Tutorial: Snap Tray

Snap Tray finished - interior
Snap Tray finished – interior

After Sew Day, I decided to make one of the trays that Lynette showed in her Heavy Metals demo. I am thinking about making them for people attending the Flash Retreat in April.

The project also inspired me to get out my KamSnaps tool.

This is not a project that I invented. I know there are probably many tutorials out there. You can do searches to find others. This tutorial shows the way I made mine.

Supplies
      • Sewing machine
      • BSK
      • 2 Squares of fabric the same size. 
      • DecorBond (Pellon 809) OR
        • ShapeFlex / SF 101 or ProFuse
      • Thread
      • Turning/poking tool
      • Sewline pencil
      • Ruler(s)
        • Creative Grids 4.5 x 8.5 inch
        • Creative Grids 9.5 inch square
      • Leather hole punch** or awl**
      • KamSnaps tool and snaps or SnapSetter or Rivet Press with appropriate snaps.

Optional Tools and Supplies:

These are easy enough to make several at a time. I used a Layer Cake that I had washed and divided into pairs, but hadn’t yet used.  I have no idea what I was going to do with the squares.

Any squares will work. Use a larger square for your first one. I would not use a smaller square than a 5 inch square, but try it out. I think you could also use rectangles.

Since I don’t use DecorBond much I used that for my first tray. It made the first tray really stiff, which has its advantages. I found it hard to turn. For my second one, I used ShapeFlex. The tray was a little more floopy, but still usable.  ProFuse would also work. The takeaway is that many different kinds of interfacing will work. Try what you have at home and see what you think. There is always more fabric, right? 🙂

 

Directions

Gather supplies and materials.

      • You can use whatever color thread you like. Use a matching thread to make your stitches disappear when you topstitch. 
Cut interfacing smaller than your square
Cut interfacing smaller than your square

Cut interfacing 1/2 inch smaller than your squares to lessen bulk in the seams.

Note: in the photo above, I cut my interfacing 1/2 inch smaller, but it turned out that my layer cake squares had shrunk when I washed them and were more like 9.5 inches instead of 10, thus the interfacing is not as small as I normally like. I like to keep it out of the seam allowance if I can just to lessen the bulk.

Apply interfacing of choice to the squares according to the manufacturer’s directions. Since I don’t use DecorBond much I used that for my first tray. It made the first tray really stiff. It will still be usable. For my second one, I used ShapeFlex. Since I was making 14 or so of these, I took the opportunity to try some Featherweight Fusible (Pellon 811FF) I had on hand to see how that would work and how it would feel. 

Place squares RST
Place squares RST

Place the interfaced squares right sides together. 

Trim so the edges are square and all the threads are removed.

Draw a line to note 1/4 inch
Draw a line to note 1/4 inch

Draw a line 1/4 inch away from the edge of the fabric where you plan to have your opening for turning.

Use the line you drew or your foot to note 1/4 inch
Use the line you drew or your foot to note 1/4 inch

Start sewing perpendicular to the edge of your fabric for about 3 stitches or 1/4 inch.

Stop with the needle down.

Turn the fabric so you are sewing parallel to the edge of the fabric. Remember that you are going to leave an opening.

Sew around the edge using a 1/4 inch seam allowance, leaving a 4-6 inch opening

Sew a 90 degree angle to edge
Sew a 90 degree angle to edge

Tips for Success:

      • At the beginning and the edge of the opening, sew up to the 1/4 inch line from the edge of the fabric to stabilize the opening for turning
      • About 3 stitches before each corner, backstitch, go forward again and then turn the corner. After you turn the corner, backstitch again. this will reinforce the corner and make it less likely that you poke through the fabric or stitches when poking out the corners.

Leave a 4-6 inch or so opening for turning

Press the seams open
Press the seams open

Press seams open

Pressing won't be completely smooth
Pressing won’t be completely smooth
      • You won’t be able to press the seam on the side with the opening all the way flat, but do the best you can (enlarge the photo above to see more detail)
Turn the piece
Turn the piece

Turn the piece right sides out. Poke out the corners carefully. I use my Modern American Vintage Point Turner/Hera Marker. If you backstitched at each corner, it will help keep your tool from poking through.

