Beary Colourful BOM: Red Bear of New Beginnings

Happy New Year from the Clever Chameleon

It’s finally time to meet the Red Bear of New Beginnings! Welcome to the Beary Colourful BOM!

Happy New Year!!!! May 2018 be full of blessings and peace and success for you!

Red Bear of New Beginnings: Beary Colourful BOM at Clever Chameleon

Today is the day! A new year. New goals. And the first episode in two intertwined projects that will run all year. The 2018 Monthly Color Challenge and the Beary Colourful Quilt BOM.

2018 Monthly Color Challenge

I have been looking forward to this day for several months. This project is all thanks to Jen Shaffer of Patterns by Jen. For each month of 2018, Jen has chosen a colour and is releasing a pattern for a pieced block in that colour. Over the 12 months there will be 12 blocks in 12 colours to produce a rainbow quilt. The first block for Jen Shaffer’s quilt is available for free at Jen’s blog right now. This is the first block that you can download from Patterns with Jen:

Red Block for 2018 Monthly Colour Challenge

How the Monthly Color Challenge will work

Jen has invited a small group of bloggers to help with her 2018 Monthly Color Challenge. So at the beginning of each month, there will be a blog hop to inspire you with different projects in the allocated colour. This month, to start things off, there are six other bloggers participating in the Red Challenge Blog Hop. There is myself – I will get to what we are doing for the challenge here at Clever Chameleon in a moment. And then there are five other fabulous quilters.

The other Red Challenge Bloggers for January 2018 are:
Jen Strauser at the Dizzy Quilter
Sherry Shish at Powered by Quilting
Jen Rosin at A Dream and A Stitch
Nancy Scott at Masterpiece Quilting
Joanne Harris at Quilts by Joanne

And at the end of each month….. there are prizes!

Not only has Jen put together a free rainbow BOM for you, and lined up half a dozen other quilters to help inspire you, but she has organised prizes as well!!

Every month, in the last week of the month, Patterns by Jen will have a linky party especially for people who have participated in the monthly colour challenge. You can link up one project per month in the colour of the month. Your link can be Jen’s block, something you have made from one of the other Challenge Blog Hop participants or something completely original. As long as your creation is made predominantly in the nominated colour. You can participate in as many or as few of the monthly parties as you wish. 

Northcott prize

Every month there will be a prize drawn randomly from the links in the linky party. January’s linky will be open at Patterns by Jen from Jan 24 – Jan 31, and a winner will be chosen on Feb 1st. January’s prize is sponsored by Northcott and is a set of 2.5″ strips….. win this and you’ll be all set for June’s challenge! 🙂

And…. every linky party that you enter will also give you one entry for the Grand Prize. Which is to have a quilt top quilted by Jen of Dizzy Quilter! There are a few details you should know about this prize, but winning this would be a serious coup.

That’s all fantastic. But I’m here for the Red Bear!

Beary Colourful BOMIndeed. We should definitely get on now to what’s happening for Jen’s Monthly Color Challenge here at Clever Chameleon.

Every month of 2018 I am going to make an appliqué bear in Jen’s nominated colour. And for the duration of the Color Challenge I am also making the patterns available to you so that you can make them too. Together these 12 bears will form the blocks of a rainbow bear quilt suitable for a  single (twin)-size bed.

So without further ado, I present to you, the Red Bear of New Beginnings. New Year’s Red Ted is celebrating fresh starts and the courage to try new things. He is stepping out with the intention of improving something or discovering something. 2018 is his year!

Red Butterfly Bear of the Beary Colourful BOM at Clever Chameleon

The Red Bear has a butterfly on his tummy to remind him to never fear new beginnings or be ashamed to change his path for the better.

Red Bear butterfly tummy motif

Or he has a beetle on his tum…..

