Tuesday 11 November 2014

Made: Personalised tote bag


It's safe to say that I adore anything personalised, and I recently had the notion to make some personalised tote bags as gifts for Christmas this year. I found a great deal on plain cotton bags on eBay, so they worked out at less than 80p apiece, and raided my fabric stash for small, colourful scraps, to make gifts that are not only pretty and personal, but thrifty too.

I can't say that this make was simple ('What I wish I'd realised' below), but even allowing for my panics and mess-ups (I had to unpick the first section a couple of times) it only took an hour from step 1. to completion.

You will need...
- A plain tote bag
- A letter template (I used Commerce SF in font size 700)
- A scrap of patterned fabric
- Iron-on interfacing
- Contrasting cotton thread

1. Using a hot iron, first iron your fabric flat and then affix the interfacing (shiny side facing up) to your fabric.

2. Pin the template to your reinforced fabric and cut round neatly using fabric scissors. 


3. Carefully pin the fabric letter to the front of your bag (not through the whole bag, as I initially did!). I used a measuring tape to ensure it was exactly centred.

4. Set your sewing machine to the correct setting - you want very tight stitches for the applique to look neat and tidy.

5. Placing the edge of your fabric in the middle of your presser foot, begin sewing slowly. You may, like me, panic that your fabric isn't moving. Don't worry! The tightness of the stitches means it moves through the machine very slowly.


6. Take extra care around corners. The straight lines are simple but I struggled with guiding the fabric neatly around curves and in the corners where two lines met. Remember: less speed more haste.

7. Once the sewing is finished, give the bag a final press with the iron to neaten it up. It will have been squashed and folded while sewing.

What I wish I'd realised...

- That maneuvering the bag around the needle - and ensuring I didn't sew it shut - was going to be a tough task. But persevere - it is possible. This could be solved by making your own bag in the first place, which is a longer - but not difficult - process. That way, you could sew the letter onto flat fabric before assembling the bag.
- That sewing curves was going to be such a bitch: I apologise now to whoever receives this one for Christmas as the bottom curve of the J is a hot mess. I think in future I'll stick to letters with entirely straight edges!

15 comments:

  1. I love it! Such a good Xmas present idea.

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  2. It looks brilliant! Tote bags are always great, but personalised ones like this are even better! I'm sure the person who receives it will love it :-)

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    1. I hope so! Might give it to my mum (also a J-name) as she's duty bound to like it!

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  3. Want: Personalised tote bag.

    Looks great.

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  4. Oh, I've been thinking about something similar! You have to pay for all carrier bags in Scotland now (plastic, paper, whatever) so tote bags are suddenly ESSENTIAL.

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    1. They're introducing the same thing here next year (I think?) so yep, all the tote bags needed!

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  5. Looks great to me! I'm sure the giftee will like it too. I must remember to take photos of the bags I'm making to share on the blog at some point.

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  6. Brilliant! Projects like this make me want to learn to use my sewing machine. I just know I'd sew the bag shut though....

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    1. I went to a very basic 'how to sew a simple cushion cover' workshop, which gave me the basics I needed to use my sewing machine. I'm still pretty rubbish, but it's been so worthwhile.

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  7. Cool idea :) the bottom doesn't look messy at all, I'm sure they'll love it. I wonder if removing the bed of the machine would make it easier to manouver?...Only at some points maybe. I bet the next one will be quicker now that you've completed the first.

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    1. I deliberately did all straight lines on the second one; it was a bit speedier but not much!

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  8. What a lovely idea. It reminds me of a stocking my Mum made me for Christmas when I was little, I still have it somewhere...

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