Tuesday, October 14, 2014

UPDATE TO DROP CLOTH VALANCES

I just finished laying out the fabric for the last four windows. I ended up using 2 drop cloths at $7.99 each, and 5 yards of cotton duck from Hobby Lobby at $8.99 a yard, less my 40% off coupon. That makes valances for FOURTEEN windows under $50. Not bad considering the valance I liked at countrycurtains.com (Parisian Note Lined Pleated Valance) was $69.50 FOR ONE!

DROP CLOTH VALANCES


Not long ago I looked out the door at our 3 season porch and was horrified to realize it had old lady curtains. I began researching ideas for new window treatments, and started a board on pinterest called “sunroom ideas”. I found several people have made curtains and drapes out of paint drop cloths. The porch has 14 windows, plus a door, so the idea of large amounts of fabric for small amounts of money was appealing. I went to Harbor Freight with my husband and found 4 foot by 12 foot canvas drop cloths for $7.99. Drop cloths are quite a heavy fabric, so it isn't necessary to use double the width of the window, like you would with a thinner fabric.

I love the look of the rustic off-white weave, but I was concerned about sewing through several layers of heavy fabric, and that it would be too plain. I found some cotton duck at Hobby Lobby with a gray French theme and the same background color for $8.99 a yard, and used a 40% off coupon. After a little experimenting, I decided to make box-pleated valances, similar to some I found on countrycurtains.com called Parisian Note Lined Pleated Valance. I decided to wash all the fabric before beginning. The sunroom’s combination windows let the dust in, so the valances will need to be washed now and then, and I didn’t want the fabrics to shrink at different rates. I decided not to replace the existing curtain rods, in the interest of saving that expense, and spray painted the finial ends a hammered bronze to update the look from the shiny gold. With the way the curtain rods are hung, and the fact that there is more than one window size, I was forced to custom size each valance to each window. The four foot width of the drop cloths is wide enough for most of the windows, so I started with trimming off the existing hem and cutting a 14” piece to make the first valance. I left the side hems in place and allowed a half inch seam allowance for everything. The trim fabric is a one way design with an 11 inch repeat. I cut 11 inches off and then made a four inch strip for the rod pocket, and a seven inch strip for the hem trim. This makes a valance that hangs 16 inches.

 1. I began by ironing the hem trim in half the long way, wrong sides together. Then I folded in the raw edge that will be on the front 1/2 inch and pressed it. I pinned and stitched the hem trim to the bottom edge of the wrong side of the valance, leaving 1/2 inch on each side to fold in the raw edges. After ironing and pinning the front side to the bottom of the valance I stitched through all the layers on the front.
 2. One window width is 37 inches, and I want two pleats, so I divided the measurement in 3. I measured and marked 12 inches in from each side. I folded the fabric in half, and measured and marked six and 1/2 inches in from the fold. The fabric between the marks forms the pleats. This valance ends up with 12 inches of fabric, 4 inches for pleat, 13 inches of fabric, 4 inches for pleat, 12 inches of fabric.

Using a soluble marker, draw a line 3 inches down from the top edge and stitch the pleats, right sides together. After stitching the pleats I measured the width of the valance to double check that it was 37 inches wide. Iron the pleats in place. For a more crisp pleat, you can edge stitch the folds. I edge stitched the inside folds. The drop cloths are not a "crisp" fabric, so pressing and using some starch helps hold the pleat folds.  
3. Iron the raw edge of the trim fabric that will form the bottom edge of the rod pocket. Stitch the other edge to the top of the valance, right side of the trim fabric to the wrong side of the valance. Iron the trim and seam allowance up, then stitch along the edge of the trim, through all the layers. Pin the casing in place, press to the front of the valance, then stitch through all the layers on the bottom edge of the rod pocket casing.
This project is an intermediate level, and assumes basic sewing skills. There is really as much measuring and ironing involved as sewing.  Give drop cloths a try for your next window project, especially if you have a lot of windows to cover. I'm thinking up additional projects to use the leftover fabric on. And let me know how your valances turn out.

Monday, July 21, 2014

BABY SHOWER FUN!

I am so excited to be hosting a baby shower for my husband's nephew and his wife's long awaited baby girl! We are all so happy and excited to welcome this precious sweetie. Wednesday my grand-daughter and I baked cut-out sugar cookies with Paula Deen's cookie recipe. Some of the reviews stated it was difficult to roll out, and tended to crumble. I have to agree. Maybe refridgerating the dough overnight made it too cold. The taste of the cookies was worth the hassle. We decorated with home made powdered sugar glaze, white and pink of course! We are serving Wild Rice-Chicken Salad, fruit, biscuits with jam and honey, and the cookies for dessert. We have "Price is Right" and "Name that Kid" for games. I purchased 10-12 items at Target and the guests will guess the price. Closest guess without going over will win a small prize. For "Name that Kid" guests will have to name the children in famous families. Person who gets the most right will win a prize. We served "Lemonade Punch" easily found at AllRecipes.com, contributed by "Baggy", and it went over very well. I used Yellow Tail merlot and frozen pink lemonade. My lemonade ice cubes didn't freeze hard enough, because there wasn't enough water in them. I tried freezing the concentrate in an ice cube tray, and it doesn't work. Comments included not too sweet, and there were requests for the recipe.