Red Beetle appliqué

This month I have pulled out all the stops and given you two options for the motif on the Red Bear’s tummy. Most months there will only be a single pattern, but the first month is special, right? And perhaps there are children out there who would rather something less fluttery on their quilt than a butterfly. So I thought very hard, and decided that beetles start as grubs, pupate and then emerge as spectacular flying insects. So why should butterflies always get the glory as the poster child for change and renewal? Beetles do a complete metamorphosis too .

So, the other Red Bear has a beetle on his tummy, also to remind him to never fear new beginnings or be ashamed to change his path for the better.

Red Beetle Bear from the Beary Colourful BOM
No this is not a bugbear, despite my DH’s quick wit!

The beetle/butterfly choice is all yours. Of course, you can abandon both the butterfly and the beetle and put anything you like on your bear’s tummy if you wish.

How to get the Red Bear Appliqué Pattern?

Sorry, this free pattern download has expired…. it will be available for purchase in due course. Perhaps you would like to join the free 2019 Love with a Twist BOM here instead!

Further to the pattern file, the fabric and notion requirements for the Red Bear block are at the end of this post. The technique I used to make my bear is free motion raw edge appliqué. If you are already proficient at free motion raw edge appliqué you should need very little further guidance to create your Red Bear. 

If you do need more help, I will be posting further instructions and tips to supplement the pdf pattern over the next few days (Update: done!). This current post is already mammoth enough! Also, some instructions will be applicable to every bear and will serve us better over the year if they can be accessed directly, not buried in this post.

However, there are a few things I want to discuss with you right up front.

I am going to trapunto each of my bear appliqués.

This makes the fusible appliqué less flat and dimensionless. It also means that I do not need to use a stabiliser (stabilizer) while I am stitching the appliqué. Because the trapunto layer is also my stabiliser.

trapunto bear

Stabiliser, you say?! For some choices of machine-stitched appliqué techniques, the fusible webbing and multiple layers of fabric in raw edge appliqué are sufficient to keep your work flat. However, if you are finding that your stitching is pulling at your design and distorting your work, you will need to use a stabiliser to keep your appliqué flat. Here is a good review of stabilisers. 

But may I just recommend the trapunto?

I am a beginner and/or I don’t free motion stitch. Can I do the Beary Colourful BOM?

Of course! You may want to wait a couple of days to get started though. I am preparing a blog post (update: done!) to cover some minor adjustments to the block that will make the bear simpler. These adjustments will be particularly helpful if you do not wish to use free motion straight stitching to secure your appliqué. Free motion stitching allows you to easily appliqué very small pieces and around very tight corners. Some of the corners and small pieces in the original pattern may send you balmy if you try to secure them with more traditional appliqué stitches such as zigzag or blanket stitch. 

I prefer needle-turn/hand-stitched appliqué. Can I do the Beary Colourful BOM?

Certainly, if you are independent. You will need to know how to add your own seam allowances to the pattern, as this pattern is designed as a raw-edge appliqué pattern. You may also want to follow the simplification guidelines to deal with unrealistically small details. Beyond that – I don’t do hand appliqué so I can’t offer you any further knowledgeable help.

Where are we headed?

You are welcome to set your bear blocks into a quilt top however you like. But, I know some people/groups are looking at this quilt as a charity quilt option (good on you!) and I thought it may be helpful to lay out my intentions for a simple quick finish after you have laboured over all the blocks. My current intention is to finish the Beary Colourful Quilt off very simply by adding sashing between the blocks, followed by a plain border. The bear blocks will finish at 12″ by 15.5″.

Beary Colourful Quilt layout

If you add jelly-roll (2″ finished) strips between the blocks, 4″ wide side borders and 6″ wide top and bottom borders, the final size of this quilt will be 48″ by 80″. This will fit on top of a single (twin) bed with 5-6″ overhang on each side and at the bottom. Increasing the sashing widths a little will get more overhang.

I intend to do February’s blue bear in dark blues, which will leave light blue unrepresented in the quilt and a perfect candidate for the sashing colour.