Topstitch using 1/8 inch seam allowance

      • sew over the starting point and backstitch.

Fold tray in half on the diagonal in both directions.

Make holes
Make holes

Make holes for Kam Snaps using your awl or leather punch.

Measure and make a dot
Measure and make a dot
      • Measure 1.25 inches from the very tip of the folded square in towards the center
        • My friend, Lynette, uses a 1.5 inch measurement, so try both (on different trays) and see what happens.
      • Keeping the ruler in place, measure 3/8 inch down from the edge of the tray
        • My friend, Lynette, uses a .5 inch measurement. Again, try both measurements, on different trays, and see what works for you.
      • Using your Sewline pencil, make a dot.
      • Do this on all sides near each corner.

Follow the directions on your tool of choice (KamSnaps, SnapSetter or Rivet Press). You will need 4 caps, one Innie and one Outie for each corner.

 

 

This is a good project for your Quiltmaking Go Bag. You can store it flat and then use it at the side of your sewing machine while you are in class or on retreat for small tools and supplies, like snips and a seam ripper, or for trimmed threads. It helps with a little organization in unfamiliar spaces.

 

 

 

**Obviously, you should shop at local quilt shops and small businesses. However, if you are too busy or can’t find what you need there, I use Amazon affiliate links and may be paid for your purchase of an item when you click on an item’s link in my post. There is no additional cost to you for clicking or purchasing items I recommend. I appreciate your clicks and purchases as it helps support this website.

White Journal Cover

White Journal Cover #2 - front
White Journal Cover #2 – front

I think the last white scrappy journal cover that I made was in 2016

2016 seems like a long time ago, well, it is 10 years!. That is what I came up with searching the blog. It makes sense, though as I am not using the Miquelrius journals now. I also have a recollection of making one for an older journal that got lost in the shuffle last year. 

 

White Journal Cover #2 - back
White Journal Cover #2 – back

This journal cover was actually mostly made when I pulled out the white drawer recently. I put a back (inside) on it and stuck the journal in. It was a bit small, but I made it work, since it isn’t going to be entered for any prizes. I wasn’t in the mood to rip it apart. I the fabric will stretch anyway. 

 

 

White Journal Cover #2 - inside
White Journal Cover #2 – inside

The inside fabric was a large piece of Crimson Tate eraser fabric that was in my scrap bin for some reason. I don’t usually put large pieces like that in my scrap bin. Who knows?

 

Finished: EPP Ball #11

EPP Ball #11: orange & pink
EPP Ball #11: orange & pink

I finished another EPP Ball a week or so ago. This one is heading off to a Farmer’s market for my friend to sell. It’s a new adventure for me and we will see how it goes. 

I have never wanted to sell my creations, because I love making things and want to continue to use it as a method of expressing my creativity as well a way to reduce stress. 

EPP Ball #11: orange & pink
EPP Ball #11: orange & pink

This foray has a fairly low commitment. I am sending her two items to sell. I priced them on the high side, so we will see. I don’t want to encourage orders or people telling me what colors to use.

This one does not have any Beanie Baby pellets inside it. I had a reason for not including them, but I don’t remember what it is. I am working on another one and will add the pellets. 

EPP Ball #11: orange & pink
EPP Ball #11: orange & pink

Working on this project has made me want to get back to La Passacaglia, which is languishing. 

I really enjoy EPP.

Another Pink Journal

Another Pink Journal cover
Another Pink Journal cover

I had some bits of made fabric in my pink scrap drawer and they were getting in the way of me making new donation blocks. I decided to make another journal cover. The project also served as a palate cleanser after I finished another project.

This version isn’t as long as the tutorial demands. Basically, I was lazy and it works fine as is. There won’t be as much security if I were to put things in the cover, but this is a journal from 2009 and I don’t think I will be taking it off the shelves that often.

Another Pink Journal cover - back
Another Pink Journal cover – back

I took the opportunity to look through it. I saw a lot of studies for the Creative Prompt project. Those made me smile. I liked doing those drawings. It was a great thing to do while I waited for the YM.

