Saturday, 17 September 2011

Baby prep ie. shopping!

Ok so with 6 days to go, I thought I'd round up my baby essentials shopping.  Being baby number three, people assume you've kept all your old equipment & clothes from your last baby's, but living in a shoe-box with no storage and always needing extra pennies, we've always sold our cast-offs at boot fairs.  Seeing as that's where we bought most of the items in the first place, it always seems like good karma!

The items I have saved are sheets & blankets - these were bought new for my first daughter and they were so expensive I haven't dared sell them for mere pounds, because we all know sheets & blankets can come in handy in a crafty household anyway!

Also, maternity trousers!  I find it so hard to get good trousers anyway, but if you're lucky to find comfy (& good looking) maternity trousers/jeans, I recommend you hang onto them!  I favour the over bump elasticated panel, supportive, comfy and no revealing gaps!  In summer they are a little warm though! I have some from H&M, some from Next and some early pregnancy ones from Mothercare - which have a small elasticated waistband, which also come in handy AFTER delivery when you still can't fit in your normal jeans!

This time round I've bought all my tops from eBay, nothing fancy, just basic t-shirts mainly for a few pounds each and it's meant I've had more variation this time round rather than spending a lot of money on a couple of new tops.

 

I did have good intentions of making several tops, but in the end only got round to one (above)!  Mostly from reticence over spending money on good fabric when I'm not very experienced in dress-making for myself.
The one I did attempt was the Mariposa tunic from Anna Maria Horners' fab book 'Handmade Beginnings'.
I got 4m of Amy Butler fabric (Love collection: Memento in Midnight) from the Sewing with Pleasure show in March and it took me until the summer to have the confidence to cut into it!
I found the instructions very wordy and almost with too much information for me, I think I like more diagrams as I tend to be a bit slapdash and if I know how the garment goes together, I'll usually fudge it together!
So once I actually got down to it and figured out how the pieces were meant to join I just got on an sewed!  Not very neatly but I had fun!  I used the large size being a busty 14/16 up top and a scant seam allowance (rather than getting into re-sizing the pattern) and hoped it would fit.

And actually I'm really happy with it!  If you undo the ties it has a front modesty panel to enable you to breastfeed and I hope to wear it as a normal top afterwards anyway (with a bit of taking in?!)
I'm also considering making the longer dress version in a lighter fabric to wear over jeans in the winter. 

So I've been trying to buy as much stuff second-hand as possible, which means some enjoyable rummaging in charity shops & car boots and browsing eBay!
All the baby's clothes are second-hand, they wear them for such a short amount of time, it's criminal the price of buying new.  Also, not knowing what sex the baby is most items I've bought are neutral/white and I'd rather save my money to get colour appropriate outfits when it's bigger.

Next big purchase - the pram!  For my daughters I had a Graco travel system which had a very useful system of quickly moving the car seat from the pram to the car with no fiddling with seat belts.  The downside being it was heavy and bulky. At about 4 months I moved to the much loved Mclaren Quest buggy, which was a revolution and I'd recommend it wholeheartedly.
So knowing that I only needed a pram for the first few months (as I still have my battered Mclaren in standby) I knew I wouldn't waste money on a new pram, it was definitely going to be second-hand and there are loads at boot fairs/eBay or local noticeboards when you start looking!
Now I was going to just get a cheap Graco again but then I thought about getting a more robust all-terrain type as the one thing the Mclaren doesn't handle very well is off-road walking.  Now we don't do a lot of hiking or anything but we do go for days out, to gardens, fairs, forests, parks and I thought it might be useful to also have a buggy that could handle these.

So I spent some time keeping an eye out on local pram/travel system auctions on Ebay (I love Saved Searches, my current one is for a bike trailer!) and eventually won a Jane Powertrack 360 for the princely sum of £10! It was a bit further away than I wanted but for the price I was very happy!
It was in a bit of a state and needed a good scrub but it came with the carrycot and car-seat parts.  I spent an extra £30 on accessories - a rain cover, a pram mattress and the actual adapters to hold the carrycot (again from eBay) and then spent a lot of elbow grease getting the mud off the frame and bleaching out the mildew from some of the fabric parts (all thoroughly rinsed off after, I found normal stain cleaners rubbish but normal bleach did the trick).

It is rather bulky with the carrycot on but I wanted this so that in the mornings for the school run I didn't have to worry about straps and waking the baby up in the usual scramble!  The car seat also clips on quickly when going out and about and when it's a bit older the fabric seat will get put on and it'll be an off-roader!

I did treat myself to some pads for the car seat as it didn't have any from Kryshees shop on Folksy, as she had some fab fabric, these were made and posted really quick and make the car seat look much newer!


Next big purchase - the cot!  Can you guess? Yes eBay again!  Another local search, this time I needed to be a bit fussy as I wanted the standard size cot so that my saved sheets would fit!  After watching and waiting for awhile, I found this fabulous one, which I think originally came from JoJoMaman Bebe and has the option of being used three sided against your bed, for the fabulous price of £31.


This meant I didn't feel so bad about the extortionate price for the mattress - £99 from Mothercare - I went for the same type as I've had before as it has a removeable zip off cover which I found very handy when you have a sicky baby or leaky nappies in the middle of the night!  I've also saved the spare covers from before which should be handy.
Had a bit of a panic with the matress as they delivered the wrong one - it was a cot bed size but they were very apologetic at customer services and sent out the correct one the very next day. Being 38 weeks pregnant at the time, I was convinced the baby would come before it did, like sods law, thankfully not though!

