Tag Archives: fast

Veterans’ Day Poppy

On November 11th of every year, many people in the Western world honor our veterans. Mostly by wearing poppies.

This year, I am making out own simple felt poppies to wear, and I am sharing it with you.
They take little time to make, so if you have red and black felt (or a black button) you can have one to wear in under an hour. A few people and an afternoon could have a basketful to donate, hand out, or sell to raise money.

You’ll need a strip of red felt and a disk of black felt (use your scraps!) and thread (I have used quilting thread, doubled sewing thread, and 2 strands of floss. It’s not seen, but will need to be strong to not break when pulled).
Of course, you’ll need a needle and scissors and possibly a tapestry needle to help pull the thread tightly.
I’ve included the pattern.

So the first thing you’ll need to do is cut out your poppy flower and center. You want to cut on the solid lines. The dashed lines are your stitching lines. You do not need to transfer them. You can scale the flower up or down at this point.


For the petals, you want to start at one corner with a knot, and stitch along the long curve and up each petal. This is a simple running stitch, and not too tightly. The dashed lines are a pretty good size to go by.

Then you want to carefully pull the thread so the felt bunches up on itself. This is where a toothpick or large needle can be helpful. You can use this time to nudge the petals into whatever shape you want to. When the flower is bunched, attach the end to the area you started, drawing the flower into a circle.

Then you can put that aside, and work on the center. The center can be a button or a disk of knots, or anything you want. Here I used a black felt disk. Stitch around the outside and pull it closed again. Then take a few stitches across the back so that it flattens out and sits well

Then you simply use the thread you have tightened and tack it to your petals.

Tie it off to finish it. At this point, you can add a pin back if you have one and want to. or, you tie the thread off and clip it

And you are done. If you make one, please show me! 🙂


Holiday Angel for a quick stitch

Every once in a while, you need a homemade present you hadn’t thought of. It’s the realization that the holiday is closer than is appears, or that there will be an extra at a gift exchange, or that there’s a party you were just invited to. And people the people who we are, we often want to embroider one.

That’s where this little angel comes in.

I think she is really cute!

A simple little dear made with bits you probably already have at home, that you’ve kept because they will be useful some day!

And today is that day! 🙂

This is my little angel made with red, gold and brown floss, and beads on natural colored felts. I stitched a face on her.

no face, halo!

This is the same angel with different stitches and colored felts, and with a halo instead of a face. I forgot her face! And she’s still cute.

Denim angel!

And this one is actually made of old jeans off the scrap pile and Kreinik metals from the San Francisco School of Needlework and Design’s Burlesque Challenge.

I think she’d look best with both a face and a halo, but she is cute no matter what.
What you’d need for each angel is scraps of thread and felt (or anything that would not unravel too easily), anything you’d want to embellish with (ribbon, metals, beads), and of course, your needles and scissors and ‘regular stitching supplies’. And the pattern that is included below. You will want two of each pattern cut, to cover your stitching, unless you are in a real rush.

Just choose your favorite border stitches and go to town, embellishing until you are out of time. Stitch the two wings and bodies and faces together (if you have two faces) with a button hole stitch, and assemble with the face on the dress and dress over the wings with the hanger between the body and wings. And you are done.
If there is any interest, or even if there is not, I may get a full PDF together with how to do these angels.

Angel in pieces!

Happy Holidays! And Happy Stitching!