What you will need to make the Red Bear block

  • Fabric for the background of the block. Each bear block will require a base fabric square of at least 13.5″ by 17″ to allow leeway for trimming. I used a light-grey tone on tone print and a similar batik for my two Red Bear blocks. You should be able to get 3 blocks across the WOF of most quilting-weight cotton fabrics.
  • Thin batting for the trapunto layer. I use a polyester batting of 1/8th inch loft that I buy by the yard at my local quilt shop. The red bear requires a trapunto batting square of approximately 11″ x 15″.
  • Fusible paper-backed fabric adhesive (for example vliesofix). 15″ x 24″ will be ample for the red bear.
  • Red fabric scraps for the main sections of the bear. The whole bear requires the equivalent of 6″ x 24″ of red fabric. But he is built from pieces, so you can use multiple smaller scraps if you wish.
  • White/light colour fabric scraps for the muzzle and tummy,  5″ x 8″. If shadowing bothers you (when fabrics show through the layer above slightly) you may wish to cut two each of the muzzle and tummy pieces and make these sections out of two layers of fabric. Then you will need 10″ x 8″ of white/light fabric. 
example of shadowing
Shadowing…. the bear on the left has two layers of white fabric on his muzzle, the bear on the right has only one layer. Some red can be seen underneath the muzzle of the bear on the right.. Honestly, kids will NOT care.
  • Various coloured small fabric scraps for eyes, nose, mouth, paws, inner ears and tummy motif appliqué shapes. 
  • Machine embroidery or sewing threads to match your appliqué fabrics (I used rayons for a little shine, but cottons are prefered if you are securing with only a single round of stitching)
  • General tools: sewing machine, iron etc, teflon ironing sheet or baking paper, small sharp scissors, pencil, chalk/washout fabric marker, quilting pins, black permanent fabric marker
  • Optional but helpful: curved blade embroidery snips and a furry friend to sit on your mending pile to provide guilt-free sewing time. Thanks Mew!

Wow! I think that’s all I need to tell you until tomorrow! Tomorrow I will put together a pictorial walk-through of how I put my red appliqué bears together. (Update: this post is now available).

Until then, enjoy the blog hop!

P.S. Have you liked Clever Chameleon on Facebook? That is where you will get your first glimpses of the Blue Bear of High Hopes before February!

P.P.S This is the first full scale pattern I have produced for online download. Should you have issues with this pattern, I would be grateful for your assistance in reporting problems so I can correct them and learn for next time. Thanks!!

P.P.P.S. Sharing the Red Bear of New Beginnings on all my favourite linkys this week! Cooking up Quilts, Love Laugh Quilt, Sew Can Do, Inquiring Quilter, Quilt Fabrication, Sew Fresh Quilts, My Quilt Infatuation, Crazy Mom Quilts, Confessions of a Quilt Addict, Busy Hands Quilts.
And I would have shared on Freemotion by the River, but Connie already did it for me! Thanks so much Connie!


Don’t want to miss a bear in the Beary Colourful BOM? You can follow my blog directly for email updates, or through Bloglovin’. Sneak peeks of next month’s bear will also appear throughout the year at Clever Chameleon Quilting on Facebook. All your follow options can be found here

Colour Inspiration Tuesday: January is Red!

January is Red color scheme from Clever Chameleon

The last Colour Inspiration Tuesday of 2017, and the first of our 2018 Monthly Colour Inspiration series

In 2018 it is my intention to set aside the last Colour Inspiration Tuesday of each month to look forward to the incoming “Colour of the Month”. The Colour of the Month is the colour that we will focus on each month in Jen Shaffer’s Monthly Color Challenge and blog hop.

2018 Monthly Color Challenge

The Colour of the Month for January 2018 is Red. And today, being the last Tuesday before January, I am painting the town! 

Red mosaic

January is Red. Where can red take us…..?

