This fabric star ornament tutorial walks you through step-by-step instructions to create a unique folded fabric ornament
Today I got to teach a demo for this fabric star ornament to the Houston Modern Quilt Guild. I did a video tutorial, but because I didn’t caption it I wanted to accompany it with a picture tu…
Learn how to make a beautiful and unique folded fabric star Christmas ornament using vintage sheets. This Christmas ornament tutorial will walk you through all of the steps.
This fabric star ornament tutorial walks you through step-by-step instructions to create a unique folded fabric ornament
Make folded Danish stars from fabric to decorate for the holidays! With just one straight seam, even the kids can get in on this holiday project.
Today I got to teach a demo for this fabric star ornament to the Houston Modern Quilt Guild. I did a video tutorial, but because I didn’t caption it I wanted to accompany it with a picture tu…
Make folded Danish stars from fabric to decorate for the holidays! With just one straight seam, even the kids can get in on this holiday project.
Did you ever make these folded stars out of paper strips when you were a kid? ;) I've been playing around with making these Danish ...
Patchwork Flat Star Ornament for Christmas DIY Tutorial, Patchwork Star Ornament Christmas Decoration
How to Make a Fabric Star Free fabric star ornament pattern and tutorial
I learned how to make these adorable folded star ornaments at my traditional guild at least 10 years ago and haven't seen them anywhere since. I used this activity as a final assignment in an introductory Instructional Design course and boy was it ever fun to watch a 6'5" man who works as a parole officer learn how to thread a needle! Here's a brief tutorial for making these ornaments, which can be for a Christmas tree or a Solstice celebration or even as a way to celebrate a graduation - anywhere you'd use a star. It's all about the fabric choices. Materials: 3 strips of fabric 2" x 7" - can be all the same colour, all different or any combo you like. one or two buttons, no more than ½" wide. If choosing two buttons make sure their holes line up. 8" length of twine or embroidery floss Directions: Create Triangles: 1. Lay strip of fabric right side down, short end closest to you. 2. Fold up bottom corner to opposite side of strip and line up fabric edges, creating a right-angle triangle. Make sure the bottom corner is pointy. 3. Fold triangle up so that the side aligns with the edge of the strip. 4. Fold again, aligning side of triangle with the edge of the strip. 5. Continue folding the triangles until there's only a small flap of fabric left. 6. Tuck this rectangle into the folded triangle like a tab. 7. Press if desired. 8. Repeat steps 1-7 for two remaining strips of fabric. Assemble Ornament: 1. Lay one triangle long side up, and the other triangles on either side, with the long sides facing out. 2. Place the middle triangle on top of the left triangle, 3. Stack the right triangle on top, aligning the triangles as shown. 4. Secure the stack with a couple of hand stitches. 5. Attach the buttons on both sides of the ornament passing the needle all the way through both buttons from one side to the other (this is why you want the holes to line up). (Alternative: no buttons or just one button sewn and another glued). 6. Make a loop with the jute and knot the end. 7. Slip the loop around the top triangle, bringing it in behind. 8. Tug the loop up to catch on the button stitches. 9. Finished! Enjoy!
