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Love to Sew: Children's Sun Hats

Paperback / softback

Main Details

Title Love to Sew: Children's Sun Hats
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Gillian Stratton
SeriesLove to Sew
Physical Properties
Format:Paperback / softback
Pages:64
Dimensions(mm): Height 222,Width 222
Category/GenreNeedlework and fabric crafts
ISBN/Barcode 9781844488360
ClassificationsDewey:646.506
Audience
General

Publishing Details

Publisher Search Press Ltd
Imprint Search Press Ltd
Publication Date 18 April 2013
Publication Country United Kingdom

Description

Sewing is popular with all ages at the moment and this series, Love to Sew, focuses on the latest hot trends. The 64 page handy square format gives us room for twenty projects, with some simple step by step pictures. Children's Sun Hats is a colourful, unique book which shows the reader how to make twenty gorgeous sun hats for children. Children love to play outdoors; therefore a personalised sun hat would be a welcome gift for your son, daughter, grandchild, niece, nephew or even a friend's little one. In this book, Gill demonstrates how to make sun visors, caps, pretty sun hats for little girls and cool, contemporary sun hats for little boys. It also includes templates and beautiful styled photographs of all the hats.

Author Biography

Gill Stratton has always loved hats, a passion passed down from her Mum and Gran, who took any opportunity to wear a hat! Gill attended night classes at the London School of Fashion at night classes to learn how to make hats. She then went on to work for Mille-Fleurs, a bespoke millinery workshop in Otford, Kent, where she continues to make occasion hats and fascinators. Gill has also started her own company, Elizabeth Rees Millinery, making bespoke children's hats. As a mother of three, she saw a gap in the market for hats that are unique and desirable. She also found that allowing her children to choose the design and fabric was the only way to get them to wear sun hats!

Reviews

July 13 If the sun does manage to struggle through, all kids will need a sun hat. Gill's book has 20 projects with templates, simple step-by-step pictures and lovely photos. She includes sun visors, caps, pretty sunhats for girls and modern hats for boys, all suitable for beginners and more advanced stitchers. * Machine Knitting Monthly * Aug 13 Fun to wear and safe and practical into the bargain. Hats were once commonplace and seem to have gone out of favour. With warnings about being exposed to the sun, it makes sense to cover your child's head. There's no better way to do it than with material chosen by your child. These fun fabrics make wearing hats a doddle. From babies to 8 year olds, Gill has come up with different patterns and ideas. You'll find materials and equipment plus all the basic techniques. You will need to enlarge the pattern pieces. Easy to use book for a variety of hat patterns. * Karen Platt Yarnsandfabrics.co.uk/crafts * Sept 13 Do you, like the author of this book, have a child that does not want to wear a sun hat? Give them a look at the fun hats in here and they are sure to decide otherwise! With wise advice concerning getting the children involved in choosing the fabric and trim for the hats, this is a book that is sure to be useful to anybody who ever makes anything for children. As with the other titles in this series this is love-to-sew, not learn-to-sew, so basic sewing skills are taken as read. The first part of the book gives you a crash course in basic hat-making with measuring heads, sewing on a brim or a peak, making crowns, stitching it all together and adding a lining dealt with briskly and remarkably effectively. You might need to know how to sew but millinery skills are not needed before you open this book. The projects themselves are mostly for babies and children up to 8 with plenty for each sex and many tastes covered. There are hats for a new baby, visors, peaked caps, a pretty floppy dress hat suitable for a formal occasion, explorer;s hat, a pirate hat and even a foreign legion style one to keep the sun off the back of the neck. Some of them are even made by recycling old clothes such as jeans, a dress, shorts and a shirt which gets my approval for green crafting. Each project is laid out with what you need in the way of materials and tools and there are instructions in the form of words mostly but with a staged photo or two to help you along. On the opposite page is a full-page photo of the hat being worn that you can show to the child in question for their approval. When I was younger children were thought to be made of asbestos and hats were not required (!) but I would have had a ball wearing some of these (and not getting sunburned into the bargain). A very useful book...can we have one for adults too please? * Myshelf.com * May 13 If you're feeling inspired to sew after seeing the 'Great British Sewing Bee' then 'Children's sun hats' by Gill Stratton is a wonderful bright bold fun book with some lovely hats in to spoil your children with this summer. Out of the 20 patterns three are baby hats, seven are for boys, seven are for girls and three are recycled hats. The templates are half size over five pages at the back of the book which need to be enlarged by 200 per cent. There are eight pages of photo-illustrated basic techniques at the beginning of the book on: 'Using patterns to cut out the fabric', 'Using iron-on interfacing', 'Assembling a brim', 'Attaching the crown to the middle section', 'Attaching the brim to the crown', 'Making and attaching the lining', 'Making a six-part crown', and 'Making and attaching a peak'. Gill says in her introduction to the book 'Sun hats have become a summer essential to keep the sun from children's delicate faces. However if, like me, you spend most of the summer nagging your children to put their hats on, then this book is for you. I found that if I let my children choose the shape and colour of the hat, they were much more likely to wear it.' I can say that this is definitely the case. I never had a hat made for me but I wore a cotton dress my mother made for me which was blue with colourful lollypops on to death, and was distraught when I grew out of it. It was a dress she never would have found in any shop and I loved the fabric so much. * sewingisforgirls.blogspot.com *