Red is strong, red is loud and attention seeking. Red is demanding, warning, luring. Red is the colour of danger, the colour of speed and adventure, and the colour of rescue. Red declares the most passionate of loves!

red mosaic

Red is delicious ……. or poisonous. One thing is certain, red is never boring! Red stimulates appetite, causes tension, and generates excitement. Red is the colour of opportunity, wealth and prosperity. Red is glorious.

Red deepens to purple……

red mosaic

….. and lightens to orange.

red mosaic

A little red can go a long way. It loves to accent white, grey and black colour schemes. Red is very powerful.

Red mosaic

It looks great with its complement, green. But blue and red runs deepest in many a people groups’ veins. 

red and blue mosaic

Will you be seeing red in January?

Are you joining the 2018 Monthly Color Challenge? If so, where will the colour red take you? A red block for a rainbow quilt? Like Jen’s red block or my red appliqué bear?

Or are you a true lover of red? Whether it is a red block, a red pin cushion, a red pillow or an entire really red quilt. I can’t wait to see what everyone shares!

Beary Colourful BOM
Join my Beary Colourful BOM in January for the first block… the Red Bear of New Beginnings

Today, red is already in the air at my house. I have been making binding for the Vanuatu Turtle Quilt.

Red fabric strips

Vanuatu turtle quiltIf you wish to explore the world of red quilty projects, here are a few to get you started:
My own Vanuatu Turtle Quilt
Red Nanny’s Red Quilt (That Patchwork Principle 2013)
Red Crazy Pieced Quilt (Exuberant Color, Dec 2017)
The Year of the Red and White Quilt (Lynn Carson Harris 2014)
Red & White Patchwork Quilt (Gold Shoe Girl 2016)

I have also started a Pinterest Board dedicated to red quilts and related sewing.

And more Colour Inspiration Tuesdays where we have looked at red include:

Quangdong Christmas color scheme from Clever Chameleon
Quangdong Christmas
Hot Chocolate color scheme from Clever Chameleon
Hot Chocolate
Butterfly Loves Red color scheme from Clever Chameleon
Butterfly Loves Red
Red Eye Flight color scheme at Clever Chameleon
Red Eye Flight
Frosty Berries color scheme from Clever Chameleon
Frosty Berries
Flanders Poppies color scheme from Clever Chameleon
Flanders Poppies

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

No Red and Blue yet….

It seems we haven’t done blue and red colour scheme yet. We will have to rectify that.

Not long to go now….. 2018 is less than a week away. I have a great feeling that it is going to be a marvellous quilty year! Have you had a think about your goals for 2018 (if you are a goal setting type)? My main quilting goal is to end 2018 with less UFOs than I started with!!! 

P.S. All of the red photos featured today are the work of the generous photographers who use the Unsplash distribution platform. If you would like to use any of these photos (they are all free and without strings attached), or find the talented photographers who took them, head over to my Red Collection here.

P.P.S. Sharing on Crazy Mom Quilts


Would you like to keep in touch with Clever Chameleon and the fun quilty ideas I design as well as find all over the internet? You can follow directly for email updates, or through Bloglovin’, Pinterest or FB. All your follow options can be found here. Thanks for your support!

2018 Monthly Colour Challenge BOM: Official Launch!!!

2108 Monthly Color Challenge

It’s Time!

The 2018 Color Challenge at Patterns by Jen has officially launched and all the important details have been finalised. Here at Clever Chameleon we will be joining in with Jen’s colour challenge with the Beary Colourful BOM in Jen’s monthly colours. 

Beary Colourful BOM at Clever Chameleon

This adventure starts very soon, on January 1. Below is everything you need to know that wasn’t included in everything I already told you on Friday…… If you specifically want to be a part of the free Beary Colourful BOM, read Friday’s post as well.

