Thursday, February 16, 2012

Cowly Coolness


I made myself a very cool . . . what is it?  It’s a hat.  It’s a scarf, a cowl?  It can also be a shrug!  A friend asked me to make a tutorial.  That sounded like fun, so here it is! 
I went to JoAnn’s looking for a half yard of fleece and 1 and 2/3 yards of a coordinating brocade.  I bought a remnant of black fleece.  I had decided that I needed a black hat anyway.  The remnant had to be at least 18” long to be big enough.  That’s ½ yard if you just go to the cutting counter and ask for it. (say they didn’t have a color you like or something)  Getting the remnant is more economical though.  I am so cheap!  A half yard of the fleece will work since it’s so wide.  It’s almost 60” once you cut off the selvage edge where it’s kinda funky.  My remnant was a few inches too big so I cut it down to 18” across.  
A remnant of brocade won’t work, since a remnant is a left over bit (usually less than a yard) and you need a yard and 2/3.  I found mine in the red tag fabrics in back. (again, cheap) Cut your piece 21” wide
 Now, make sure that the two pieces are the same length.  Sew the short ends of each piece together to make two loops. Because a brocade tends to fray easily, I also zig zagged the seam on the brocade. Press the edge of the brocade loop to the inside,(the wrong side of the fabric)about ½” using a cool iron.  (my iron is so cool, eh?)  No.  I'm saying don't melt it by going hot!




 
Lay the wider, brocade fabric loop inside the narrower, fleece loop with the wrong sides facing each other and seams separated by about an inch.  Fold the brocade over again and pin it to the fleece on both sides.  Sew around both sides.  Clip the threads and you’re done!  See how easy that was?  You can slip it over your shoulders like a shrug (I'm not crazy about the look) or wrap it around your neck, twist it in the front and then slide the second loop over your head.
I hope you love it as much as I love mine!




1 comment:

A Batty Biddy's Blog said...

I realized once I was done that I had put the fleece lining in inside out so the seam allowance shows if it's not put on carefully. *sigh* Am I going to take it apart and fix it? ARE YOU KIDDING?