Saturday, August 20, 2011

Quiet Book

This summer some friends organized a quiet book swap. We had 10 women in the group, so everyone made 10 copies of their page. We met at the beginning of the summer to set measurements, discuss who’s doing what page, and to discuss ideas. Then 3 months later, we swapped them (and watched the SYTYCD finale together). This past week I’ve added a few pages to the ones from my friends, and ended up with enough pages for 2 books- one for younger kids, one for preschooler/ kindergarten age. Most of the pages I made are from this site: quietbook.blogspot.com. She has detailed instructions for each page of her book.

Here’s a tour of my books:

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Home décor weight fabric for the outside. Button closure.

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Preschool Book

Caterpillar patterns by me, with a pocket of felt circles to match. I used iron on adhesive on the green circles, then sewed on, added embroidery eyes.

Fishing page by Bethany - Pellon felt clouds and sun come off buttons, the fish have magnets inside so you can go fishing with a fishing pole (not pictured)

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Numbers matching by me. Take off all the numbers (they’re attached by velcro), then count items and find matching number. It was fun to go through my scrap bin and figure out what will fit for each number. I was going to include a pocket, but with the velcro sticking them in place, I just added 11 and 12. Those ones are ribbon, it would be fun to do this page with just patterned ribbon for each number.

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ABC pages by me- I bought flocked letter (like what you use to iron on t-shirts) then ironed it onto Pellon instead. Added velcro on the back and squares for each letter. Pocket for easy cleanup.

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Mail page- The girls have loved this one so far, Natalie wrote me notes (that consisted of just letters in her name) while sitting on the couch next to me as I finished up the books.

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Girl hair braiding: This was my page for the swap. Hooray for me! Above is all the pages I gave away. I had fun coordinating dresses and ribbons, and making all the clips- or should I say, watching movies and tv shows while making all the clips.

 

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If you’re wondering how I did the hair, I did a huge length horizontal, sewed around in a circle, then did 7 or so yarn strands vertical with a line across, so the hair would look like the back of someone’s head.

 

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Pie page- Weaving by Juli. She found that super cute berry fabric and then sewed the oatmeal colored crust and pie around it. 

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Cover of the second younger book- see how it’s rigid? This book has a cereal box under the cover to give it a hard cover.

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Car page by Julie. You can take the signs off and rearrange. She printed on t-shirt transfer paper, then transferred it to pellon that had Velcro sewn on the back. The top right is a gas pump with shoe lace pump, and the red square in the lower corner is a pocket for the micro machines (ebay).

Barn page by Ginger. Finger puppets! Her page is amazing because it’s so cute, she is so meticulous- and because she was done like 2 weeks after our first meeting!

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Holidays by Savannah- the laminated circle under the felt rotates around, and each pie piece has clipart for a different holiday or season.

Ocean by Lindsay- The boat, clouds and sky are Velcro pieces, and the animals are jelly like, behind the clear plastic vinyl. My kids love those squishy fish.

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Mr and Mrs Potato Head by Erika. Don’t you just love Mrs. Potato Head’s eyelashes?

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Beads by Sarah- For counting and textures.

Purse by Lindsey- This was all about the zipper, and the cool stuff she put inside- dollar store toys of things that belong in a purse- big coins, glasses, comb, notebook. We joked about using the comb for real because our kids always end up disheveled by the end of sacrament meeting.

 

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I spy by me- Patchwork of patterned fabric, with matching squares (with felt on the back). The kids match them up. Like a puzzle, only slightly easier. I liked all the puzzle pages I saw on other sites, but was weary of losing one piece and the puzzle being unusable as a result.

 

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Cupcakes! by me. This was the page that required innovation for me. First, I found these foam stickers (12/$1)  that were ice cream cones at Jo-Ann’s. Cut off the pointy cone= cupcakes! The two larger cupcakes were 50 cents a piece, so I didn’t want to do just those, because of cost- plus they’re huge! Secondly, I found this super cute cupcake ribbon, and I wanted to do the oven in shiny fabric.