My Fellow Colour Challenge Bloggers

Apart from Jen Shaffer of Patterns by Jen, and myself, there are six other quilt bloggers who are committed to making this whole-year blog hop an astounding success. They are:

Joanne of Quilts By Joanne
Diane Cullum of Sewing with D

 

If in doubt, call us all “Jen” – you will have a nearly 50% chance of being right!!! Lol. As it is, when I tell people my name they sometimes think I said “Jenny”. Dione rhymes with Leonne, but there isn’t a lot of phonetic difference between D and J. And Jeonne sounds wrong, so Jenny it becomes…… In contrast, when I write my name, people read Dion or Diane. So there you have it, an impromptu discussion on why my blog has a random name like “Clever Chameleon”, not something like “Dione Quilts”, You may blame my parents, although Dad squarely blames my Mum. 🙂

Anyway, I digress, and I must get to the best part! Sponsors!

Meet the Sponsors

Jen has done a marvellous job in finding sponsors for this colour challenge. I know for a fact that this challenge blog hop was a fairly last minute idea, but look at this line up of sponsors! Details about which sponsors are sponsoring which months will be forthcoming as they are finalised.

And there is a Grand Prize as well!!

For every month you enter the colour challenge link up at Patterns by Jen, you get an entry for the grand prize. Which is to have your quilt top quilted by Jen of Dizzy Quilter! Not to be confused with Jen of Patterns by Jen……

There are a few conditions, understandably. Your quilt top can be up to 90″ x 90″ (US$202.50 value!), you must provide the backing, 8″ longer than width and length. Batting can be purchased from Jen, for $20, if you like.

Return shipping is included for US residents only. And the quilt will not be trimmed or bound, those services are extra. It is a fantastic prize!

Coming Back to Earth….

Tomorrow we will put aside our Beary Colourful excitement for a bit and have a more traditional Colour Inspiration Tuesday. 

Do you remember my Hoya, or Wax Flower? I had a few comments about it seeming so fake. Well, I assure you, not only is it real, but it’s oddity pales into insignificance in light of another Australian flower. The Australian orchid I discovered through our local state Botanic Gardens the other day just cracks me up! But that’s all I’m telling you until tomorrow!


Would you like to keep in touch with Clever Chameleon and the fun quilty ideas I design as well as find all over the internet? You can follow directly for email updates, or through Bloglovin’, Pinterest or FB. All your follow options can be found here. Thanks for your support!

2017 Ornament Exchange and Tutorial Blog Hop

How to make a Drum Ornament for Christmas

Welcome to the 2017 Ornament Exchange & Blog Hop! This year, there are 47 amazing bloggers participating in the exchange. The rules of the challenge were simple: be partnered with a fellow blogger, create a handmade ornament for $15 or under, create a tutorial, and ship the ornament off to a new home!

Introducing my Ornament Exchange Partner

My 2017 Ornament Exchange partner is the amazing Evija Roberts of From Evija with Love. Evija has a wonderful DIY, crafts & furniture up-cycling blog, where she shares all the creative things she and her cute pug Coco get up to. 

Evija’s preferred style of ornament for this exchange is traditional, in silver and white. Luckily for me,  I also got bonus intel…. last year Evija did a post about her new Christmas tree and some of her family traditions, so I was able to see exactly what I was aiming for! 🙂

Evija's Christmas tree
Evija’s beautiful Christmas tree

How the Drum Ornament came to be

When I signed up for this blog hop, I had a stack of ornament ideas in my head. But none of them were conceived with the simple elegance of silver and white in mind. And since I’d used up all my silver fabric scraps on several projects last Christmas, I was effectively handed a clean slate to try something different, and an excuse to go craft shopping. Actually, that’s pretty much my definition of Christmas!! Whoop!

I went my local craft store not having a clue what I might make., but assuming colours would be no big deal. But when I got there I discovered all sorts of fun Christmasy fabrics in stock, but nothing in just silver, or in silver and white, or even predominately silver.  So, I bought pieces of the two most silver textiles I could see and went home to invent “something”.

Insul-fleece and hexagon fabric
What did I buy? Insul-fleece batting (top of photo)  and a sparkly silver and gold hexagon-print cotton fabric. 

