Tuesday, December 22, 2009

Pirate Vest

Easy Pirate Vest

Here is an easy-to-make Pirate vest and eyepatch for your favorite little pirate. Made from felt and shoelaces, there is no sewing required to make this pirate vest.

print


Need:


  • Black felt material (if 36" wide or more, 1/2 yd will work)

  • One pair of Shoelaces 54" cord-type

  • Scissors

  • Hole punch

  • Elastic cord for eyepatch

  • Chalk (optional, for marking)





What To Do:


  1. Fold felt fabric in half, so that the length from the folded edge is 18 inches (or more if working with wider fabric).

  2. Note that the folded area will serve as the shoulder area, so this must not be cut.

  3. We started with a piece (folded) that was 14 x 18 inches, but prior to cutting your material you might need to make an adjustment in size, depending on the child. You might need to work larger or smaller, as the case may be.

  4. Referring to the pattern, (you may want to draw chalk lines prior to cutting) cut out area for the side of the shoulder and the side taper.

  5. Next ... cutting ONLY the top (front) cut straight up the center front. Then cut diagonal lines, as shown, to form the front.

  6. Use a hole punch to make six holes (front and back) about an inch apart. Only cut one thickness of fabric at a time.

  7. Lace sides with a shoelace and tie off at end of lacing. Tie off ends, about even with the bottom of the vest, then cut off excess.

  8. Cut Eyepatch from area cut from side shoulder. Make two small holes to tie elastic cord through.

  9. Now your Pirate is ready to go!

Monday, December 21, 2009

Easy sew Pirate vest

Easy Sew Pirate Vest

I found this tutorial on the web for making a pirate vest. The original post is in Italian so I had to translate it with google translator. I think it did a pretty good job. Follow the link above to go to the original site and download the patterns.






This is our costume for Halloween, a little pirate-looking threatening.

We do not know yet whether we will use it to attend a party, probably just put our house or grandparents, for us it was like another opportunity to play along with disguises.


To sew the vest, hat and scarf I used the black felt, the rest of clothing (trousers, white shirt and red bandanna) already had at home.

To make the vest (size 2 years) and the patch you can download the 4 patterns I designed for you: Click here go to original site for patterns

I cut the first two pieces in front of the vest, then the piece back.


I joined the track in front and one behind with pins and I have sewn the back shoulders and hips.



To make this pretty simple vest embroidered with the car I have piping with red thread and I sewed embroidery on the back of the pirate who had previously prepared. The paper pattern to embroider the pirate can be found in this post: the pirate top stitch.



For the dressing, I cut an oval from black felt and added black elastic to tie it.


The hat was the most difficult to achieve, I followed the tutorial explaining how threadbanger where cucirne one with a pair of leather pants to recycle. I'm not having the pants I used the black felt and finally I do not know how I managed to do it. We add here the video so you can get an idea of how I work:

Sunday, December 20, 2009

Stamped Pirate Loot Bags

Loot bags





Two new sets from Cornish Heritage Farms, available today! Pirates are a hot commodity right now, well, at least the romantic notion of them. Not sure I would want to be paid a visit by the real thing, ykwim? So, if you like a realistic set, then Shiver Me Timbers fits the bill. I decided on a booty bag of chocolate coins for this set. Wouldn't this be a fun hand delivered invitation to a pirate themed party or a perfect bag of "gold" for the winner of a party game?

Supplies: Muslin, sewing machine, Cotton cording (jewelry dept at Joanne's), Palette Noir and Burnt Umber ink, Distress Vintage Photo ink, Small shipping tag, Chocolate coins

Pirates, done by Kim Hughes for CHF, fit the fun and whimsical style. This set, Ahoy Matey, is the SOTM set and available for a limited time. I made this card and was going to mail it to Brett, you know how kids love mail....instead, I left it with his teacher to put on his desk to wish him a great day. Inside reads:
You're a treasure. (with the miniature crossbones stamped next to the sentiment).

Saturday, December 19, 2009

Build your own Treasure Chest

How to make your own Treasure Chest


An article that appeared in the January 1999 issue of Lost Treasure Magazine on how to build a treasure chest to keep your finds in.







