Showing posts with label baby. Show all posts
Showing posts with label baby. Show all posts

Monday, June 18, 2012

Bassinet Mattress Tutorial


With my due date quickly approaching, I pulled our bassinet out of storage for reassembly.

I've been planning for some time to make a new mattress for the thing.....The one that came with it was just so.....pathetic.

With my last baby, I had added padding under the sheet but it was still woefully inadequate. I don't know how she slept on it. Hence my decision to make sure this baby wasn't sleeping on a wafer-thin abomination to mattresses everywhere.

I also decided I'd do a little tutorial!

What you'll need to make your very own Bassinet Crib Mattress:
 - Measuring tape
 - Foam by the yard
 - 3/4 yrd vinyl
 - Sewing machine
 - Matching thread

Step 1: Measure your bassinet.
My bassinet dimensions turned out to be 30 in by 15 in. You'll need this measurement to determine the amount of foam you'll need.

I got my foam by the yard at Joann's during their Memorial Day sale - it was all 50% off. Since the thickness I choose (which is 1 1/2 inches, by the way) was $30.99 /yd normally, I was eager to get a deal.

Step 2: Cut your foam to fit snugly into the bassinet.
I initially cut the foam to 30 in x 15 in, knowing that I would need to trim it down a little to fit. I then set the foam on top of the bassinet and used a Sharpie to mark where I needed to round the corners and/or cut off a little foam. The final dimensions were 30 in x 14 1/2 in.


Again, make sure the fit in the bassinet is snug. Safety first(!) when it comes to the kids!


Step 3: Pin your vinyl around the foam.
Place your foam on a single layer of vinyl (vinyl is located in the 'utility' fabrics area of your local craft store - available in many colors). Make sure you have a buffer around the outside of the foam - 2 or 3 inches is sufficient.


Fold the vinyl over the foam, tightening the vinyl against the foam on the folded side (creating a vinyl-foam ...taco?).


Pin the top layer of vinyl to the bottom layer of vinyl around the foam. Try to get your pins as close to the foam as possible for a tight fit.


Cut off the excess vinyl.


Step 4: Sew around the foam.
Top-stitch around the three open sides, as close to the foam as you can get. You may need to squish the foam down a bit as you go.



Note: If you're wondering why I only pinned/sewed three sides here, the reason is that I am inherently lazy and cheap. The less work I have to do and the least amount of materials I have to use, the better. You could, indeed, pin/sew all the way around (you masochist, you).

Step 5: Make vinyl binding.
You'll need to make some binding to hide your raw edges. Cut 2 inch strips from your leftover vinyl - enough to cover all your edges. 

If you need to sew several strips together, here's how to do it:

Place the two pieces perpendicular to each other at their ends. Sew across the two pieces at a diagonal.


Cut off the excess.


Fold open. Repeat if needed.


When you've got a strip of vinyl sufficiently long for your needs, fold it in half lengthwise. Unlike fabric, vinyl won't stay folded so you'll need to pin it to make it stay - do NOT iron! Vinyl is plastic, afterall - it will melt.


Fold the raw edges in to the center fold and pin. (Incidentally, this is the same method you'd use to make normal fabric binding.)


Step 6: Pin the binding to the raw edges.
Cut off the raw edges of the vinyl around the mattress to 1/2 an inch.


Fold down the end of your binding.


Apply the binding to the raw edges of the vinyl and pin.


Top-stitch around, back-stitching at the beginning and end. Again, try to keep the vinyl tight around the foam. Sew within a 1/4 inch of the edge of the binding.


And voila! You're done!

Behold! My new awesome mattress versus the old, wussy mattress:


The final product installed. Now all I need are some new sheets!




Friday, August 12, 2011

Baby Legwarmers


I guess the trendy thing nowadays is to make your baby look like they've just come from the set of an 80s work-out video... But since I don't wanna pay for something I can clearly make myself, I made a pattern for some baby leg warmers.

I used Serenity (Deborah Norville Collection) sock weight/super fine yarn in Aquamarine.

0-6 month size

Cast on 40 sts, on US size 3 dpns.
Work *k2, p2* rib for 16 rows.
Knit stockinette stitch until the work measures 6" from cast-on edge. Increase 4 sts evenly over the next knitted row (I increased at every 10th stitch); knit 1 row straight; Next row, increase 4 sts evenly again, knit 1 row straight(48 sts). (The block of increases should make up 4 rows total)
Continue in ss until the work measures 7". Increase row (4 sts evenly), knit 1 row; increase 4 again, knit 1 row (56 sts).
Continue in ss until the work measures 8". Increase row (4 sts evenly), knit 1 row; increase 4 again, knit 1 row (64 sts).
**If you need to add length, continue in ss stitch and do increases every inch as needed**
End with *k2, p2* rib for 16 rows. Cast-off loosely and weave in all ends.

The ones I made are clearly too short for my baby at this point (I started these a couple months ago). Plus, he has super fat thighs (which I tried to compensate for with the increases). He's almost 7 months and in the 90th percentile for height, so these are now much more like calf-warmers. He had a lot of fun chewing on them.