| Back to School: The Perfect Slouchy Book Bag |
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| Editor: Liz Johnson | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Thursday, 19 August 2010 03:00 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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What should you use to carry your school stuff this year? Well, if you're all about form and structure, the venerable back pack is your friend. But if you want something comfortably soft and slouchy, then go with the book bag: the wild child of school totes. Ours uses no stabilizer, only a lining. The exterior fabric is a velvety corduroy from Valori Wells with the thinnest of wales. Wooden beads, stone buttons and waxed cording create the closures. And, tiny golden rivets attach the strap. So cute... maybe you should keep it as your everyday bag!
A big thanks to our friends at Fat Quarter Shop for providing the cool Valori Well's Nest Corduroy for this project. It's called "Autumn Paisley", which conjures up the perfect swirl of falling leaves and colors. Sewing Tools You Need
Fabric and Other Supplies
Getting Started
At Your Sewing Machine
Exterior pockets
Side seams and boxed bottom corners
Interior pocket
Strap
Assembling lining and bag
Riveting the strap in place
Contributors Project Design: Alicia Thommas Other machines suitable for this project include the Bernina 380 and the Elna 7300.
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Comments (29)
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mom taxi julie
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... That is such a darling bag! I love the fabric too! (followed a pin from pinterest) |
TrinaC
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... I just made this bag with my 16yr old daughter. Thanks for the great project!!! It turned out super cute. I wish I could attach a picture or link to show it off. It is a great 1 day project. Easy enough for those of us without a lot of sewing experience. |
Micaela
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... I just made a list of materials... this is def. going into my to do list... top priority!! |
michele921
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... going on my list of things I want to make. I know I have some material hanging around screaming to be made into this bag. I will be modifying it though, bags always need a lot of pockets for those little things this one will get a phone,pencil and pockets for paper. Thanks for the tutorial |
Susannah
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... I am going to change the size a little bit and make the outside pockets of different sizes. It will be perfect to carry a plastic box of scrapbooking paper (12" x 12") and many tools in the pockets. I think I'll match it with some other little bags in the same fabric to hold more tools and supplies. Perfect for taking my craft with me! |
MelissaS
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... Love,love this bag. Made one as a diaper bag for my sis, one as a laptop bag for my SIL and I am currently making one for myself because I was so jealous of the other two! So easy! |
kbenevides
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... I'm new to sewing and I'm having trouble building up my fabric collection. Where I live there is extremely limited selection in stores. When I have a project I want to make I'm anxious to get started right away and going online and then waiting for fabric to arrive makes me lose steam. However, I'm not really sure how to buy fabric in advance of knowing what I'm going to use it for. I never know how much to get or what coordinating fabrics to buy etc etc. Help!? |
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... Bellisima la bolsa, la tela es muy original!! gracias por el tutorial, bien explicado, gracias cariños |
JaniceK
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... This is perfect for my dgd!!! She's finishing her last semester at college and she will really like this!!! Thanks! |
JgC
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Liz Johnson, Editor, Sew4Home
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... Hi sewalaskan -- those sound like dandy adaptations to this project. We love it when folks are inspired by our projects and then take the ball and run with it on their own |
sewalaskan
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... I just made one for my niece. I changed a couple things - I lined the outside fabric & made the lining a little longer & turned it down so that the hem of the pocket showed the lining fabric. I also added another pocket on the inside. Made that pocket longer & sectioned for a couple pens. I used webbing for the strap - covered it with fabric & sewed it on - no rivets. Thanks for the great pattern. |
Ruth O
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... I made two so far, easy and fun. Didn't do the rivet thing but otherwise...great!!!! |
Amy M
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... I love love this bag and can see making it for holiday gifts but I don't want to invest in a rivet tool. Can the straps be sewn on and reinforced with the box stitch where you sew in a square and then sew an x through the square? Or other suggestions for attaching the strap? |
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said:
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... I love this bag and Im way too many years from going back to school! The fabric is lovely, I have to get some. Thanks for another great tutorial! |
runa
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... ooh! love the colours....what a pretty looking bag....must make this for my little sister.......thanks for the tutorial..... |
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. Aside from that, I would recommend buying what you love as soon as you see it. Online ordering does sounds like your best best. Many outlets have VERY good customer service and I think you'd be surprised how quickly things arrive. We love the folks at FatQuarterShop.com, HawthorneThreads.com and QuiltHome.com. As we often mention in our "Love That Fabric" series, fabric comes and goes just like fashion. If you don't buy something when you first see it and fall in love with it, the design can sell out quickly and then you're sad when you can no longer find it. If you can afford it, I'd recommend trying to buy about 3 yards of something you're crazy about but not quite sure what to do with. That is plenty for just about any project we do here (aside from really big things like full length curtains or duvets). It's my normal "default" cut if I'm simply adding to my collection without a specific project in mind.