What do you do with all your finds? Cash in the clad coins? Sell your valuable coins? Sell the jewelry? I like to keep the stuff I find so I can show it off and use it as a conversation subject. How you display your finds is important when you want your presentation to be interesting to other people. The place where you store your treasures is very important. Whenever I dream of treasure, I envision a Pirate's treasure chest full of coins and jewelry. In this article, I will show you how to build a treasure chest to show off your finds. The project requires a minimum of tools. I am not a carpenter and had no problem building it. But I made it up as I went along. You will have some plans to follow. This project is very inexpensive and is limited only by your imagination. I am sure everyone has their own idea as to what a Pirate's treasure chest should look like. Use your imagination! This is what my pirate's treasure chest looks like.

List of materials:



one inch thick Pine board 11 inches wide X 2 feet long

1 inch square trim, x 4 feet long

one inch half round dowels, enough to finish job

small picture frame nails (enough to nail all dowels to frame)

Two brass Handles with brass screws

two brass hinges

One Brass padlock latch kit

2 feet of brass chain

4 brass eye bolts

small finishing nails

Tools required:



jigsaw or coping saw

hand saw

Hammer

Miter Saw (not required but handy for cutting dowels)





Draw your treasure chest pattern on a piece of paper. This is what mine looked like. Trace your pattern on the 1 inch thick pine board and cut out with a jigsaw. Cut the front and back rim sections from the 1 inch trim. Cut to length you prefer. Cut the bottom with your hand saw.





Bottom Section: Glue and nail together the two sides and bottom of treasure box together . Then glue and nail together the front and rear 1 inch trim pieces.



Top Section: Glue and nail together the two sides to the front and rear 1 inch trim pieces. Allow bottom and top section to dry overnight.



Cut half round dowels to length, glue and nail them to the treasure chest until you have covered the entire box. Sand and stain the box to desired color. I chose an antique stain for mine. After finish dries, attach top to bottom with hinges and attach handles to sides. Attach padlock latch kit to front of box. Attach eyebolts to inside of top and bottom and attach chain to the eyebolts. The chain will hold the lid half open while you add or remove new items from your chest. You can now add any special adornments that make this project Uniquely yours. I did a little Metal Smithing and added the Batwing Skulls to the side of the top of my box. I am also currently searching for an antique padlock for the box.



That's it! You now have a very unique Pirate's Treasure Chest to display your finds. Those tarnished old clad coins look great in a box like this and it kick starts the imagination of anyone that looks at it! This Pirate's Treasure Chest should add to your Treasure Display.







Closeup of Side of Treasure Box

Thursday, December 17, 2009

Pirate Party inspiraton

From Tania McCartney's blog
Ahoy there, me hearties! A treasure hunt there be... just follow the map to Riley's place, o'er the rollicking sea!

And so began Riley's 7th birthday party bash - a pirate treasure hunt.

I loved this theme - had been wanting to do it for sooo many years and finally managed to bypass the football and sports parties and have this theme approved by Riley. So I went for it!

Invitations


These were so easy. I just chose a pirate motif (scanned from some gorgeous 3D stickers) and constructed an invitation on the computer, printed it out and glued it to cardboard. I ripped the edges (I tried to burn them but the paper went up in flames - be careful!) then folded the whole thing in half.

I then punched a circle and tied with black ribbon, printed out each child's name and glued it to the outside of the invitation, and finished it off with a hunting trail and an X to mark the spot.

Decorations

It was so much fun to decorate for this party. I started with a black flag banner, studded with lettering to spell out 'Captain Riley'. I love using letters for decorating - you can print them in 'outline' mode (onto any colour paper) and cut them out to form words.

For the banner, I simply cut triangles from black card and sewed them together with the sewing machine. I also did this with red, white and black circles - punched them sewn together with the machine, and hung from the ceiling.

At the $2 shop, I found craft kits featuring pirate ship cardboard cutouts, and these cutouts were hung from the ceiling and stuck to windows and walls. You could print off a ship outline and cut it out yourself. I also re-used the little red 'X's I made for Riley's gift tags, and hung them from fishing line, too.

Lastly, I made a ball and chain shackle from a black balloon and black paper chain, and black balloons with curling string were hung here and there, including outdoors. And how could I forget the Lego pirate ship centrepiece. Four long hours and dose of lumbago, and it was together. Now, that's love.