DIY Fabric Christmas Patchwork Star Ornament Free Sewing Patterns
OK, can you believe four months today Christmas Day will be over? We started a Christmas countdown at this time last year, so throughout the year I have been collecting ideas (and discarding them, too!) ready for the fray. In fact I have even prepared my very own Christmas list... more of which later, however Christmas is also about presents and to that end, I have two bow makers which I am going to give away to two lucky winners who post on this post by Friday 29 August 2012. So no more shilly shallying, let's get cracking, you will need: Paper, pencil, protractor (go on you know you can borrow it from your children's new school set... just to see if it works), a ruler and paper scissors Christmas fabric scraps Pins, needle, thread, dressmaking scissors, small sharp scissors Fish knife Ribbon or hairy string Iron and ironing board Wizard little bowmaker (I will be giving away two, Merry Christmas!) Stuffing - kapok, polyester filling Buttons for decoration (optional) We are going to start with the star, this is a classic six point star used in quilting, yep, you are learning another technique by stealth... If you want to make the big star which will be 7" wide then start by drawing a line 3" long, for the smaller star which is 5" wide draw a line 2" long. Now we are going to use our protractor for good (not evil maths), line it up the line at the bottom of your protractor goes along the line you have drawn, at the left hand side mark it at 70' and the right hand side mark it at 110'. Draw a line up to this point measuring 3" for the big star and 2" for the little star. Draw a line along the top which will also measure 3" or 2" creating a rhombus, you have just created your pattern template. You can either use just this one or cut out half a dozen. Choose six scraps of fabric which sit well together and on which you will be able to cut out two of your templates, iron the fabric. You need to lay the template so that the longest line through the centre of the template lies along the warp of the fabric (parallel to the selvedge). Pin the template to the material and cut out two diamonds in each fabric. Spend a couple of minutes working out how you want to arrange your star. Take three of the diamonds, using a 1/4" seam allowance (if your machine does not have markings then use a permanent marker and draw a line a quarter of an inch from where the needle goes down and use this as your guideline). Start sewing from the outer edge into the centre but stop 1/4" from the end ... this is really important, otherwise you will not get a sharp pointy star. I usually use my old and trusty hand Singer so that I have to work at a slower pace and allegedly I will make few mistakes - who is laughing at the back? Now pin the other side to the middle diamond and sew it as above. Press the seams open, yes I know this goes against your quilting and patch work principles but you have to have faith in me... just this once. Do exactly the same for the other side. When you look at it from the right side, you will see the centre point of the middle diamond 1/4" from the edge ... how clever are you? Pin the two sides together, ensuring that the points meet in the middle, I do this by putting a pin through the point on one side and then through the point on the other side to make sure that they meet exactly. If when you sew it together they do not sit correctly, undo it an start again, otherwise it will annoy you forever and it will only take a couple of minutes to correct it. Iron open the seams down the centre. Next we are going to create the back using the same technique, however don't lay it out with both sides laying face up as the arrangement will not work ... believe me, I did it ... twice! What you need to do is lay the completed star right side down and place the matching diamonds on top, with right sides uppermost. Repeat the steps we took to create the first star. Take your ribbon, I visited my ribbon stash and found some festive red ribbon from Jane Means, fold it so that the loop of the ribbon reaches the mid-point of the star and make it about 8" for the large star and 6" for the small star (you may want to adjust this to suit your decorating scheme). Take one side of the star, lay it face up, choose which point is going to be uppermost and fold the ribbon in two with the two ends lying over the point of the star, pin them in place. Take the other star and place it on top, pin it in place but leave a gap on one of the sides as we will turn the star inside out through this aperture. Sew the star together. Trim the excess fabric from over each point and turn the star inside out, use the fishknife to poke up into the points to make them really sharp. Start to fill the star with stuffing, do this by using small amounts, I know it is tempting to ram it all in to save time but this will give you an uneven lumpy filling, so small and often is the way. Pin the open sides together and slip stitch (this is a small diagonal stitch) them together with a matching thread. To make your bows, put two dowels in the holes for the size of bow that you want. Run the ribbon round the back of the dowels and take the left hand ribbon towards the right dowel. Next take the right hand ribbon over the top of the left ribbon and round under the back ribbon and bring it back over the top to the front. Make a loop by bringing the the left hand ribbon over to the left hand side. Thread the right hand through the loop, pull both ends until you are happy. Slip it off the dowels and gussy it up... now you have perfect bows every time. I have two of these little gadgets to give away to two posters who leave feedback and I will announce the winners on Friday 29 August. For some reason the smaller stars look better with a couple of buttons sewn through the middle, use two buttons so that the star will look good from each side when you see it on the tree. You will have noticed that I also made a heart, yep we are doing a bogoff on techniques this week, we are going to do some crazy patchwork. I bet that you have in your fabric stash, bits of fabric that are too small to do anything with yet, you cannot bear to throw away and that is what we are going to use. After cutting out the diamonds we are left with odd shaped bits and we can make use of those. Remember how we made a heart template earlier this year from a biscuit cutter, either use that or cut out a new template. Find a small square of fabric and sew another piece to one of the side, repeat this with square shapes and triangles until you have sewn together enough to cover your heart template... once this is done you are officially the Dolly Parton's mum of patchwork with your very own fabric of many colours, just like her mother made! Pin the heart template to your patchwork and cut out the heart. Repeat for the other side. Now you can leave it like this but I remembered a fantastic crazy patchwork tea cosy that my mum had which was made of velvet and silk scraps which had herringbone embroidery joining them together, so I used the herringbone stitch on my machine using a contrasting thread to sew over all the seams. Insert the ribbon loop in the same way that we did with the star, pin the heart together with right sides facing and leave a gap on one of the sides so that you can turn the heart inside out. Once you have sewn it together, ease the curves by cutting little notches into the curves so that the fabric will not bunch and pucker. Turn the heart right side out, using the fish knife to get that lovely point at the base. Stuff the heart with small amounts of stuffing until it is filled to your satisfaction and slip stitch the opening shut. Add a bow to the bottom of the loop and now you have another Christmas decoration for your tree. Don't forget to pop by on Friday to see if you are one of the winners. And now is the time to go and look at Handmade Monday... and just think with it being a Bank Holiday weekend you will have plenty of time to kick back and enjoy it all For those of you who are wondering why these are Chris's Christmas decorations, well they are for my brother who as a little boy always referred to decorations as decormorations... although I still feel his greatest skill was walking down our stairs head first on his hands, do you think 50+ is possibly too old to try this?
