Bag-making & sewing setup

It’s been a while since I’ve done a process post, so here goes.

First of all, a look at my current (extremely cluttered) workspace.

(I intentionally did not tidy up before taking these photos because I’m not an influencer trying to sell you a perfect lie. I’m human.)

Sewing table with thread racks on the wall behind it

My thread all lives on the thread racks on the wall, out of direct sunlight. The main surface of the table is covered in a 36”x24” self-healing cutting mat, and my main shop sewing machine, a brother nouvelle 1500s lives here 90% of the time.

To the right of the photo is a 4×2 ikea kallax unit, which holds bins of fabric, and my Eversewn Sparrow usually lives on top of it, close at hand for when I need a zig-zag stitch or a buttonhole.

To the left of the main sewing area is a small table topped with layers of cotton and heat-proof batting sewn in a cotton casing to make a small ironing board, and under that table are clear plastic bins of more fabric. Are we starting to see a theme, here?

I sit in the middle on an early 20th-century round (hardwood) piano stool, which allows me to spin in place and raise or lower the seat depending on what I’m doing.

Today, let’s talk about sewing a drawstring project bag, something I do a lot of!

Lining fabric laid out flat to be cut with a quilting ruler and a rotary cutter
Bag outside and lining, cut and ready to be sewn

Once I have the fabric cut to my specifications, I start the sewing process. This goes a lot faster these days than it did when I was first starting, but that’s largely because I’ve figured out how to assembly line cut and piece: sewing a single bag from start to finish takes nearly as long as it ever has.

Here are some process photos:

One part I particularly enjoy is top stitching the drawstring channel. It allows me to coordinate thread colors to bag top colors (in this case: black) but also rewards precision and accuracy, which I find soothing.

Video of the process of topstitching a drawstring bag, done slowly.

In the end, after adding drawstrings, I end up with a bag for the Halloween collaboration kit with the Periwinkle Sheep!

A purple mushroom print bag next to my brother sewing machine

As a reminder, these bags are available for a limited time only and come with a matching skein of custom yarn that looks like this:

Periwinkle Sheep yarn for the Halloween collaboration kit

You can get the kit on The Periwinkle Sheep’s website until August 20th. Kits will ship on or before October 10.

And remember: we will be donating 10% of kit sales to World Central Kitchen for their efforts to combat starvation and famine in Gaza.

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Author: Alisa

I sew and bead to fundraise for charity. I have two spinning wheels and three sewing machines, and more knitting needles than I probably really need.

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