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I bought silver lame for the baking sheet, but when I bought the stickers, I realized I just wanted them to be magnets onto a metal sheet, rather than velcro or stuck into little cups. So I used E-6000 glue to glue the metal sheets to the fabric, then put Wonder Under the ribbon to make it into a tape of sorts, to bind it to the metal and the fabric. Then sewed the ribbon all the way around close to the metal. In the process of sewing the pages onto the cover the metal has been shoved around and the ribbon sometimes ends up tucked under the metal.

Last but not least, I used fabric marker to draw the oven details- which promptly rubbed off as I was ironing them onto the sheet. So the oven looks dirty already. And then while ironing I accidentally touched the hot iron onto the plastic oven door- which promptly crumbled into an unrecognizable heap of fabric and curled plastic. So I made a larger door, and sewed it on last! There’s also the little potholder, so they can do some fine motor skills trying to pick up the cupcakes with the potholder. It’s attached with ribbon.

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To bind the books, I cut out the cover back, sewed the first and last page on, then sewed the middle pages on with a zig zag stitch, alternating front and back of the book. (The pages had raw edges on the inside seam that was to be towards the binding. The middle page I sewed in the seams so there were no raw edges, then sewed at the center seam and 1/2 inch over so all the sewing was covered up. (The multiple seams shown on the yellow page below). Then I placed the back cover in place, pinning around all the edges under, sewing a seam all the way around, and adding a tab for the closure. Added a button to the front cover- and I’m done!

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Hooray for quiet books! I’m hoping this one lasts a long time!

9 comments:

Katherine said...

I love the pages! I wish I would have joined the group! I'm jealous!

Bethany said...

I'm exhausted just looking at this!!! I have no idea where to even begin to put all the pages together. My kids love playing with the seperate pages though! :)

m@rta said...

Hi :) I'm so happy that there are on the world so creative persons as U :) It's amazing what is possible to prepare from so small pieces of fabrics :) Feel invited to visit my "quiet book" pages. The newest one: http://marta-mojepasje.blogspot.com/2011/09/niesiona-wena-popeniam-kolejna.html

skippy and sue said...

I love this quiet book. I am a grandma and would like to make a quiet book for my grandchildren. Do you have instructions and templates you share with other people? Your book is darling.

Jacki said...

Skippy and Sue- Most of the book is from this website, quietbook.blogspot.com . I think most of the members of my group used tutorials from the internet- so you could try to google a description of the page and see what comes up. I like to search with google images to find the same look, faster. The only one I designed was the dress and barettes page, so I could provide detailed instructions if you email me, jacquelinerenee@hotmail.com

Caren said...

Question: your pages (the base fabric) - were they just a cotton material? Did you use any kind of stabilizer or batting or anything in between pages?

Jacki said...

Caren- We used "target board" material for the swap pages. It's similar to home decor weight and properties, but available in plain colors. If you go into Jo-Ann's and ask at the fabric counter they should be able to point you to it. I recommend something more stable than cotton fabric- like twill or denim or felt. Having something more stable than a plain cotton quilting fabric meant that I didn't need anything in between to fill it. Some of my friends in the group sewed craft foam in between the layers to make the page more stable and rigid without adding weight. I put cardboard in the covers of one of my books, and metal sheets on the back of the other- so that gave the book a good stiff surface for the pages to rest on when you hold it in your lap. I've made fabric books (the panel character books you can buy at fabric stores) with batting in between, and they seemed so puffy to me. I was trying to cut out some of the bulk of the books so it would all fit in my church bag. I've seen it done all kinds of ways- some people do rings with holes on the sides, some bind, some make it into a bag with big handles. It's up to you! Hope that helps!

Jenny and Keith said...

I would seriously pay big bucks for one of these! I don't sew, so making something like this would take me years. But if you have any extra I will buy it from you! I'm serious.

MotherOfThree said...

Thank you for the tips on how to do the hair...I wouldn't be able to figure it out myself. I love the way you did the girl...I'm inspired....

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