You Can Easily Make Several of Them in an Afternoon! Woven star ornaments made from paper have a long history. They’ve been popular in Scandinavia, Germany and other countries for decades, maybe even centuries. It’s easy to see why. They’re simply beautiful. These ornaments can just as easily be made from fabric, and it’s super …
This fabric star ornament tutorial walks you through step-by-step instructions to create a unique folded fabric ornament
Decorate for Christmas! Quick. Fun. Easy. Fabric Ornaments Fun projects that you will want to sew all year long! Add texture to your Christmas sewing projects in a fun and unique way. INTRODUCING 6-Point Star Ornament Pattern 8-Point Star Ornament Pattern Tree Ornament Pattern 6-Point Star Fabric Ornament Pattern Easy technique. FOLD. PRESS. SEW. Easy folding and sewing technique for QUICK and FUN star ornaments. Perfect for any celebration! - Great for scraps - You can use them to decorate gifts or your Christmas tree or table. They are also great as coasters. Learn to sew 5-point stars- the quickest
How to make an EPP Christmas Star decoration using Aurifil 80wt thread.
I learned how to make these adorable folded star ornaments at my traditional guild at least 10 years ago and haven't seen them anywhere ...
The final ornament in the Ornament Along is here. I’m officially obsessed with making fabric ornaments, especially since I’m discovering some pretty rad things to make. I’ve seen gobs of tutorials on how to make these using recycled paper, but nothing with fabric, so tada…. now there is one. Here are the supplies you’ll need: […]
DIY Fabric Christmas Patchwork Star Ornament Free Sewing Patterns
Welcome! Back in the day (10+ years ago!) I created this free tutorial for my readers and it's become one of my top ten most popular projects! I hope you enjoy this "Vintage Betz White" tutorial and consider becoming one of my email list subscribers! Join my email list for fresh new content, freebies, discounts,
DIY Christmas Scandinavian Star Ornament DIY Tutorials+ Video
Decorate your Christmas tree and presents with Scandinavian woven fabric stars. And the best thing, no sewing machine required!
Quilted Holiday Star Ornaments (No Sew) You could make one of these every year year. Keep them for yourself, or give them as a gift. Once you learn the technique, you can put photos on fabr…
Decorate for Christmas! Quick. Fun. Easy. Fabric Ornaments Fun projects that you will want to sew all year long! Add texture to your Christmas sewing projects in a fun and unique way. INTRODUCING 6-Point Star Ornament Pattern 8-Point Star Ornament Pattern Tree Ornament Pattern 6-Point Star Fabric Ornament Pattern Easy technique. FOLD. PRESS. SEW. Easy folding and sewing technique for QUICK and FUN star ornaments. Perfect for any celebration! - Great for scraps - You can use them to decorate gifts or your Christmas tree or table. They are also great as coasters. Learn to sew 5-point stars- the quickest
This fabric star ornament tutorial walks you through step-by-step instructions to create a unique folded fabric ornament
I learned how to make these adorable folded star ornaments at my traditional guild at least 10 years ago and haven't seen them anywhere since. I used this activity as a final assignment in an introductory Instructional Design course and boy was it ever fun to watch a 6'5" man who works as a parole officer learn how to thread a needle! Here's a brief tutorial for making these ornaments, which can be for a Christmas tree or a Solstice celebration or even as a way to celebrate a graduation - anywhere you'd use a star. It's all about the fabric choices. Materials: 3 strips of fabric 2" x 7" - can be all the same colour, all different or any combo you like. one or two buttons, no more than ½" wide. If choosing two buttons make sure their holes line up. 8" length of twine or embroidery floss Directions: Create Triangles: 1. Lay strip of fabric right side down, short end closest to you. 2. Fold up bottom corner to opposite side of strip and line up fabric edges, creating a right-angle triangle. Make sure the bottom corner is pointy. 3. Fold triangle up so that the side aligns with the edge of the strip. 4. Fold again, aligning side of triangle with the edge of the strip. 5. Continue folding the triangles until there's only a small flap of fabric left. 6. Tuck this rectangle into the folded triangle like a tab. 7. Press if desired. 8. Repeat steps 1-7 for two remaining strips of fabric. Assemble Ornament: 1. Lay one triangle long side up, and the other triangles on either side, with the long sides facing out. 2. Place the middle triangle on top of the left triangle, 3. Stack the right triangle on top, aligning the triangles as shown. 4. Secure the stack with a couple of hand stitches. 5. Attach the buttons on both sides of the ornament passing the needle all the way through both buttons from one side to the other (this is why you want the holes to line up). (Alternative: no buttons or just one button sewn and another glued). 6. Make a loop with the jute and knot the end. 7. Slip the loop around the top triangle, bringing it in behind. 8. Tug the loop up to catch on the button stitches. 9. Finished! Enjoy!