Soon I was happily humming “Pa rum pa pum pum, rum pa pum pum, rum pa pum pum…”. My supplies had spoken. After tinkering for a while, I realised I had serendipitously purchased exactly the right things to make a drum ornament!

Drum Christmas Ornament for the 2017 Ornament Exchange

PA RUM PA PUM PUM! ….. Go on, hum along as you take a look at my tutorial. 🙂 If you do not yet have the Drummer Boy carol firmly stuck in your head, either you are made of very ear-worm resistant stuff, or your education is lacking somewhere and you should google it…… Enjoy!

2017 Ornament Exchange and Blog Hop

Meet the 2017 Ornament Exchange Hosts

Erlene ⋅ My Pinterventures Kim · Made In A Day Amanda ·Domestically Creative

Shirley · Intelligent Domesticatons Michelle · Our Crafty Mom

Beverly · Across the Blvd. Christene · Key to Inspiration Pili ⋅ My Sweet Things

Nicki · Sweet Parrish Place Megan · C’mon Get Crafty

Hilary · Raising Fairies and Knights Emily · Two Purple Couches

Tina · One Crafty Mess Marie · The Inspiration Vault Debra · Shoppe No. 5

Trisha · Rosewood and Grace Jeanie · Create and Babble Katrin ⋅ Kreativ K

Terri · Christmas Tree Lane Maureen · Red Cottage Chronicles

Toni ⋅ Small Home Soul Ula ⋅ Lulu & Celeste Sue ⋅ A Purdy Little House

Pamela · Home On The Corner Lorelai Life with Lorelai Cindy ⋅ DIY Beautify

Debbie ⋅ Tweak and Style Stephanie ⋅ Swoodson Says Chelc ⋅ Inside the Fox Den

Susan ⋅ Super Mom – No Cape! Molly ⋅ Just a Little Creativity

Roseann ⋅ This Autoimmune Life Angela ⋅ Simply Beautiful by Angela

Vicki and Jenn ⋅ 2 Bees in a Pod Joanne ⋅ Our Unschooling Journey

Tylynn ⋅ Bitterroot DIY Sam ⋅ Raggedy Bits Mary ⋅ The Boondocks Blog

Cyn ⋅ Creative Cynchronicity Dione ⋅ Clever Chameleon Quilting

Erica ⋅ Erica Ever After Chelsea ⋅ Love Paper Crafts Evija ⋅ From Evija with Love

Samantha ⋅ Little Bits of Home Hope ⋅ Hopes Crafty Niche Anne ⋅ Orange Bettie

Pam · P.S. I Love You Crafts


Make your own Drum Christmas Tree Ornament – Full Tutorial

Drum ornament supplies

You will need the following supplies:

  • a feature fabric – sufficient size for 6 hexagons (downloadable pdf template for 3 different hexagon sizes found in this link)
  • fabric scraps for the top and base of the drum
  • paper-backed iron-on adhesive or glue stick
  • Insul-fleece, ordinary fleece or other heavy non-fraying material such as quality felt – You will need a slightly larger piece than that of the feature fabric
Insul-fleece
Insul-fleece has a shiny silver side and a soft white fluffy side.
  • 6 small beads ( I chose 4mm clear rainbow pearl beads that I had on hand)
  • 6-8″ scrap of thin ribbon to match your project (I used white ribbon snipped from new clothing… you know, that ribbon added to clothes for display hanging purposes….. why waste it?)
  • cardboard tube (the cardboard tube insert from a hand towel roll or similar)
  • thread to match or complement your feature fabric and beads
  • hot glue and gun (or ordinary glue and some patience!)
  • 2 bamboo skewers (large drum) or 2 wooden toothpicks (small drum)
  • a very small amount of air-drying polymer clay (steal it from your kids/grandkids if you can)
  • hand-sewing needle, scissors, masking tape or other strong sticky tape, pencil

Optional supplies:

  • glitter
  • sewing machine and iron (for sewn version as pictured)
  • your favourite non-permanent fabric marking method (such as chalk, wash-out marker, freezer paper) for marking hexagon shapes
  • glue stick (for people who do not like to sew)

Drum decoration for Ornament Exchange

Notes on my specific supplies:

The feature fabric I used is called X17 Sparkle Xmas Hexagons (cream) from the Spotlight Apparel Fabric range. It was the hexagon print that directly triggered my idea for the drum ornament. However, there is no need to actually have a hexagon print for this project. Your favourite yardage or scraps cut into hexagons will do equally well.