This one includes some fun fabrics.

I am out of practice making them so there was quite a bit of ripping at the assembly stage. The inside doesn’t look that great, but it doesn’t matter.

Kristin’s Pink Journal Cover

Kristin's Journal Cover - front
Kristin’s Journal Cover – front

I made a journal cover for a friend. I meant do this task before she left her job (with the same team I was on) and started her new one, but that was a particularly busy time for me and I just finished last week.

She received it the other day and was totally thrilled. She loved the pink, which was great. She told me she likes pink, but I wasn’t sure if this was too much pink. Apparently not, which is great!

Kristin's Journal Cover -whole cover
Kristin’s Journal Cover -whole cover

I really like this journal cover and would have kept it for myself if I hadn’t planned to give it to my friend. On the plus side, I made a lot of extra ‘made fabric’ in the process of getting pieces big enough to cover the journal. This means I have almost enough to make another journal cover for one of my journals that doesn’t yet have a cover.

It is so odd to be in touch with former work colleagues. Somehow we formed a bond and I can feel it is fragile, but still there, which is heartening.

Blue Journal #2 2022

Sheesh! February already! January is never long enough for me.

2022 Blue Journal Cover #2 (front)
2022 Blue Journal Cover #2 (front)

This is the second journal cover I made the other day when I just needed to sew.

Most of the details are the same as for 2022 Blue Journal Cover #1. Most of the fabric was already made. I had to piece the flannel, but in this case, I used batting tape to keep the pieces together. Yes, that is an unorthodox trick that I haven’t tried before, but seemed to work ok. The older journals (this one is from 2005) won’t get much use until long after I am dead, so I am not to worried about the batting tape failing.

2022 Blue Journal Cover #1

2022 Blue Journal Cover #1 (front)
2022 Blue Journal Cover #1 (front)

Saturday turned out to be a kind of topsy turvy day. Once I finally got to the machine, I wasn’t really up for working on the A Place for Everything Bag. I felt defeated by it and wanted to just finish something.

I needed some new journal covers  and they are relatively easy to make. I found some already ‘made fabric’ in my blue scrap bin and stitched up a couple of journal covers.

It is pretty easy to make these when the fabric is already sewn together, so this one when together really fast. The hard part was dealing with the flannel, which I have been using for the other side instead of regular fabric. I was running out of the yard I have had for awhile and had to piece bits together. After these two I will need to go back to interfacing a regular piece of fabric. Why buy more flannel when I have plenty of fabric?

2022 Blue Journal Cover #1 (back)
2022 Blue Journal Cover #1 (back)

I probably should have used the made fabric for another blue donation quilt. I’m not really worried, though. There are always more scraps.

Yellow Journal Cover

Yellow Journal Cover - front
Yellow Journal Cover – front

I took some of the made fabric I had assembled for the Yellow Improv donation quilt and made a journal cover.

I felt like I was taking away from the donation quilt, but I’ll be needing a new journal cover soon, so needs must. I figure I have a lot of scraps, so more donation quilts are on the agenda.

This one turned out to be just a smidge small, so I had to stretch it to get it on the journal (Miquelrius 6.5 in. x 8 in**).

Yellow Journal Cover - front and back
Yellow Journal Cover – front and back

I kind of used what I had rather than arranged the scraps because I didn’t think of using the pieces I was working on for a journal cover until I had already made most of the pieces.

I still have quite a few equilateral triangles from the Flower Sugar Hexagon quilt I made a long time ago. I am trying to use them up, but there seems to be a never-ending supply.

Yellow Journal Cover - inside front cover
Yellow Journal Cover – inside front cover

I am not very enamored with the inside. That corn fabric doesn’t look great outside of the Food quilts. At least it reminds me of the three food quilts I made and the people who received them.

As I may have mentioned, I have stopped adding fabric to the inside and just let the flannel be the other side of the cover. It makes the project go more quickly and makes the cover flatter.  Of course, it doesn’t use as much fabric.

Yellow Journal Cover - inside back cover
Yellow Journal Cover – inside back cover

I think I have one more Miquelrius journal to use after this one, then I will switch completely to the Leuchtturm journals.