Welcome! Back in the day (10+ years ago!) I created this free tutorial for my readers and it's become one of my top ten most popular projects! I hope you enjoy this "Vintage Betz White" tutorial and consider becoming one of my email list subscribers! Join my email list for fresh new content, freebies, discounts,
A Beautiful Decoration for Any Time of Year! Simple folded paper stars have been used for Christmas ornaments and other occasions for generations. We think of them as Scandinavian but they’re popular in many European countries and elsewhere. Now we can make the same stars from fabric. Each star can be all one color, or …
Welcome! Back in the day (10+ years ago!) I created this free tutorial for my readers and it's become one of my top ten most popular projects! I hope you enjoy this "Vintage Betz White" tutorial and consider becoming one of my email list subscribers! Join my email list for fresh new content, freebies, discounts,
A Beautiful Decoration for Any Time of Year! Simple folded paper stars have been used for Christmas ornaments and other occasions for generations. We think of them as Scandinavian but they’re popular in many European countries and elsewhere. Now we can make the same stars from fabric. Each star can be all one color, or …
DIY Christmas Scandinavian Star Ornament DIY Tutorials+ Video
You Can Easily Make Several of Them in an Afternoon! Woven star ornaments made from paper have a long history. They’ve been popular in Scandinavia, Germany and other countries for decades, maybe even centuries. It’s easy to see why. They’re simply beautiful. These ornaments can just as easily be made from fabric, and it’s super …
A Beautiful Decoration for Any Time of Year! Simple folded paper stars have been used for Christmas ornaments and other occasions for generations. We think of them as Scandinavian but they’re popular in many European countries and elsewhere. Now we can make the same stars from fabric. Each star can be all one color, or …
A Beautiful Decoration for Any Time of Year! Simple folded paper stars have been used for Christmas ornaments and other occasions for generations. We think of them as Scandinavian but they’re popular in many European countries and elsewhere. Now we can make the same stars from fabric. Each star can be all one color, or …
DIY Christmas Scandinavian Star Ornament DIY Tutorials+ Video
I shared this tutorial at Ucreate a couple weeks ago; here it is for those of you that may have missed it. This idea came to me when I wa...
I stumbled upon this cool tutorial over at Sofie Legarth's blog . It's in Danish, so I endeavored to make an English version because I'm ...
I stumbled upon this cool tutorial over at Sofie Legarth's blog . It's in Danish, so I endeavored to make an English version because I'm ...
It's that time of the year! I started sewing for Christmas! There are so many beautiful Christmas prints and so many patterns out there, isn't difficult to choose what to sew first?? I love to make these stars (pattern here) from fabric with metallic accent. The simple stars are quick and easy to sew and you can make them in any size you want. This is a great project for small scraps. The pattern uses fusible web; I have a big box with leftover scraps from other projects so it was great to use some of them. The kaleidoscope stars
Vary the Fabrics for the Season! Prairie points stitched to a round base make wonderful stars to enjoy on a tree during the holidays. They will also be fun hung just about anywhere around the house. Choose Christmas fabrics or make them up for any season. We can imagine these adding a whimsical note to …