Food

The more parties I throw, the more I want convenience and ease. Although I did make Riley's cake from scratch this year, there's nothing wrong with a packet cake mix. These cupcakes were from a box and even iced with the packet frosting (which was delicious). I then drew on bandannas and little piratey faces with writing icing.

The chocolate crackles with coconut (I used Coco Pops, not rice bubbles) were studded with chocolate coins wrapped in foil. Paper patty pans from Wheel & Barrow.



The pirate jelly shots (above) were just mango jello with a little extra liquid. I had every intention of immersing the bases of the cups in hot water to loosen them so the boys could just throw them down like sailors, but this idea was lost in the mad crazy ride of a boys' party.

The skull cookie-pops were just butter cookies cut with a circular cutter, dripped in melted chocolate (the face only) and then decorated with a white chocolate icing writer. Make sure you bake the cookies extra long so they are really firm, inserting the stick underneath each cookie and pressing down lightly before sliding into the oven.

The fruit skewers were impaled with little Asian sticks that resembled swords. The kids were served freshly popped popcorn in striped boxes and each child had their own white noodle box which were served stuffed with chips and chicken nuggets. All these items were so easy-make.

Costumes

Before guests arrived, the birthday boy dressed in his modified version of a pirate costume, complete with pirate boardshorts.

And Mum even got in on the act (Ella was too 'cool').


And when the landlubbin' guests arrived, they were whipped into seafaring shape with a few stategically-placed brow-pencil moustaches and scars, an eye patch, and a dose of sea-air-madness or two.





Games

Things kicked off with a pirate treasure hunt, starting with the first hand-written clue and following through with a series of clues that trailed these scurvy dogs from room to room in search of treasure...




...treasure that miraculously appeared in the depths of a barnacled chest - in the form of goodie bags which were little cardboard chests stuffed with piratey goodness and sealed with a skull and crossbones sticker.





I attached faux money and chocolate coins to the chest so that when the boys opened it, they also scrabbled for the cash.

X Marks the Spot was our next game. I tore the edges of a 12" x 12" scrapbooking paper and drew on a crude map with a permanent marker (Google similar maps - you could print one off if you don't want to draw) and attached to a sheet of black card. I made little red Xs for each child, with their name on, with a spot of blu tac on the back.

Kids were blindfolded and spun before marking their spot.



I'm a bit of a sucker for traditional party games and yes - you guessed it - pass the parcel was next. I was surprised when the kids leapt about in excitement when I announced the game. At seven, I thought it would have been a bit 'lame' but they had a ball.



Next was the real winner - the piñata. Right in the middle of a particularly busy patch, I only started making all these items the day before the party, and I couldn't face the usual papier maché hoo-ha with all that mess, so I instead used a flat, soft-ish cardboard box, taped it here and there with strong tape and decorated with fringed crêpe paper and another hand-drawn treasure map.

It was a - er... hit.





The Cake


Absolutely one of my fave parts of the party-driving process - the cake. I didn't want the usual skull and cross bones number, nor a ship - so I decided on a treasure island, resplendant with Polly Pocket palm trees and the moveable stickers I based the invitations around.

I started with a silver tray filled with blue jello (make this a little firmer than usual by using slightly less water). I then baked a round chocolate cake, packed with choc chips, and cut the edges down to make a quasi-island shape.

I then 'iced' the cake with melted chocolate then regular white Betty Crocker frosting. I whizzed one and a half packets of Nice biscuits until they were fine sandy crumbs and carefully pressed these onto the cake, pressing into the sides and allowing sand to fall onto the jelly 'water'. Once pressed on, scatter a little more on top so the sand looks loose.

The reason I iced the cake with a layer of melted chocolate first is so the surface becomes a little firmer - all the better to stand your palm trees firmly in.

I attached the pirate stickers to toothpicks and inserted upright into the cake, then added gold chocolate coins for the pirate's treasure island stash. Easy easy easy and so effective.





Photos

A really nice touch to any party, and a wonderful memento, is to have the kids pose in front of a backdrop (mine was wrapping paper from a large roll, IKEA) to get some crazy shots. Do this when everyone arrives so they are fully costumed.

Here is Riley's effort, complete with a wonky, loose-toothed gap. Haaaaar!


Many thanks to the composed and lovely Claudia and Ella for putting up with the boys' piratey antics. Put it this way - I've never heard a rendition of 'Happy Birthday to You' sung quite like this one! A ball had by all. (A canon ball...)