I also chose to use Insul-fleece (by Legacy) for the main body of the drum purely because it has an Aluminized Polyethylene coating on the back that is shiny silver.  …….ooooooh, shiny…… 🙂 . If you don’t need the silver effect, feel free to substitute felt or fleece in your favourite colour instead.

Step-by-Step Instructions

Step 1

Trace out 6 hexagon shapes onto the paper-backed adhesive and iron onto the reverse side of your feature fabric. Follow the manufacturer’s instructions for ironing on your brand of adhesive. Cut out your hexagons and remove the paper backing. Note: If you are using a fabric printed with suitable sized hexagons like I did, you can just iron on the adhesive without pre-marking the hexagon shapes.

Cut hexagon fabric pieces
Enough adhesive-backed hexagons for two Drum Ornaments.

Alternative method: If you want to do a no-sew version of this ornament, simply mark out 6 hexagons on your fabric and cut them out. You don’t need to use the iron-on adhesive.

Step 2

Lay your hexagons onto the soft white side of the Insul-fleece, (or on your felt). If you would like to see borders of the backing fabric around your hexagons on the finished ornament, space your hexagons out accordingly.

Fabric hexagons adhered to Insul-fleece
Fabric hexagons adhered to Insul-fleece with no spaces.
fabric hexagons adhered to Insul-fleece
Fabric hexagons adhered to Insul-fleece with space to accomodate borders on cut hexies.

Adhere your feature hexagons to the Insul-fleece or felt with a hot iron. 

No-sew method: Use the glue stick to adhere your fabric hexagons to your chosen backing textile and skip step 3. Please do not use a glue stick if you intend to machine sew your hexagons!  It will be no fun if you gum up your machine!

Step 3

Sew around the edge of your hexagons to permanently fix them to the backing textile. Use a thread colour that blends with or adds to your design as you wish, keeping in mind that the sewing will be visible once the ornament is completed. Do this step before you cut the hexagons out of the backing fabric – because sewing around individually cut hexagons is too fiddly….. ask me how I know…… 🙂

No-sew method: Skip Step 3

Step 4

Cut out your 6 hexagons. You can either cut the hexagons flush with the boundaries of the feature fabric or if you have allowed for it, with a border of fleece/felt.

Cut hexies for Drum ornament
Cut hexies for Drum Ornament – no border.
Marked hexies for drum with borders
Marked borders on hexies.
Cut hexies for Drum Ornament - with borders
Cut hexies for Drum Ornament – with border.

Step 5

Place two hexagons reverse-sides together. Join them together by sewing a few stitches on the spot to create an anchor point in one top corner and then the bottom corner directly below. This can be done either by hand or machine.

Position of sewing
Join two hexies together by stitching a few stitches at the position of each “x”.
Sewing two hexies together
Sewing two hexies together with a few stitches in one top corner.

Step 6

Open up your work so that you can lay the third hexagon behind the second hexagon. Join these two hexagons with a few stitches in the free top and bottom corners of the second hexagon. Repeat this step until you have a chain of 6 hexagons.

Sewing a hexagon chain
Add hexagons one by one to form a chain of hexies attached to each other at the top and bottom corners.

Step 7

Form your hexagon chain into a circle and sew the top and bottom corners of hexagon 6 to hexagon 1. Quietly trim any corners that haven’t quite lined up to get a  nice straight top for your drum. Your feature fabric should be on the outside of the circle and your drum should now look like this…..