 

 

 

 

 

 

**I use affiliate links and may be paid for your purchase of an item when you click on an item link in my post. There is no additional cost to you for clicking or purchasing items I recommend. I appreciate your clicks and purchases as it helps support this blog.

Finished Journal Cover

Journal Cover - closed
Journal Cover – closed

I am still tidying up after all the work in my workroom. One of the things I found was a piece of ‘made’ fabric (improv piecing) that was just the right size for a journal cover. I sat down and made one!

I am still not completely up and running, so it was good to make something that involved, at least, a little piecing.

I just used flannel for the inside. I didn’t add an inside cover. I did that once before and it seems to work fine.

SLA Journal Cover Gift

SLA Journal Cover front
SLA Journal Cover front

I am, once again, president of my local library association. Not what I wanted to do again, but circumstances required that I step up. One thing that I did was want people to read my newsletter/”Message from the President”. As an incentive, I offered a fabulous prize, which was a journal cover for a composition book.

Since I didn’t know if a woman or a man would win, I chose neutrals – mostly blacks and greys, but one piece had that great orange triangle, so I used it as a centerpiece. I wasn’t excited about making something with those colors, but I am pleased with the way it came out.

SLA Journal Cover -open
SLA Journal Cover -open

I picked the winner and now just have to get it to that person.

Blue Improv Journal Cover

Blue Improv Journal Cover - front
Blue Improv Journal Cover – front

My blue scrap drawer is finally showing some signs of having some space available. I have been piecing blue scraps together, as I mentioned the other day, in between working on the Red Scribbles quilt. I finally had enough to make a journal cover, so I decided to stop and make a journal cover. I need a quick finish fix and there are more blue scraps for a Color Improv donation quilt.

Blue Improv Journal Cover - inside front cover
Blue Improv Journal Cover – inside front cover

As also mentioned, I hadn’t thought of this as a journal cover, so the piecing is pretty random. I didn’t center any motifs for the front. This is for an older journal just to protect the pages, so it looks ok for that purpose.

As I did this piecing, I wanted to save any strips I found for more of the Color Strip donation blocks (quilts). I don’t know if I will find enough to make another quilt. If not, I can make a few blocks for the rainbow strip donation quilt I am planning.

Blue Improv Journal Cover - back
Blue Improv Journal Cover – back

Though I am making space in the drawer there are still a lot of scraps. The scraps still fill the drawer, but are not crammed in. There is hope, in other words, that I will have enough strips for something else-blocks or a quilt.

I am trying to use scraps that are smaller than 4.5 inch strips, because of the possibility mentioned above. This means that there are a lot of small scraps becoming larger slabs until they end up as a journal cover. It feels good to see the blue drawer emptying out.

I forget how much I like some of the fabrics I have used until I see a scrap. I know I always say that there is always more fabric. I do get attached to fabrics I like and want to email the fabric companies too reprint them when I find a scrap and know it is out of print.

Blue Improv Journal Cover -top
Blue Improv Journal Cover -top

I had a problem (or my own making) with this journal cover. It is slightly too large. By the time I noticed, I wasn’t about to rip everything out into order to trim it.

I thought the slab was the correct size, but I think I forgot to think about seam allowance for the last bit of piecing. Oh well. Things happen.

Starting another Cell Phone Wallet

Start of Paris Cell Phone Wallet
Start of Paris Cell Phone Wallet

I have a favorite dress that was made for DH’s Grand President events. It is the one dress for which I forgot to make a matching cell phone wallet. I have used others, thinking they looked ok, but I like the matching ones.

I still wear these dresses when I go to certain types of events, so this project was sort of on my list. One problem was that I didn’t have anymore of the fabric and it was so old I couldn’t get anymore. At the January CQFA Mini-Retreat, I saw Marie with some of the fabric and asked her if she had more. She found a little more than a FQ and gave it to me. The fabric has been languishing since then. I was on the phone for an extended call and decided that was a good time to start cutting out the piece.

I didn’t have enough of the fabric for the whole thing so I used an AGF solid pink I really like. The outside will match the dress.

