Sew a Dodecahedron
The purposes of this project are to:
1. Sew a fun, toss-able, and decorative dodecahedron (an object with 12 sides).
2. Practice using the sewing machine. While teaching my daughter to sew on the machine, I found that the most frustrating thing for her was trying to keep a straight seam while at the same time trying to mange stopping, starting, and generally using the foot pedal.
My daughter and I did this together. She decorated the fabric using machine stitching, and I sewed the seams that make the shape.
1. Sew a fun, toss-able, and decorative dodecahedron (an object with 12 sides).
2. Practice using the sewing machine. While teaching my daughter to sew on the machine, I found that the most frustrating thing for her was trying to keep a straight seam while at the same time trying to mange stopping, starting, and generally using the foot pedal.
My daughter and I did this together. She decorated the fabric using machine stitching, and I sewed the seams that make the shape.
Materials
Materials:
sewing machine
colorful thread
1/2 yard thick, stiff, non-adhesive interfacing (I think felt would work as well)
scissors
round object to trace as template
measuring tape
straight edge
pencil
paper
disappearing quilt marking pen or chalk
sewing machine
colorful thread
1/2 yard thick, stiff, non-adhesive interfacing (I think felt would work as well)
scissors
round object to trace as template
measuring tape
straight edge
pencil
paper
disappearing quilt marking pen or chalk
Decorate Your Fabric
We're starting with a blank canvas. Using the sewing machine's stitches, we're creating the design on the fabric.
This step was a lot of fun for my daughter. To make the designs, she got to sew wherever she wanted on the fabric using all sorts of crazy patterns. She got to practice starting and stopping using the foot pedal without having to worry about keeping a straight line or minding the seams allowance. I think it was actually the first time she had fun with the machine and didn't get frustrated.
We used free-motion quilting, which means that we lowered the machine's feed dogs so that they weren't feeding the fabric forward and regulating the stitch. With free motion quilting, the sewer's hands control the movement of the fabric entirely. If your machine can't lower the feed dogs, you can still do this project--your design will just have more zig zags and fewer swirls.
In short:
Thread the machine with colorful thread.
Stitch all over your interfacing so the thread makes cool designs.
This step was a lot of fun for my daughter. To make the designs, she got to sew wherever she wanted on the fabric using all sorts of crazy patterns. She got to practice starting and stopping using the foot pedal without having to worry about keeping a straight line or minding the seams allowance. I think it was actually the first time she had fun with the machine and didn't get frustrated.
We used free-motion quilting, which means that we lowered the machine's feed dogs so that they weren't feeding the fabric forward and regulating the stitch. With free motion quilting, the sewer's hands control the movement of the fabric entirely. If your machine can't lower the feed dogs, you can still do this project--your design will just have more zig zags and fewer swirls.
In short:
Thread the machine with colorful thread.
Stitch all over your interfacing so the thread makes cool designs.
Trace 12 Circles, Then Cut
Using your round object (ours is a juice glass) as a template, trace 12 circles on your interfacing using a pencil.
Make sure you center any favorite parts of your design on a circle.
Make sure you center any favorite parts of your design on a circle.
Cut Out the Circles
Cut out the circles, cutting off all the pencil marks.
Make the Pentagon Template
Use your round object to trace a circle on paper.
Measure the circumference of the circle using the measuring tape.
Divide the circumference by 5. Let's call the resulting number "x". Mark the circle every "x" inches along the circumference. You will have 5 evenly spaced dots along the circle.
Using the straight edge, connect adjacent dots inside the circle. You will get a pentagon.
Cut out the pentagon. You've made the pentagon template!
Measure the circumference of the circle using the measuring tape.
Divide the circumference by 5. Let's call the resulting number "x". Mark the circle every "x" inches along the circumference. You will have 5 evenly spaced dots along the circle.
Using the straight edge, connect adjacent dots inside the circle. You will get a pentagon.
Cut out the pentagon. You've made the pentagon template!
Mark the Stitching Lines
Using the pentagon template, mark a pentagon inside each circle using the disappearing ink quilting marker. You can use chalk or something else to mark, but if you can't dust it away, the marks will remain visible.
Stitch the Dodecadedron
Start by picking on circle to be your "Master Circle". Sew a circle to each of the 5 sides of this circle, matching the stitching lines, and stitching on these lines. Then, sew the sides of the circles that are adjacent to each other. Make sure all the seam allowances (the little crescents sticking out) are on the same side of your dodecahedron. After you do this you will have something that looks a bit like a bowl. (A bowl is a cool project in itself!)
Make a second bowl.
Stitch the two bowls together, matching stitching lines.
Ta-da!
Make a second bowl.
Stitch the two bowls together, matching stitching lines.
Ta-da!