Use your sewing talent and your fabric stash to make some gifts.
For a certain occasion or just an “I was thinking about you” here are 18 gifts you can sew.
For The Home
Placemats
This is a gift they’ll use every day. Use a little batting to give the mats some weight and substance and be sure their washable.
Ideas:
- You could pick one fabric or piece together fabrics in a pattern or randomly.
- You could make them in a solid fabric and stitch flowing lines of decorative stitches in one or more colors across them
- You could sew a little pocket onto the front to stuff in a napkin or a pair of chopsticks
Table Runner
A table runner is perfect for informal dinners or for showing off a gorgeous table but still having a safe place to put down the serving bowls. It adds color some color, and a sense of what this family table is all about this day whether it’s a mid-century modern print, a dark solid with gold binding, a hand-printed rustic linen, a holiday theme print, or upcycled flannel shirt patchwork.
Ideas:
- Make two long runners for a wide table or two short runners to go across the width of the table for a modern table
- Bind it with contrasting fabric or matching
- Insulated it to safeguard the table from hot serving dishes and condensing ice tea pitchers.
- Add tassels to the ends
- Fuse on and applique motifs from a print fabric
- Make it reversible
Napkins
Cloth Napkins are really the best. You save money and trees but you mostly save money because good cloth napkins will last you for years of daily use and weekly washings.
Ideas:
- Use printed quilting cotton. (The print will be on only one side).
- Make them large for an elegant dinner or small for a lunch box.
- Embroider them, print them, stamp them, get out the fabric markers and personalize them.
Pot Holders
The size you make determines the use but these are a great project for the smaller cuts in your stash. Be sure to use insulated batting and cotton, linen or wool to avoid melting fabrics.
Ideas:
- Made smaller they become coasters
- Made thicker they become a protector for your table or counter
- Have your child decorate solid light color fabric with handprints then sew it up as a gift for grandparents
A Very Cool Apron
This is not your grandmother’s apron but you could stencil a floral border on it if you want to. Easy on and off and no straps to tug or bind. Plus pockets and it only requires a yard of fabric to make.
Ideas:
- Shorten it a bit, add a loop and a center pocket for a gardening apron
Decorative Garland
Add a little fun and color to any room on the cheap and low commitment. Great for a baby or teen’s room, or a dark corner. Sews up fast.
Ideas:
- Use any shape or a mix of shapes
- Choose specific colors to make it a holiday theme
- Make a miniature garland to hang in a large houseplant
For Going Places
Zipper Pouches
These are pretty darn handy. And an easy way to use your had-to-have-but-not-sure-what-to-make-with-it fabric
Ideas:
- Use laminated fabric for the lining
- Decorate the outside with fabric markers, stencils, stamps, etc.
- Make a set of three (above) or just one
Yarn Project Tote
The reason I want to learn how to knit is that it’s portable, unlike a sewing machine. Make knitting even easier to transport by turning a zipper pouch into a yarn pouch with a handle and eyelets for the yarn to be pulled through. Inside it has a collapsible yarn divider (there when you need to separate two balls of yarn and it flips to the side when you don’t).
Ideas:
- Include an outside or interior pocket for a sheet of instructions
- Add an inside pocket for phone and keys
- Sew this from a felted wool sweater
Backpack
Sometimes a little backpack is all you need; for a day hike, for swimming sessions, the gym, or a trip to your local farmer’s market. This backpack has pockets, secure pockets, and everything needs pockets.
Ideas:
- Sew it in faux leather or suede (leave off piping around top edge)
- Make it any size
Shoe Bag
Where do you put your shoes when you pack your traveling bag? In with your clean clothes? Don’t do that, not unless you put them in a bag first. Upgrade their shoe bag from Safeway plastic to linen. It adds a little luxury to living out of a suitcase.
Ideas:
- Piece together large scraps to make the bag
- Use blocks from unfinished and abandoned quilt projects
Roll Up Tool Tote
Paint brushes, color pencils, makeup brushes, crochet hooks and knitting needles plus who knows what else could go in this type of tote.
Ideas:
- Give it filled with a set of color pencils and coloring book
- Fuse a piece of fabric laminating sheet to the inside for holding brushes
- Make the pockets larger, and the tote longer for bulky but small tools
Drawstring Bags
These bags hold everything. They can be made any size out of almost any fabric. Great for new parents (keeps diaper bag items organized) great for kids (favorite toys ready to come along) great for traveling (socks and other small items together, and then dirties all together on the way home). Really they’re pretty handy for every one.
There are three variations written about in the blog so check them all out
Ideas:
- decorate the outside to correspond to the contents. Example: applique or embroider socks on the outside for a traveler’s sock bag
- Monogram it
- Make it small and fill with lavender for a drawer sachet (just knot it closed as it won’t be used for other purposes)
For Kids
I made these 23 years ago to keep in the diaper bag. They made for an easy to bring along distraction if a little sweetheart needed one. When the sweeties got older they became the puppet masters
Ideas:
- Any animals could be made, not just those found in the barnyard
- People could be made too – and then you could add tutus, yarn hair, and/or superhero capes to the puppets
- Pencils in place of fingers turn the finger puppets into puppets 😉
Road Course Play Mat
This simple project will keep any car lovin’ tike busy. Leave lots of blank spaces between the roads for block buildings and “construction sites”
Ideas:
- Instead of roads, you can make floors of rooms as a house for little people
- Make it a woodland setting with a lake and cave for toy animals
- Make a beach and ocean (or lake) for little people, animals, and boats
Simple Quilt
Using simple rectangles or squares you can piece together a quilt for a new baby or new big brother or sister. A quilt this size is perfect to lay the baby on when she’s not in your arms or there’s a diaper to be changed.
Ideas:
- Don’t quilt it, instead tie the quilt layers together every 8 inches or so (so much quicker than quilting)
- It’s not just for babies, this is a good size for a lap quilt.
For Wearing
Patches
Patches are pretty popular lately and you can find them in millions of styles but you can make your own too and a lot cheaper than the $7 (or more) price tag I see on machine-made patches. This post shows eight different ways to make decorative patches for backpacks, jackets, messenger bags, laptop sleeves, and even for holes.
Ideas:
- Fabric markers are an easy way to add words to any patch
- Adult coloring books are a great resource for designs, or design ideas, to embroider (I suggest simplifying them but you don’t have to)
- If you have a machine that does embroidery then you’re set to open up your own patch shop
Bracelets
Felt is my go-to leather substitute. Not as durable as leather but softer, and easy to sew beads onto and easy to embroider onto and therefore a great leather substitute for cuff bracelets.
Ideas:
- Make a bunch in a rainbow of colors
- Make three in a monochromatic color scheme to be worn as a set
- Make them narrow and use a sew-on snap
- Use glitter glue instead of beads
Fabric Necklaces
The more the merrier when it comes to tube necklaces so plan on making a set. A great scrap busting project especially for those extra few inches of length you had after cutting out that pattern.
Ideas:
- Add beads
- Add knots
- Instead of making a closed loop, attach the ends of a few to a ribbon and have a tied ribbon closure