Above: The top of the tin. I pieced a small covering for the lid portion in Sandra’s colors of burgundy, green and pink (with cream and gold accents). To keep the ends from fraying, I backed it with fusible interfacing (the knit tricot kind) before beginning the stitching. It really helps when working in such small scale.
I always like to add “feet” (four wooden beads) to my tins so they stand up a little higher. It also allows you to select slightly longer trims for the sides. The bottom was first covered with a thin green fabric (you can still see the writing beneath it, but that is not a big deal; I just wanted the tin covered). The purple flower was just a machine-embroidered motif on the fabric. I thought it would be cute to include it.
The inside is a quilted satin fabric - a vintage piece I have had for years and use sparingly here and there. I actually did the inside FIRST by glueing down the two lining pieces and then glueing trims down to cover the raw edges.
And of course, once it was finished, I filled it with some lacey goodness for Sandra!
Until next time,
5 comments:
Oh Wow!! This is so cool and so lovely-what a neat idea.
This is very pretty!
That turned out beautifully Cathy!
What a sweet little tin! She's gonna love it...!
This is definitely something I want to try. It is so cute. The problem is that I am afraid to use glue. It gets everywhere except on the places where I want it.
Post a Comment