Photo Courtesy of Nathan Hall |
It was almost so easy! I read some tutorials here on Make Baby Stuff and a few other tips and tut's here and there. It sounded like 4m of a good quality jersey was enough. So that's what I bought. But actually I needed 5m. So, the troubleshooting started and, with the help of a talented friend, I decided to put a 1m panel in the center. I found a beautiful (and ridiculously expensive) batik print on clearance and snagged it up.
At this point I actually got excited about my mistake because it meant I could use a more expensive print on future slings and not break the bank! The batik was considerably less stretchy and didn't have a lot of give. I was a bit worried, but it is actually more supportive for babe while still allowing you to pull it over baby's body without much work.
My sewer friend, Darcie, showed me how to sew the panel on so it would be secure (a French seam, Darcie?). And when I was sure that is would hold, I top stitched just to make sure! It took a loooong time to hem 5m of fabric. I didn't pin, just rolled it under in sections as I went. The batik was very fussy and I don't know if I would use it again. Next time I may try and taper the ends at a gentle angle for the last half meter or so on each end. It makes tying easier, but I wasn't brave enough to try it my first time.
I'm so happy it turned out and that Nathan and Cara are using it!
This is me trying Daniel in the sling to make sure it would hold up to a toddlers weight. He looks so tall!
it's beautiful! mistakes are the beginning of most great inventions, eh?
ReplyDeleteIt's true! I spend at least half my crafting time trouble shooting. Hopefully it will keep me sharp well into old age, I'm not very good at Sudoku, lol!
ReplyDelete