Friday, February 28, 2025

Just Ducky

 I shared a bit of this at the end of January of this year. Now it's time to show you the completed book. Or as complete as it's going to be for now; there could be further embellishments in the future, you never know!

 This began with another child's handkerchief, folded in half to create the outer cover. I put a piece of quilt batting between the two layers of the hanky to stabilize it and give it a bit of substance. It's amazing how thin many of the vintage hankies are.  

I quilted around the Sailor Duck and eventually around the border print as well. The dragonfly was created commercially from felt.

The body of the duck hanky was plain so I added the corner from a lady's hanky and the seashell to fill up the blank space inside the front cover. Next to is is the lacy border from some yardage.

Flipping over the lace you find a duck print I've had for years in my quilting stash. To dress it up a bit I added the laces and rick rack.

This is what you see when you turn over the duck print page. The base of the page is fabric from an old handmade apron. I added the bit with the bird from another quilter's cotton and a piece of a woven ribbon to decorate that page. The lace on the facing page is blanket stitched to a piece of wool felt. I do like a variegated thread. 😁

 Turning over the lace...

You have the felt (for needles and pins if you like) and opposite, a side-opening pocket made from vintage cloth with more lace and a ribbon across the top. The vintage laundry tag serves as a tag on the pocket's edge. The little yellow bird is printed on the flannel that makes the base for this page. I added the little bit of feather stitching. 

Turning over that pocket-page you come to the center spread of the book. Somewhere I had acquired this strip of lace that had already been hemmed on one edge. By stitching up the sides and across the bottom I was able to turn it into pockets large enough to store packets of needles. Again, I added the strip of lace across the top (which creates just enough of a flap to help hold the needle tubes in place). I also stitched through the lace to divide the width into four narrower pockets. The fabric underneath the lace pockets is vintage feed sack.

On the other side of the center spread we have the flannel printed with another cutie pie duckling. I added some simple straight stitches to enhance the image. Just for kicks I sewed a scrap strip of the vintage cloth to the top of the page so it hangs loose. It echoes the green of the wool felt opposite (more storage for needles or pins). 

Lace over felt again (the other half of what you encountered at the beginning of the book), and the page I shared in process at the end of January. Purely for fun and decoration. 😊

Turning that over...


 The other half of the ducky print overlaid with another piece from the quilter's cotton embellished with embroidery stitches and a plastic rhinestone dragonfly. And the other half of the wide lace.


 Here you see the inside of the back cover. Another corner from a lady's hanky. I added the feather stitched foliage between the rosebuds and the metal charm and pink butterfly button. I've had that button forever! I was pleased to find a place for it finally.

To fill in the blank space on the back cover I simply stitched on a bit of fussy-cut lace. I like that some of the laces and edges peek out of the top and bottom of the book. This feels really lovely in the hand. Soft and squishy (except for the tubes of needles in the middle!). It measures about four inches tall and 4.5" wide. The handmade apron I used for a page base had ties made from a narrow green bias binding. I'm using a strip of that to tie the book closed although I haven't attached it to the book in any way. 

So there you have it. This was a fun project. I especially like finding ways to utilize the vintage linens that would otherwise sit in a pile or a drawer and rarely be seen. The engineering involved in the construction of pages and pockets and such is still new to me. I'm definitely learning as I go. I've already begun the next fabric book (and had to undo half of what I'd done too soon in the process). There's no telling when you'll see how it turns out. Hopefully, we'll all live long enough to see that day!

 

1 comment:

  1. One of the eyelet fabrics is what I think we called ' Broderie Anglaise" way back in the late 1950's or so. The book is a delight from front cover to back page.

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