Hexagon circle
Hexagons sewn into a circle, ready for the cardboard tube insert

Step 8

If you are making a drum that is thinner than your cardboard tube, cut the cardboard tube lengthwise.

cardboard tube

Now, overlap the cut edges to create a narrower tube that fits snuggly inside your hexagon circle. 

cardboard tube sizing
Slide the tube into the hexagon circle and allow it to fill the space snugly

Secure the tube at the correct diameter with tape.

cardboard tube secured with tape

Note: If you are using the largest size hexagons from my template, a standard (Australian) paper towel roll insert should fit inside your hexagon circle unaltered, so you can skip this step.

Step 9

Shorten your cardboard roll to a few mm less than the height of your hexagon circle.

Recessed cardboard tube
Cut your cardboard tube so that it is flush with the bottom of your drum but recessed slightly at the top.

Next, cut two fabric scraps into rough circles somewhat larger than the ends of your cardboard tubes.

cut a top and bottom for your drum

Snip the overhanging fabric from the edge in towards the tube so that the fabric bends easily over the tube. Secure one circle of fabric to the top of the tube with tape or glue to form the top of your drum. 

Fabric top secured onto cardboard tube.
Secure the fabric top onto your cardboard tube. Now repeat for the bottom.

Repeat this process with the second circle of fabric to form the bottom of your drum. I used Insul-fleece for the top of my drum and a white fabric scrap for the base.

Step 10

Fold your ribbon in half and secure both ends to the tube (with glue or tape) so that the loop will emerge from the top of the drum for hanging.

drum insert
Your cardboard tube should now be covered with fabric top and bottom, and have a ribbon loop attached

Slide the completed tube assembly into your hexagon circle. Secure with a little glue inserted between the tube and the hexagon circle.

Drum with insert
Slide the fabric covered tube into your hexagon circle and secure in place with glue.

Step 11

Each hexagon should have two corners poking out from the circle. Join these two loose corners to each other with a few hand-stitches so that they come together in front of their own hexagon.

hand stitch the drum details
Join the loose corners of each hexagon together so they meet in front.

Once each corner is secure, stitch a bead onto the point for decoration.

Adding beads to the drum
Add a bead to each point for decoration.
completed drum ornament for Christmas
Your Drum Ornament is now complete. You can hang it as is, or add drumsticks.

Step 12

Create two drumsticks by trimming two toothpicks or bamboo skewers to size (for small drums use toothpicks, for larger drums use skewers).

cut skewers
Trim your toothpicks and skewers to approximately 4 – 6.5cm (1.5 – 2.5″) long

Add a small ball of polymer clay to the end of each stick. Optional: Knead glitter into the polymer clay for a little more sparkle on your drumsticks.

drumsticks
Make drumsticks by adding a ball of polymer clay to the end of your trimmed skewer or toothpicks.

Attach the drumsticks to the drum with a few hand-stitches or a little glue.

two completed drum ornaments

Step 13

Send a picture of your fabulous creation to dione @ cleverchameleon.com.au so I can share it with everyone and we can see how clever you are! Then enjoy your new Christmas ornament and have  a safe, magical Christmas!

Here’s a couple of variations of the drum ornament that I made: with borders around the hexagons – one with a simple solid purple feature fabric.

bigger drum ornaments


FIND ALL 47 HANDMADE ORNAMENT TUTORIALS BELOW AND SHARE YOURS TOO! Use Hashtag #2017OrnamentExchange so we can see your creations on social media.


 

P.S. Don’t forget to check out the other 46 other ornaments on the blog hop today!

P.P.S. Please make sure you drop by Erlene’s blog at My Pinterventures and thank her for running this massive blog hop!

P.P.P.S Sharing the Christmas joy on my favourite linky parties: Quilting Room with Mel, Quilt Fabrication, Sew Fresh Quilts, My Quilt Infatuation, Confessions of a Quilt Addict, Busy Hands Quilts,