Free Pattern!!
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Around The Bend
“Stick Pins” |
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A Doll Pin
Design by Ruth Prest
Think of the faces you have seen carved in wooden walking sticks or
in
tree stumps, then make the same kind of face in a little 6 to 8 inch
“stick
pin”. People will think you
carved it from wood!
Materials
and supplies needed:
Scrap
of fabric with “wood grain” look – approx. 6 to 8” square
Sewing
thread to match fabric, sewing machine
Upholstery
or other strong thread for sculpting
Milliners’
or dollmakers’ needle
Beads
for eyes
Metal
pin back or safety pin
Air
erasable marker - optional
Fine
point permanent pens, Prismacolor pencils, white gel pen
Fairfield
Soft Touch, polyfil supreme
Stuffing
fork, hemostat or other turning tool
Optional
embellishments: silk ribbon,
embroidery floss, tiny bird or flower beads or buttons
Instructions:
Use the pattern sketches below as a guide.
Trace them,
or feel free to draw your own “stick” with a different
shape and branches.
Fold the wood grain fabric scrap with right sides together.
Trace the
stick of your choice on the wrong side of the fabric.
Use shortened
machine stitch length – 18 to 20 stitches /per inch. Stitch around the
stick, leaving small space open near the
bottom for turning and stuffing.
Cut
out leaving scant ¼” seam allowance. Clip
curves, turn and stuff
smoothly, but not too hard.
Hand stitch opening closed.
Sculpting
the face:
This represents a “stick” not a person, so play with
the features!
It doesn’t have to seem realistic.
Choose an area – center,
higher or lower, along the stick where you
want to place the face.
If
you choose, use an air erasable marker to locate eyes, nose, and mouth
in the
face area you have selected. I
prefer not to mark the features
on these little characters, and just see
what develops as you stitch.
Use
upholstery thread or other strong thread and milliners’ or
dollmakers’
needle. Anchor a long piece of
thread in backside of pin.
Enter
center back of pin and exit at inside corner of one eye.
First form the bridge of the nose by making a series of tiny stitches
back and forth underneath nose bridge, scooping up stuffing with each
stitch.
Next, stitch from the last “bridge” stitch down to the nostril
area
on one side. Take tiny stitch in nostril and return to bridge area.
Repeat same stitch a second time, cross underneath nose bridge and repeat
nostril stitches on other side of nose. Use
the tip of the needle to “pick” stuffing up into the point of the nose and
the flare areas on each side of the nose. Also
“pick” up stuffing to plump up cheeks as needed.
Use
additional stitches to define a shape for each eye,
to create “furrows” in
the forehead, to shape the mouth,
and make “ripples” for a beard.
Play with the angles of
the stitches, where you enter and exit the
fabrics, and
how tight you pull the threads.
The diagram here gives a few stitch locations you might try, but
experiment with
your own pin and see how you can make different expressions.
Try making small tucks to form a lower lip or a heavy eyebrow, or to make
a ridged, textured beard.
Stitch a
bead into each eye, trying to place the bead in the same position on both sides,
so the pin looks like it’s focusing both eyes on the same thing.
Once
the sculpting is done to your satisfaction, use the fine-point marker to outline
eyes, darken nostrils, color in a mustache and / or beard, and eyebrows, if you
wish. The color and shading of your
fabric will dictate what pencil colors to use for shading.
With a pencil just a bit darker than the fabric color, shade darken the
sides of the nose and the eyelid areas, leaving or creating highlights along top of nose and on highest points of the
cheeks. Shadow in the beard areas and / or eyebrow areas.
Use a white gel marker to put white around the eye beads to make
whites
in the eyes.
| Add any additional trims – silk ribbon,
“leaf shaped” or flower shaped
beads or other kinds of beads – whatever suits your tastes.
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Add any additional trims – silk ribbon,
“leaf shaped” or flower shaped
beads or other kinds of beads – whatever suits your tastes.
Securely stitch pin back in place on back side of pin and wear
it with pride.
Just wait and see how many people will squeeze it
and ask if it is really
carved from wood!
Have
fun!
Ruth
Click
here for stick templates.
This pattern prints out
with the three "sticks" from
6 to 8" long, and 1 to 1-1/2"
across, but you can use them
any size!
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