Amy Butler Journal Cover

Amy Butler Journal Cover
Amy Butler Journal Cover

I have a number of the Miquelrius journals** without covers. I want to make covers; I just haven’t gotten around to it. This week I got around to making one.

After making Frolic!’s back, I had some large-ish pieces leftover. I decided that one was large enough to make a journal cover.

After I started, I found that I had run out of flannel. I use the flannel for the interior instead of batting, because it is thinner. Since I won’t be carrying this journal around, I don’t need to worry about the feel of it in my hand, so I just used two pieces of fabric.

I thought about using ShapeFlex, but it is out of stock everywhere and I didn’t want to use it up on a journal cover if I can’t get more at a reasonable price.

Using two pieces of fabric seems wrong somehow and makes me wonder why I think journals need covers. When I am using a Miquelrius journal every day I carry it around. I know that the cover corners can be sharp. Having a cover keeps me from getting cut. Also, having a cover keeps prying eyes away. If I am not really using these journals on a daily basis because they are full, do I need covers. Need? Clearly: no. I think I just want them all to be the same. I guess I’ll have to think about that some more.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

**I use affiliate links and may be paid for your purchase of an item when you click on an item link in my post. There is no additional cost to you for clicking or purchasing items I recommend. I appreciate your clicks and purchases as it helps support this blog.

Journals on the Shelf

Journals with Covers in the wildI was ironing fabric the other day and looked up to see my journal covers staring back at me. I had been thinking about making a journal cover from some leftover fabric from the Frolic! back and the journals on the shelf caught my eye. They sit on a shelf at about eye level. Since I have cleared off some of the books on my shelves, I can see things I didn’t see before.

Looking at these journal covers has made me think about beauty and fabric. I am much more careful now about choosing fabrics to purchase. Some of the fabrics above reflect some, if not poor, ill advised combinations of poor fabric choices. Something appealed to me about the fabrics, but the combinations and how they appear on the shelf do not all appeal.

I don’t plan to remake the journal covers, but I do plan on paying more attention to how the new ones come out. I have several that need covers and journal covers are a good use of scraps.

This is part of the process. I probably made the covers I no longer like a long time ago. I have evolved in my color choices and the way I put colors together since then. I also realized that I can see these journal cover, so I need them to be pretty. I need to take more care in choosing fabrics.

I use a medium gridded Leuchtturm journal now, so I don’t need journal covers. I still like the Miquelrius journals. I plan to use up the blank  journals I have and to make journal covers for them. I find that the Leuchtturms fit in my purse and seem more compact. I can also put a spine sticker on them saying which month is contained within.

Red Scrap Journal Cover

Red made fabric pieces
Red made fabric pieces

As mentioned, I have been working with red scraps. As I dived into the drawer, I found several pieces of fabric that had already been made from scraps.

Since I have a few Miquelrius journals that need covers, I decided to use some of the scraps to make a journal cover. It was fun to look at all of the made fabric and decide which pieces to use. I felt like I was picking out commercial fabric. It was nice to have a choice.

Red journal cover closed - May 2019
Red journal cover closed – May 2019

Because I had already done the hard work of making the fabric, I just had to make the piece large enough to fit the journal. (Sizing info can be found in the journal covers tutorial). It went really quick, which was great, because I was in need of a quick finish. I am pleased with the chair print on the front as well as the disbursement of dot fabrics.

Red journal cover front open - May 2019
Red journal cover front open – May 2019

I use flannel instead of batting for the center of the journal covers. It gives the cover a little bit of body, but doesn’t make it bulky. I’d like to just use ShapeFlex, but it doesn’t stick very well to made fabric because of all the seams. If I am using a favorite commercial fabric and there aren’t a lot of seams, then I will use ShapeFlex.

Red journal cover back open - May 2019
Red journal cover back open – May 2019

I always cover the batting the another cotton fabric, but I forgot to do that this time, so the flannel serves as batting and backing. It is on the inside and doesn’t show much, so I think it will be ok. I haven’t been carting my journals around as much as I have in the past, so I think the flannel will stay clean. I am glad, however, this is just for me. I think I will need to read the tutorial again before I make the next one.