Sew Ready to Play


Have you seen the "Sew Ready to Play" series hosted by I'm Feelin' Crafty? It's such a great concept: bloggers are invited to sew something inspired by a favorite children's game. There have been some great posts inspired by classic games and some that are new to me. 

I am participating today with a tutorial for a Little Piggy Pouch inspired by the "This Little Piggy" rhyme. I used the beautiful Nursery Versery fabric by Heather Ross for Kokka and came up with a pouch that seems consistent with the character of the fabric and illustrations--a bit of batting and some raw edges to add texture. You can view the full post here. Oh, and I made Tess a little outfit to match, of course...
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