Soft Sculpture And Stuffies

A site to talk about my soft sculpture and stuffed toy creations, paper doll artwork and tarot card art in progress. All are creative endeavors for selling at Medieval events.

Name:
Location: Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States

I'm a science fiction fan from wayback, artist, soft sculpture toy designer and cat owner.

Saturday, December 30, 2017

Day Glo Orange & Green Fleece

I kept looking at those two colors in fleece for the longest time trying to figure out how to make use of them with my crafts.  The day-glo aspect sort of eliminated most ideas right off the bat but I finally came up with a few things.

Making 'bee' cat toys was one of the newer things I'd come up with this past year. I think if I modified it to be mostly a dark brown or even a black, and use the day-glo green for the back of the body, they might make really nice looking fireflies.  

As for the bright glow-y vivid orange -- 'safety hamsters', for those beginner cats that are new to chasing prey. No sharp edges. Easy to see.  That sort of thing.  A joke item but then again it's the OWNERS you're appealing to with the shape and ideas. Cats are fine with anything stuffed with catnip.

Saturday, December 09, 2017

Cardinal Christmas Tree Ornaments


One project recently that I made up for a gift exchange with the sewing group I'm in was a Christmas tree ornament of a cardinal.  It did take me almost three hours this morning to make all 9 them (yeah, I put it off till the last day, way to go, right?).  I detailed the birds up a little by adding a red bead to the wings when I sewed them on and glued a red feather fluff behind the crest on the head.  That added SO much to the look. 

The bodies were freeform cut at first, I didn't use a pattern and I wasn’t sure how small to make them, but after doing the first two using an oval shape folded in half, I made the bodies a tad longer and a lot wider (basically doing a 6” circle).  I liked the larger ones better – which were almost life sized.  The body was the circle folded in half, I used a cotton print of red poinsettias with gold trim on the leaf edges for an extra ‘flash’ look for the bodies instead of just plain red felt.

The beak was an orange felt square 1” x 1” in size, folded and sewn in on the face to be trimmed once the body was turned right side out. 

Both the tail and wings (wings were heart shaped, I scissor cut the feathers on the sides) were made of two layers of red felt, stitched around the outside and trimmed close to get a clean look. The tail was machine sewn into the bottom corner as I machine stitched it but the wings were added separately after the cardinal was turned right side out, stuffed and the opening sewn closed. I folded the wings in half over the back and hand applied them by stitching through the wings and body only in the front section, with putting a bead on each side where the needle came out. The red metallic bead looked fine and I didn’t need to stitch around the wings this way, just stitching completely through side to side had them firmly attached.

The V crest for the head was one layer of red felt cut in a V with a rounded top, invert it so the point is up and the rounded edge and half the sides were tacked down.  That went on the front after the body was stuffed. 

At that point I trimmed the orange to a triangle shaped beak, then cut a black oval out of felt for the face.  To get the black face marking settled OVER the beak I sliced up the center of the oval about 3/4ths of the way with a scissors and the beak went through the slit, the black mask was then tacked down by hand all the way around, then the 8mm black bead eyes were added. 

I had a red marabou boa so I snipped ½” of fluff off the end of that for each cardinal – plucked the loose feathers off to discard, and just put a drop of Elmer’s Glue between the V crest and the head and tucked the feather chunk in there and let it dry.  It made a red ‘fluff’ sticking out behind the crest.  VERY eye catching!!!!!

Last thing was to take my branch sticks I’d been saving, checked them all over for the sturdiest ones that wouldn’t snap/break, and cut those about 4” long making sure they had a knob or bend to avoid letting them just be pulled off.  I sewed them on the belly as if the bird was perching, using quadruple thread on the needle.  The thread had to be on thickly.  If the stick does dry out enough and breaks at some point they can just cut the thread and have the ornament without. 

Then I added some fishing line for the hanging loop, double knotted that and it was done. They turned out really cute.  I can only do 3 an hour though.  Doing all 9 took about 3 hours start to finish.  Technically they can be fancied up further by running a very thin line of glue along the tail and wing edges and applying gold or red glitter there but I didn't feel that was needed on these.  They looked stupendous!   Everyone loved them. 

Wednesday, December 06, 2017

The Indoor Snowball Fight Cat Toy Sets

Apparently they're REALLY popular this season.  Gail put them up on her site and sold all 20 sets within a day or two, she ordered 30 more even though there's barely enough time to get them to her and her to send out to the customers in time for Christmas.

They did well at the St. Agnes Holly Festival also.  

Here's the picture off her site.
catnip-snowballs-270
They're made with the Soft & Comfy white fabric from JoAnn Fabrics, which runs $15 a yard. I cut 5" to 6" circles, gather stitch them around the edges, fill with fiberfill and catnip and then bag them into top loading zip lock baggies (the sandwich size, 5x7", which I get at American Science & Surplus here in the city, 100 bags for $3.89). 

The tags are printed on the computer and covered on both sides with clear contact paper I get at the Dollar Store (1 roll is 1 1/2 yards for $1).

It's the same circle size I use for the cauliflower cat toys which people were hesitant to get because of the toy being white, yet for some reason offering them THIS way it isn't an issue about the color.  Go figure!