I had some old red fine-whale corduroy from my grandmother's stash. I don't have many things of her's, but I charish all that I do have. I also used some of it to make a Christmas tree skirt which I decorated with some of her old shell buttons, and to make my girls their stockings with some more of her buttons.
To make the cushion, I cut out a piece of the fabric as big around as the plywood that I had salveged from the old seat and added 1" for the seam, by as tall as I wanted my cushion plus the amount that would curve around its top, the inch to staple it to the base, and the inch to create a drawstring closure at its top. In the spirit of my Granma I reinforced all raw edges with a zigzag stitch. I sewed this into a loop and stapled it onto the particle board which resisted those staples like the dickens (to use one of my Granma's old phrases).
At a certain point I decided that they would just have to do (nobody would see them anyway), and I turned to stuffing the form.
I began with the salvedged foam and then stuffed it firmly with fiberfill.
Next I cinched up the top with some cord. Because the fabric was so thick, I was left with a hole the size of a quarter right front and center. So, I created a patch out of some of my daughter's old velvet pants and some cardboard-like interfacing. I used the turned-edge applique method (which can be found on Purlsoho.com's blog, The Purl Bee) that uses another type of fabric to create a nice, even edge.
Then I sewed it over the hole using the ladder stitch. I also stuck one more piece of interfacing between the two to help the patch hold its shape.
I went around twice for good measure and because it wasn't easy to catch all of those folds of fabric with the first go-around.
And YAY! I love it to look at and to sit on.
I kind of feel like Little Miss Muffet or something whenever I sit upon it.
It's kind of tuffet-y, don't you think?
At a certain point I decided that they would just have to do (nobody would see them anyway), and I turned to stuffing the form.
I began with the salvedged foam and then stuffed it firmly with fiberfill.
Next I cinched up the top with some cord. Because the fabric was so thick, I was left with a hole the size of a quarter right front and center. So, I created a patch out of some of my daughter's old velvet pants and some cardboard-like interfacing. I used the turned-edge applique method (which can be found on Purlsoho.com's blog, The Purl Bee) that uses another type of fabric to create a nice, even edge.
Then I sewed it over the hole using the ladder stitch. I also stuck one more piece of interfacing between the two to help the patch hold its shape.
I went around twice for good measure and because it wasn't easy to catch all of those folds of fabric with the first go-around.
And YAY! I love it to look at and to sit on.
I kind of feel like Little Miss Muffet or something whenever I sit upon it.
It's kind of tuffet-y, don't you think?
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