Saturday 17 February 2018

Macaron Purse

For those of you, who have followed my sweet blog over at Tablier taché, you already know my passion for French pastry delicacy has no limits. The fabric that probably best suits my love is this Yuwa collection I found at Nekoneko Fabric. Not only that all Yuwa prints are made in Japan, but they produce their prints in two different weights - one is Oxford cotton, and the other - quilting cotton. It is perfect for my projects, because I could always use the lighter weight for the lining. 

Prints are very authentic French, to the smallest detail of the filigrees on the stamps. I love these macaron and pastry fabric pieces, so I had to have as many as possible:


It was a delicious photo shoot this one - inspired by fabric :). If you happened to crave the Cream-cheese Macaron Cake on the images, hop over to my blog for the recipe.


My lovely daughter, with her gentle soul, fell immediately in love with the small delicate white print and made a request for a small purse, that could carry all her belongings, including her phone.


I was up for the challenge to design a purse for that with as many compartment as she needed.


It is a lovely feminine little purse, with a leather like strap on a side, a zipper pocket on the inside and one magnetic closer. A covered button stands out to complete the look and simple pink leather accents reinforce the opening and the strap. Everything else was just precise cutting of the print, so I get the best images of pastry in close-up. :)))


My bias binding is all done by hand - no seams anywhere to be seen. 


My angel has so many pockets with this purse - she could even carry a little notebook and a pen inside. 


The things we do for the people we love!

With my whole heart to my lovely daughter,
 mom 


Monday 5 February 2018

Claire's Rose



This bouquet of mixed flowers is special. Not only, because the centre piece is a beautiful rose, but because it was assembled and designed by an incredible woman, who have been my inspiration for a long time. Her creative space is full of colours, ideas and stories. When you visit, you can not leave empty hearted. There is so much love and inspiration there. It is my sacred attic, where I find piece and calmness. 

I look back and see one beautiful image in my mind - an image she painted with not other tool, but her machine. She used thread as a sharp pencil to drew with, and then painted the shapes with tiny pieces of cloth. 


I wasn't sure what to love more - her "capturing the moment" gift, her artistry, or the sentiment in this image. But I fell in love in all that this picture represents, including the little happy princess. I have 'seen' Claire growing up, changing from the baby girl she was, carrying the beautiful totes and box bags, her mom made for her play dates, into the incredible young girl, who notices the delicacy of the flowers, tries her mom's sewing illustrations, picks her own colours and creates her own designs. 

Claire notices the Beauty. She was the one, picking the rose for a centre piece in mom's bouquet. I wanted to make her rose special. Children see the world unfiltered. They don't judge, they accept. Even their colours are purer. Their ability to see the things brighter and happier is unique. So I asked Claire what colour she would choose for her rose and she answered - light pink. 

The task itself is quite challenging - I can not disappoint Minki... Choosing the colour palette for the bouquet took me two days. I was going through all the DMC colours to pick the right ones for the minor flowers. The rose ... oh, my... My brain was about to explode. Light pink is a challenge to create. I picked all the light pink DMC colours and chose a shade to stick to. I did not want the yellow-ish shade and definitely wouldn't use the cold blue-ish pink there was. So that limited my options a lot. But since this was Claire's colour, I introduced the happy candy pink for depth and texture. That is how I see it through her eyes :) 


DMC floss for the rose used: nine shades of pink + yellow and green for the front left leave
DMC floss for the leaves used: nine shades of green + two shades of rusty brown-pink for the thorns and stains on the leaves
DMC floss count for the whole bouquet: 42 colours

I have changed Minki's design a little bit (with her permission). The most noticeable thing is that my bouquet is upside up. My heart couldn't let me turn the rose upside down. But needle painting and sewing illustrations are completely different techniques. Each represents the flowers differently and creates a different feeling. Also, I did not add all of the additional flowers, but just enough to support the rose presence, and not too many to over-shine it. After all, it is all about Claire's rose :) 


I chose warm purple for these leaves that nicely contrast with the snow white on the Snow Balls and add a colour to the bouquet.


The "Old" yellow on the left is again - a colour pop, but also, a way to show the season. Claire picked this rose in autumn, when the leaves were changing colours and the trees were preparing for their winter dream. I find the roses bloom perfection in early summer and late autumn. They are most beautiful in autumn - last colours before the snow. Sometimes, their blooms got burned by the early frost. Probably, Claire's roses never get to experience that on the West Coast, but on the East Coast of Canada, sometimes the frost bites in October. Roses' late blooms got sad and fragile, some of which managed to complete their life and hide under the warm protection of the rose hip, preserving the seeds. 


I love this little bouquet! I love every stitch of it! I truly hope, one little princess likes her rose.

With love, 
to Claire,

 Ivelina