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Santa Hat Purse |
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'Tis the season to be
stylish with this Santa Hat Purse!
The bottom section of a Santa hat is
turned upside down to become the body of this purse. The point,
with the pom-pom,
becomes the flap. You can use this darling project as a gift bag, or a
holiday
purse. Just add festive designs, a name or monogram, fill it
with lots of Christmas cheer!
The finished size the purse is 14 inches wide (across the white fur)
and 13 inches tall, including the handles. The finished size will
depend on the size Santa hat you purchase.
We found this Santa hat at Target,
but you can find them everywhere from discount to
department stores. |
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Supplies needed:
** Santa Hat
** Two wire frame purse handles
** 70 Jingle Bells (.71 inch or 20 mm in size)
** Medium weight, cutaway stabilizer
** Temporary spray adhesive
** Heavy weight water-soluble stabilizer (we use
Sulky
Ultra Solvy)
** Masking tape
** Seam ripper
** Small hair clips
** Needle and thread for some hand sewing |
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Designs used:
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Ho Ho Ho (Small) - also
available in
Large
**
Jingle Bells with Holly (Small) - also
available in
Medium and
Large |
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Create the body
Lay the hat flat. Measure and mark the center of the hat (the red
section) in between the trim and the pom-pom. |
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Cut the hat into
two pieces by cutting at that mark. |
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Embroider on
the trim
Create paper
templates of the designs by printing them at full size. Trim
around each design to make the templates easy to manage.
We are
embroidering directly onto the fur trim.
Place the template on the trim, and mark the sides with a couple
pieces of masking tape. |
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Remove the template
and trim the fur within the area to be embroidered so it is about
1/4 inch in length.
Trimming the fur allows the stitches to lie properly. |
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Lay the template
back onto the trim and center it by measuring equal distances
from the center point of the design to the edges of the trim.
Lay strips of masking tape under the horizontal and vertical
axis lines on the template. Poke a hole in the center of the
template and mark the tape. Also mark the horizontal and
vertical axis points. |
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Remove the
template and draw lines connecting the marks. These lines will
be used for hooping. |
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Cut a piece of
cutaway stabilizer a bit larger that your hoop. Draw a horizontal
and vertical line on the stabilizer (at right angles to each other).
Make sure the lines intersect in the center. These lines will be
used for hooping. |
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Hoop the
stabilizer by aligning the marks on the hoop with the lines on
the stabilizer. Spray the stabilizer with temporary adhesive. |
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Unfold the trim
of the hat (we had to cut a few tacking stitches as well) and
align the lines on the tape with the lines on the stabilizer.
Insert a pin on the ends of the lines on the tape, adjust and
align with the ends of the lines on the stabilizer. |
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Press the trim in
place and use hair clips to clip the hat back away from the sewing
area. |
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Attach the hoop to the machine and load the design. Align the needle
over the center point on the tape. Remove the tape and then lay a
piece of heavy weight, water-soluble stabilizer over the fur trim and embroider the design.
After the design has been embroidered, unhoop the stabilizer and trim
away the excess stabilizer. Also, tear away the excess water-soluble
stabilizer. |
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Embroider on the flap
Lay the flap flat with the paper template on top. We positioned the
top of the design about one inch from the top edge of the flap. Lay
strips of masking tape under the horizontal and vertical axis lines,
and mark the center point and axis points. Remove the template and
draw lines connecting the points.
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Cut a piece of stabilizer that is slightly larger than your hoop.
Draw lines on the stabilizer, hoop the stabilizer, and spray with
temporary adhesive. Use a seam ripper to open one of the side seams
of the flap. Lay the flap open flat and align the lines of the tape
with the lines on the stabilizer as you did before. |
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Attach the hoop to
the machine, load the design, and align the needle over the center point
you marked on the tape. Remove the tape and add a piece of heavy
weight,
water-soluble stabilizer over the fabric, and embroider the design.
After the design
has been embroidered, trim away the excess stabilizer on the back
and tear away the excess water-soluble from the top. |
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