Totally Funky Aprons!

To Hell with  Housework

To Hell with Housework - Retro Eclectro

I love aprons! I have a whole page on my website devoted to apron tutorials and links. I also have a post on how to make my favorite empire-waist patchwork apron.

Using Google’s Image Search I found these funky aprons designed by Retro Eclectro. I just love the skulls apron named “To Hell with Housework.”  That’s my motto!

Visit my apron page at www.chickensense.com for a ton of apron photos, tutorials, and links.

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Making a Pretty and Comfortable Apron

The more time I spend at home, the more I understand why aprons were so popular in years past. For one thing, they are so pretty that they make me feel pretty. (A happy delusion on my part…) They protect my clothes, especially when I bake anything that uses flour, which seems to get all over me somehow, and they protect from grease splatters, and are always handy for drying hands. Aside from these expected uses, aprons are wonderful for bringing in eggs from the chicken coop, or cradling baby chicks, or even for carrying flowers and vegetables in from the garden.

I love the romantic look of long, billowing aprons, but I wanted one that doesn’t tie around the neck, which always irritates me, and I wanted the high “empire-waist” style such as you see in the movie Sense and Sensibility. When I came across a leftover bit of my patchwork quilt made out of 5″ squares of floral fabrics, I thought it would make a perfect apron.

I started making the shoulder straps by taking two 20″ long strips of 3″ wide fabric and folding them in half length-wise right sides together. I sewed down the long side and across one short end. I then turned the strips right side out.

Next, for the bodice I cut two 14″ by 7″ pieces of green fabric. I laid them right sides together and sewed around all the sides, leaving a 2″ opening along the bottom for turning it right side out. (Whip stitch the opening closed after turning.) I then sewed the closed end of each shoulder strap on top of the top corners of the bodice.

For the waist band I took a 40″ piece of patchwork and cut it 5-1/2″ wide. I folded it in half length-wise right sides together and sewed across both short ends and about 5″ in along the long edge. Then I turned it right side out. Next I sewed the bottom edge of the bodice slightly on top of the top folded edge of the waistband. patchwork apronI stitched the skirt to the raw edge of the waistband.

My patchwork skirt piece is about 45″ wide. I sewed a hem around both sides and the bottom edge. Then I pinned the top edge, right sides together, to the bottom, raw edge of the waistband, being careful to leave the other raw edge free. (That edge will be folded down and whip-stitched to cover the raw edges where the skirt is attached.) I measured by eye and folded and pinned a few pleats near the middle of the waistband. You can gather the top edge of the skirt if you prefer.

I then took the other edge of the shoulder straps and sewed them to the top folded edge of the waist band at opposite ends of the waistband. I attached double-fold bias tape to the ends of the waist-band to serve as ties. Finally I folded over the remaining raw edge of the waistband and sewed it by hand to cover the raw edges where the skirt was attached.

Visit my Apron Page for lots of apron tutorials and links.

UPDATE July 2009: I have my very own blog now: chickenlady quilts on Blogger.

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