So eBay has been my salvation with this baby and helped us spend as little money as possible because frankly there's not much left over every month to afford the type of offerings in the Mothercare catalogue!  I do hope most new parents don't get sucked into the over-priced 'must haves' that they offer, the 'helpful' shopping list they provide at the back of the catalogue must be a real money spinner!  Don't even get me started on the designer prams!

The other source I've found for new items on a budget is Ikea, bit of a drive for us to get to, but when you're getting a lot of items I think it makes the petrol cost worthwhile.
Their baby range is really lovely and affordable and has all the basics.  I was going to get the cot and mattress from there if I couldn't find a suitable secondhand one, as they had a good one for only £60, there is a cheaper one still but not as sturdy looking.

So on a recent trip I got a bundle of their cheap white hand towels - 19p each! These can be used as muslins, for changing the baby on, or as I'm hoping to make bibs with!



Muslins, why are these so expensive? I got this three pack for £2.99 as I liked the colours. I've already got a bundle off eBay, and being pre-used their much softer - these Ikea ones are huge though, so I may even cut them in half them to get more for my money.  If you have babies who like to sick up/dribble out a lot of their bottlefeeds, you'll want a load of these!


Baby flannels/washcloths £2.99 for 10, these again can be useful for lots of things, burb cloths, flannels for bath time or meal times, keeping in the change bag for spills, as muslins, I did look into making your own baby wipes, which these might be good for? 


And lastly, bibs, if you're bottlefeeding, again you'll want a load of these and as a staple they seem to be rather expensive in the high street, these pack of 5 were only £1.99! Bargain, I nearly bought more, but am really going to try and make some of my own, probably using these as a template!

So with 6 days to go, I think I'm set!  The time really flies with subsequent babies, there's no time to sit and relax and ponder like when it's your first!  And trying to complete the rush of the school run while heavily pregnant and with a painful pelvis, well, they don't talk about that in the pregnancy books! 

Saturday, 20 August 2011

Festival of Quilts 2011

A bit later than planned but here is a visual round-up of my day out to the Festival of Quilts at the NEC last week.
I had a fabulous time but there is so much to see (buy & do too!) that by the end of the day my Mum & I hadn't seen everything but we were exhausted!  I can see why people make a trip out of it and stay for a few days.
There was a huge array of quilt entries this year, lots of art /contemporary quilts which weren't all to my taste, I generally liked the traditional pieced quilts and getting to see them up close and appreciate the skill, time and patience they must take to complete, makes me very envious.
 

 
553: Snowflakes Four
Patricia Boult
Hand pieced & quilted




573: Wholecloth One
Robyn Fahy
Trapunto & hand machine quilted


555: Blue & White
Joyce Dorsett
Machine pieced & quilted




558: For Tom
Jannat Messenger
Hand stitched
559:Square Deal Variation
Birgitta Debenham
Machine pieced & quilted




586: Log Cabin Flowers
Liz Cornish
Hand sewn, machine applique & quilting


580: Snow Plum Quilt
Yukiko Ayres
Hand stitched wedding ring design







105: Heartache & Hope
Jackie Smith
Inspired by a visit to a Foundling Museum



270: No Info in the show guide!
It was a very striking piece of Green Day front man Billle Joe Armstrong
143: Polonaise
Ruth Singer
Hand stitched


145: The Fragility of Friendship
Linda Barlow
Applique, embroidery & quilted






161: Stash Findings
Jenny Hubbard
Applique, embellishments













238: Spoon Fed Love
Maria Thomas
Recycled fabric and paper, quilting, patchwork & applique




233: Spring
Chloe Redfern
Hand stitched felt




304: Double Delight
Pauline Kloof
Hand knitted quilt top


435: Yesterday
Annedore Neumann
Machine pieced & quilted




411: Samplers
Kate Crossley
Machine embroidered, hand & machine quilted
452: Turbulance
Jane Appelbee
Machine stitching, beading, hand dyed


327: Becky's Dresses
Rosalind Gregory
Hand smocked dresses, hand appliqued & quilted


629:  Everyone's a Star
Ouse Valley Quilters (11 members)
Machine pieced & quilted using Liberty Tana Lawn












603: Sybil Liberties
Alington Quilters (25 members)
Paper pieced, hand quilted, Liberty fabric
606: Val's Legacy
Val's Friends (10 members)
Machine pieced, hand appliqued, hand embroidered. Machine & hand quilted.


605: Townlands of the Glendarragh Valley
Ederney Quilters (3 members)
Pieced & free machined. Professional lettering & quilting.


662: Hexagons & Stars
Lucie Summers & Jenny Spencer
Screen printed fabrics with reverse applique. Freehand machine quilting.

Miniature Quilts


845: Blue like a Wedgewood
Kumiko Frydl
Trapunto, freemotion quilting
869: Seaside
Julia Gahagan
Pieced background with shadow applique & machine quilting


843: Journey
Nina Davis
Hand printed fabric, hand & machine stitched

Apologies for the patchy photography, the lighting varied from tungsten to fluorescent, glaring to dismal, so it was hard for me to keep up!

If you've never been before I would highly recommend it, even if you're not a quilter you'll appreciate the craftiness and then there's the shopping!
Next years dates are: 16-19th August 2012
I haven't had chance to photograph my purchases, I WAS restrained, I find it best to go with a wish-list of things you need (!) and a budget!  The array of fabric on sale is truly mouth-watering though, I was severely tempted by the Liberty FQ's & kits - maybe next year!

I'll try and remedy this with pics shortly.